« first day (1194 days earlier)      last day (3981 days later) » 

21:01
> I went down to the gas station for no particular reason
Hi.
@Xeo Well, for example, from List<List<T>> to List<T>, like in Perl.
... you're not quoting yourself there are you?
@BartekBanachewicz What do you mean "what about <random>"?
also
4
Q: Fastest way to sort two vectors (key/values) at the same time?

VincentFor supercomputing simulation purpose, I have a structure that contains two big (billions of elements) std::vector: one std::vector of "keys" (64 bits integers) and one std::vector of "values". I cannot use a std::map because in the simulations I consider, vectors are far more optimal than std::m...

harder than it looks
21:02
I think that I can see that monads are an interface and that some useful things are monads, but I guess that I don't see what you could usefully implement based on any monad.
@DeadMG that's not really what's going on
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG that's not automatic - that's just how concatMap / SelectMany work, and it's very handy for working with lists
hmmm
Eric Lippert described it as a fundamental of the monad interface- that bind had to flatten from M<M<T>> to M<T>
@TemplateRex I am the imposter. Hide your kids.
Xeo
Xeo
21:04
ah. that's the second way monads can be described
Xeo
Xeo
based on fmap and join
You can implement bind in terms of it (and vice-versa), but that's not what bind does.
ah.
@StackedCrooked hm, well for it to be a syndrome, you actually need to be really really highly recognized by others. Not to take anything away from you, but Jon and Andrei actually have a syndrom if their claims are honest
21:05
so that's one valid description of the Monad interface, but it wouldn't be illegal to separate them out.
cause I am not a fan of automatically going from M<M<T>> to M<T>.
some like optional I can see you wouldn't want that, but some like range, it's really not the same.
Xeo
Xeo
then you just want the Functor interface, not the Monad one
the former provides fmap
aren't those separate things?
@DeadMG Yeah, there are two common equivalent minimal definitions.
so anyways
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG any Monad is a Functor
21:08
I've got my Monad interface, give or take, but I'm not wholly sure what you can actually do with it.
@DeadMG They're tightly related. All monads are functors.
user1804599
Write parsers!
it doesn't seem to mean enough on it's own to write anything against "any monad" instead of requiring something more specific.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG the interface by itself is useless unless you just want some generic algorithms
I like generic algorithms.
I just don't see how they wouldn't be so generic, they couldn't achieve any useful result.
21:09
heh, I hear that all the time.
Xeo
Xeo
turns out there are some things that are extremely generic but still make sense
I mean, what could I achieve with an optional, a function, and a range?
@DeadMG I wonder why monads are so particularly interesting that everyone and their mother apparently has a tutorial on it.
oh, also, correct me if I'm wrong, but pointer types should be a monad, right?
unit -> &-operator.
user1804599
They are just like optional.
21:11
you'd end up with nasty lifetime issues with bind though I guess, but ignoring that for now.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Haskell has beautiful do-notation support! :D so everyone wants to use them
@Rapptz Everyone likes burritos.
@Xeo like?
is for(elem : cont) actually going to be supported?
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG that's also where certain other monad-related classes join the fray, btw
21:12
Not that I care I just find it interesting
@Rapptz I think STL is batting a 1000 so far
@R.MartinhoFernandes implicit auto&&
Don't tell me there's a proposal for that.
there is indeed a proposal
21:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes by STL yes
and it's by STL
@Rapptz And what if there's a type name elem?
@Rapptz Woah, what
user1804599
@Xeo mapM, forM and sequence and their _ counterparts are examples.
user1804599
21:13
Although they are quite pointless in imperative languages.
@DeadMG FWIW, have you read "You could have invented monads"? It only explains what they are right at the end, almost as an appendix. It assumes some basic Haskell, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I recognize the name.
user1804599
And all the other control structures.
but Eric Lippert's is the only one I've ever read that starts out with things I care about (code) instead of things I don't (blah blah categories blah blah impurity)
21:15
lol I don't like people who use purity as a way to be condescending
maybe I read too much into it
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG I'll just send you here
but the moment someone goes "Unlike X which allows you to do Y, which is impure, language Z doesn't let you because it's pure" or something like that it automatically irks me
@DeadMG YCHIM starts with code too. It's Haskell though.
also unrelated
user1804599
I don’t like universal impurity.
