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user1804599
14:00
@BartekBanachewicz brew install c++-library :P
In general, you as a developer don't care much for distro's. Once they package your stuff, they will take care of all dependencies. In the meantime, you tell your users to.
Also this LambdaCube thing looks actually pretty decent
right, except as I mentioned, I can't use the fucking package.
not that I ever found them to be reliable in the first place, you understand.
Then install ncurses, build LLVM yourself. I don't see the problem there.
tried that too.
linker won't find ncurses.
14:01
You got the exact error?
And link command?
man, I never appreciated VS's libdirs so much until I tried working with ld.
@rightfold oh cool
libncurses might just need a symlink to another name
because meh.
user1804599
It also creates Setup.hs for you.
@DeadMG Er, it's works the same o_O
14:04
@rightfold I think I will spend some more time. I'd like to build examples automatically, for example
> /usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lncurses
also you'll have to ask Cat for the link command since I don't control that machine
$ ld -lncurses
ld: warning: cannot find entry symbol _start; not setting start address
$
@DeadMG Did you install libncurses-dev or whatever it's called on your distro?
Broken systems and shit.
libncurses5-dev wasn't installed :v
14:05
Ubuntu sucks.
Fuck Ubuntu
@Griwes No idea.
@CatPlusPlus lol
It'll work now
ah, so it was a Ubuntu thing
14:06
@DeadMG Then check. There's a huge difference between a library and a development package for that library.
@DeadMG no, not really...
Only on stupid distros
@Griwes Well, don't tell me that. I don't control the machine...
I hate the split in -dev packages as well.
I p much never not want -dev, but I don't think there's any option to always install that shit
14:08
The packages are technically unrelated (except for the dependencies they have, but then other packages have them too).
Not like adding another piece of metadata to dpkg would kill anyone
But then again :debian:
Maybe I'll switch to pure Debian though, at least get rid of Ubuntu-specific annoyances
Ell
Ell
whoops I'm compiling powerpc etc. targets too
idk if I have enough disk space for this
I really ought to buy a new hard drive
Is your HDD 200MB large
@R.MartinhoFernandes #worksforme :v
@BartekBanachewicz That's what I said.
14:12
lol
I switched to Lubuntu on my VM
@Ell There's no way to tell LLVM that you don't want to target them.
it's really not a very modular design at all.
That sounds wrong.
Are you sure you didn't miss some build setting?
yeah, they do the whole global variable of targets thing
--enable-targets
Xeo
Xeo
--enable-targets=host
or something'
been some time since I built it
user1804599
14:13
@BartekBanachewicz What is Lubuntu? Ubuntu rewritten in Lua?
well I'd also want people to be able to cross-compile the different x86/x64 targets.
@rightfold nah, lightweight ubuntu, with some funky wm
Like any *Ubuntu, it's Ubuntu with a different default WM
although there's no way in hell Wide would function on ARM or PPC, I'm pretty sure.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG I think you can in cmake but I didn't think it'd enable them by default so I didn't bother :L
14:14
Really useful
user1804599
Gentoobuntu.
@CatPlusPlus I always find that incredibly hilarious.
@CatPlusPlus default package sets also change
@Ell It enables them all by default, which isn't the worst decision IMO.
you don't get Ubuntu One and all that crap
14:14
Oh yes, that makes all the difference
I'd just rather not have to spend hours rebuilding the damn thing to not target PPC.
it's convenient :v
@BartekBanachewicz It's not.
-DLLVM_BUILD_TARGETS=X86 for CMake, probably --enable-targets=X86 for configure.
You can install Ubuntu Server and then any WM you want
Bam, instant whateverbuntu
14:15
I personally like the fact that there's a dedicated SE site for ubuntu-like shit
I need to download a different fucking image for each.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh no.
This was a solved problem back when I started using Linux around 2000 vOv
@Ell I pushed a new build of Wide, gonna see how TC takes it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you can install kubuntu-desktop etc. manually.
Don't know if two desktops conflict though.
Never thought the alternatives were well-though-out.
14:16
I use Ubuntu Server on Overmind, Lubuntu on my VM and Ubuntu Desktop on the PC I am using right now
not many problems with either.
Ubuntu repos are shit
Multiverse is completely broken more often than not
The rest is p much all outdated
I don't really care that much
most of the stuff I install goes trough Cabal/pip/npm, not apt-get
@DeadMG Seems to have built.
And replacing packages with your own is also not very convenient because :dpkg:
@BartekBanachewicz You lose system-wide updates
yep, that's pretty much where I am on Windows right now too.
a couple of test failures but that's fine because those tests aren't supposed to pass.