21:17
> A SFINAE-Friendly std::common_type
but I never got the purpose of using prime in functions in haskell
hmm
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Most generic functions on monads work with ranges of monads, since the sequencing is interesting / important
@Rapptz Just a naming convention for dispatcher-worker patterns.
21:17
I don't object to starting with Haskell code on principle the same way I do with the ones that start on theory
but they're simply not that much use to me
Why can;t I open N3868?
Oh. "missing"
Some links are just not there
there's a bit manipulation library proposal which is kinda neat
ok, so
@Rapptz but horrible naming
user1804599
21:20
@Rapptz link.
user1804599
Y u never link to things.
@TemplateRex pretty common naming
> Code checkers & generators

Native Json & HTML, built-in tutorial, easy meta programming, reflection proposal to C++
user1804599
thx :3
WTF is that.
I'm not sure I want to read more.
user1804599
21:21
Dose function names.
so these papers are all for C++17?
wait a second
isn't >> trivially implementable in terms of >>=?
and the meeting is about voting on C++14?
user1804599
@DeadMG It is.
oakydoaky.
just checking.
user1804599
21:22
m (>>) n = m >>= \_ -> n
@DeadMG Yes. It's only in the typeclass in case you want to provide an optimised version. You get a default implementation if you skip it.
fair nuff.
user1804599
It also has a default implementation.
user1804599
So you only have to implement >>= and >> will be generated for you.
@rightfold That's broken, though.
21:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is? I had (assuming I read this right) exactly the same idea in mind.
@DeadMG Just syntax.
just discard the initial value.
oh ok
> LIBRARY FOUNDATIONS FOR ASYNCHRONOUS OPERATIONS
Wow, thank you for screaming the proposal name at me.
Xeo
Xeo
either m >> n or (>>) m n
there's a paper about why auto for members is bad.
21:23
lol
> Private Extension Methods
@Rapptz I want implicit auto, fuck all those people who make typos
why just private?
screw your implicit auto garbage
so sequence is from, say, List<Optional<T>> to Optional<List<T>>?
user1804599
@DeadMG you can click the source buttons on that page, by the way. They are on the right-hand side.
21:25
@AndyProwl The worst part is that it uses word "method".
ah so I see.
user1804599
Though the links seem to be broken. :v
Where did you link to?
@Griwes Yeah well that terminology comes from C# I guess
user1804599
And Monad isn’t defined in that file. :v
21:25
Should have been C++-ised though
@AndyProwl It's a silly thing to be petty about.
@AndyProwl It's the one with declaring private member functions outside?
Java and every other language probably calls it methods.
C++ is probably the only retard calling it member functions.
Protected and public members declared after class definition would be just silly.
user1804599
21:26
@DeadMG mapM is from List<Optional<T>> to Optional<List<T>>.
Xeo
Xeo
nvm, that would be foldM
@Rapptz Member function is a perfectly accurate name, IYAM.
@Rapptz No, C++ calls it member functions, they are member functions. If C++ called them methods, they'd be methods...
@Rapptz Call me silly but I think "member function" is a better name than "method"
@AndyProwl I didn't say it wasn't better.
21:26
Call me silly, but I think they're both perfectly fine ways of describing the same thing.
user1804599
sequence is from List<Optional<T>> to Optional<List<T>>.
> C++ is probably the only retard calling it member functions.
Only hard-headed dumbasses will purposedly not understand.
@Griwes I'm being playful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But the term is non standard!!!!!1111
21:27
No one cares. It's well understood.
so sequence is basically fold, with compose(unit(item)) as the function.
It's the same garbage with dereferencing
> Type-safe database access
But I think EMs would be more useful if they were allowed to be public
Why is this one missing
I'm actually curious about this one
21:28
What's the point of extending the internal details of a class outside of that class?
> Proposing the Rule of Five, v2
Kaffee: Corporal, would you turn to the page in this book that says where the mess hall is, please.
Cpl. Barnes: Well, Lt. Kaffee, that's not in the book, sir.
Kaffee: You mean to say in all your time at Gitmo you've never had a meal?
Cpl. Barnes: No, sir. Three squares a day, sir.
Kaffee: I don't understand. How did you know where the mess hall was if it's not in this book?
Cpl. Barnes: Well, I guess I just followed the crowd at chow time, sir.
Kaffee: No more questions.
@AndyProwl Wait what?
user1804599
What moron decided to put backspace near return.
21:30
> This proposal adds a new mechanism for declaring non-virtual private class methods and static private class methods outside of the class definition.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG as can be seen from the source link
@AndyProwl Oh, I think I know what that is.
@Xeo Yeah, I can't read that.
@rightfold It's separated with \ if your layout doesn't suck :v
@AndyProwl That's for not declaring private functions on headers.
21:30
@TemplateRex But language lawyering!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. What is it then?
Is sort of nice, but doomed to obsolescence with modules.
Ooooop.s
user3010322
@thecoshman u.u Welpz. No easy A for me. The Professor's first homework assignment for Advanced Programming was to send him an e-mail and introduce yourself and your programming experience.
Xeo
Xeo
haha
@AndyProwl Not declaring private functions in headers...
21:31
> A Proposal for the World's Dumbest Smart Pointer, v3
I thought this was a joke?
Xeo
Xeo
wait, backspace, not backtick
@R.MartinhoFernandes Aah
Now it makes sense, thanks
user3010322
I showed him sol and some of my other code, and asked to meet with him to understand more about the course. He ended up just sending me an e-mail, and immediately waived me from the course. =/
user3010322
So now I can't take it, even if I wanted to earn the easy A.
@Rapptz I want the world's smartest smart pointer, std::smart_ptr that will infer whether I want unique or shared ownership ;-)
Xeo
Xeo
21:32
@ThePhD gratz? :D
@TemplateRex Or dumb ownership!
@R.MartinhoFernandes exactly
@TemplateRex And then will actually give you what you need and not what you want
user3010322
@Xeo Semi-grats. Now I'm taking an Assembly course, CS Theory, and Discrete Math all at once instead.
@AndyProwl even better.
21:32
@ThePhD TIL I can be exempt from your advanced programming course too.
@Rapptz No, it's about a type that does nothing (just like T *), but also carries information that it does not own the object pointed to in any way (unlike T *).
> your account has been automatically suspended for posting inappropriate content and cannot chat for 24 seconds.
user3010322
@Rapptz Nobody in this lounge would not be exempt from the first 4 courses of this CS degree.
@Griwes Except it doesn't, except by convention.
@Griwes template<typename T> using non_owning_ptr = T*;
21:33
IOW "the only moderator who is online doesn't know me"
how embarrasing :/
@AndyProwl wtf
@Jefffrey Yeah same reaction, but it all makes sense
In my code, T* carries that information through a similar convention. Go figure.
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@AndyProwl That's for not declaring private functions on headers.
Yeah all my T*s are non-owning.
They're just nullable references
21:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure, "convention".
Xeo
Xeo
and reseatable
@DeadMG The useful stuff with monads is, in short, ability to do all regular imperative stuff whilst keeping functional purity to the maximum.
The only benefit the dumb thing has is no arithmetic.
Xeo
Xeo
oh god here we go
If that counts as such.
21:35
tbh I'd still consider using ptr<T> if only because fuck C declarators for pointers
6
But it forces the reader and user to read the "Conventions Guide" and no-one has time for that!
user3010322
I'm not so sure that's a benefit.
Oh noes, he used that word.
@Xeo You know, I have the bind based definition from EL, and I'm not seeing how it's equivalent to the compose based definition on Hackage.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus T* arf, woof; // fuck this gay earth
21:35
Yeah
@ThePhD no one does this though except C programmers
But saying you need an alias to model non-ownership is dumb
no, wait, I think I might have cheated a bit.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG you mean bind vs fmap / join?
yeah
21:37
@ThePhD lol I've never taken a CS course~
I've helped around in the C++ class though
Xeo
Xeo
bind m f = join (fmap f m)
join m = bind m id
user3010322
I offered to TA 2 CS courses.
can I have a little bit of help to undelete this question?
@DeadMG that's because "FUCK THEORY I DONT NEED THAT HOW DO I IO"
user3010322
One professor literally told me "you would be wasting your time; you have better things to do."
Xeo
Xeo
21:38
@BartekBanachewicz wat
user3010322
The other has yet to get back to me (the one for advanced programming).
yeah it's true
Actually "how do I IO" is a nice phrase
programming noobs are literally the 2nd worst noobs
user3010322
The professor that told me I have better things to do is the awesome professor that's making a Haskell Compiler for embedded devices.
21:38
@BartekBanachewicz How do you IO?
@Griwes in the IO context vOv
@BartekBanachewicz It's not :S That there are only two impure monads in the roster of Haskell monads should be enough to see that.
Xeo
Xeo
sometimes, it's really difficult to have Bartek on your own side of the argument
@R.MartinhoFernandes Whilst technically State is pure...
And of those, only one gets substantial use.
21:40
@JerryCoffin, thanks. :)
I owe you one.
@Jefffrey Surely.
man
@Jefffrey If we ever meet up, you can buy me a drink...
I told my dad using outside as a fridge was a bad idea
all the water is frozen
@JerryCoffin Deal! ;)
rofl.
Xeo
Xeo
haha
:F fine I'm going back to HsJQuery
@Rapptz Works great when the weather's just right. Other times it doubles as a freezer. Some places also triples as an oven.
It doesn't turn the light on when you open the door though.
21:43
@BartekBanachewicz HsJQuery? High School Java Query?
user1804599
Haskell jQuery.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're opening it at the wrong time.
@JerryCoffin Oh, it's an Apple fridge?
getting "const T&" in C++03 and "T&&" in C++11 without using preprocessor: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a416f530530ed0fa
:D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Pretty much, yeah.
21:44
(__cplusplus > 199711L) doesn't use preprocessor at all
user1804599
> #define
there is no "#foobar" in it
lol
#include <iostream>
Damn Microsoft.
21:45
First line.
You lose.
Xeo
Xeo
you mean without conditional compilation
Made me reinstall Windows for reasons I choose not to share.
@rubenvb too much porn vOv
porn virus.
Yes, that is why I despise MS.
Because porn.
What did I expect from a bunch of C++ people.
21:46
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does your Android phone stalk you?
I saved my Steamapps though. Saves me 51GB of download.
user1804599
@ThePhD C# fixed that. :3
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG btw, there was something about concepts earlier?
When I woke up today, it gave directions to my work-place saying "It's time to go to work"
and when I got off work, it gave me directions to my house saying "It's time to go home"
21:47
@Rapptz Woah
NO
@Xeo Yeah, give me a minute.
Are you serious?
What app is that?
yeah
Google something
iunno, it comes with stock android
Google Now.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz I'm imagining that with glados voice
21:48
Oh, I killed that at the first opportunity.
You have to enable it and search history and Google track-my-life
it creeped out pretty bad
can I turn it off?
they already stalk my search history and youtube history :(
I don't need them to stalk my locations too
@Rapptz Mine's off, so you. I don't remember how, though.
Also, I don't GPS around all over the place.
Pretty much only turn it on when I'm lost. (Ok, ok, not so rarely)
21:50
I don't think I've ever turned on GPS.
user406009
They can get your location from cell towers anyways.
here's what I've got so far
one of the struggles I've got is that sometimes it's hard to remember which concepts should be fulfilled by run-time values, like InputRange, and which ones fulfilled by kinds.
Xeo
Xeo
wouldn't the runtime stuff be laws / axioms?
Hmmm, on Windows I don't get wild outliers caused by allocations. gist.github.com/anonymous/8568104
Oh, wait.
21:54
if you meet a concept, then you must provide X interface; so if a type provides foo(), then m.foo() is ok.
so if I want to say, "This function must receive a type", then you need a concept saying that T.pointer, T.size, etc, is ok.
It also is about a zillion times slower than on Linux, so the cost of the allocations is not as large, relatively.
3398ns vs 95ns Woah.
so decltype(int) has to implement the Type concept, and int would implement a hypothetical SWO concept.
a pointer is nullable, and a pointer's type is a type.
if you get my drift.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wonder if games will see a noticeable improvement in performance when ported over to linux thanks to this kind of stuff
?
thanks to what?
21:56
Didnt he just say allocations were slower on Windows?
@Borgleader No.
Oh =/ nvm me then
std::to_string is 34 times slower on Windows.
if allocations were really 33 times slower on Windows, it wouldn't be "noticable", it would be "Windows is crippled".
@R.MartinhoFernandes What compiler?
21:57
On Linux, it is so fast that the odd costly allocation gives wild variation in timings.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is that really "on Windows" or "on VC++"?
the Windows implementation probably just falls back to stringstream
On Windows, it is so slow that the odd costly allocation is negligible.
@Rapptz GCC on both.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Same stdlib implementation in both cases also?
Well, it's what comes with MinGW. I dunno what changes.
21:59
[Nothing like getting grilled every time you say anything, eh?]
It's specced to use sprintf, IIRC.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG the syntax is confuzzling me
which part?

« first day (1194 days earlier)      last day (3981 days later) »