14:18
It's not a really good idea on a production system
@BartekBanachewicz "It works if I avoid using it as much as possible" isn't much of a selling point.
@Ell Make sure you're using the latest commit (the one I committed one minute ago).
@DeadMG Y U NO artifacts?
wtf even is a build artifact anyway.
14:19
It's an artifact produced by a build
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tell me how to tell TeamCity to give it to you and you can have it.
lolpedia
A software development folder or file is a physical or virtual container for software project artifacts, including: requirements, plans, designs, source code, test plans and results, problem reports, reviews, notes, and other artifacts of the development process. Typically, an SDF is hierarchically organized by project phase, artifact type, and/or project team. All or parts of SDF content are typically 'managed'. That is, access and changes are controlled. For electronic media repositories, this control is often facilitated using a configuration management tool such as CVS or IBM Ratio...
oh hey, "artifact paths"
@DeadMG Go to the General settings for your build configuration, and in "Artifact paths" add the paths you want to collect.
There are some more advanced options (like making zips and whatnot), but just listing paths should be enough.
include/**/*.* => libnonius-%teamcity.build.branch%-%teamcity.agent.jvm.os.name%-%teamcity.agent.jvm.os.arch%-r%system.build.number%.zip!/include/
dist/nonius.h++
14:22
I'm a fucking genius
^ this is what I have for nonius. A zip with everything + a single-header distributable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What artifacts did you want?
hm
@DeadMG Compiler binary? Isn't that what your build produces?
yeah, it doesn't seem to have entirely produced what it should do though.
user1804599
14:23
Hmm, that reminds me.
user1804599
I should set up a script that builds everything.
maybe because of the failed tests?
@DeadMG How can you tell?
oh because I didn't ask it to build that, rofl.
user1804599
14:24
Go, LESS and CoffeeScript code.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG Still building llvm + clang now, so will update after this is done
@R.MartinhoFernandes In the "Make artifacts" button, there's a thing that lets you browse the output of the previous build.
so I'm looking right now at what got built
Ah. Neat. Don't think I noticed that.
the library probably doesn't work anyway though because it's been a really long time since I worked in that area, I've been building more independent tests.
@Jefffrey congratz! :)
14:25
CLI (32.05 MB)
libCAPI.so (37.31 MB)
libCodegen.a (716.8 KB)
libLexer.a (54.84 KB)
libParser.a (492 KB)
libSemantic.a (2.51 MB)
libUtil.a (479.96 KB)
ParserTest (238.69 KB)
SemanticTest (32.25 MB)
:lol:
what?
@DeadMG a binary typically
CLI seems like it, no?
yeah
hang on
How do you get not 1 but 3 binaries over 30MB with dynamic linking
Xeo
Xeo
14:26
@Jefffrey show code
@CatPlusPlus They're not dynamically linked.
the vast majority of that is LLVM and it's statically linked in.
well
presumably you could have built LLVM dynamically I guess?
personally I link it in statically
@BartekBanachewicz just a sec, how do you "return" "nothing" from a function whose signature is [String] -> IO ()
Does it build static libs only by default?
@Jefffrey return (). () is the one value of the () type.
14:28
That'd be dumb
@CatPlusPlus Maybe on Windows due to DLL crap.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm, I remember trying that. Lemme try again
Ahaha it does
LLVM: not very good
It's the best thing since sliced bread.
Yep, it works.
Thanks.
user1804599
14:32
Yay.
user1804599
Merge conflict in composer.lock.
@Jefffrey Dunno if you're doing it just for practice, but anyway: see replicate and mapM_.
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey cute
@Jefffrey instead of making putStringsLn recursive, you could use mapM_
oh robot was faster
yo wat
14:33
Also, the LaTeX \include system is even worse than C/C++'s.
but yeah it's cool that lounge haskellers community is growing
Cat are you rebuilding LLVM dynamically?
I just ran a TC build and it can't find any LLVM libs.
so it's me, Cat, foldr, Robot, Xeo, Jeffrey...
Yes, sec
Rapptz coded in haskell too, no?
14:33
ok
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz FredO, kinda
@DeadMG So, instead of getting a VM with Linux, you're using Cat's box through SSH?
@BartekBanachewicz I'm the oldest and bestest.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, I thought there was something like that already, but I couldn't check the documentation because I was on the train :£
14:34
@rubenvb Building on TeamCity.
which is administrated by Cat.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you are cheating
Also the book I'm reading is starting to suck @BartekBanachewicz
@DeadMG aha, huge build server thingie. kewl.
@Jefffrey Then swap to anything from what I sent you :)
In chapter 8 and 9 uses the type x = y syntax, but explains it in chapter 10...
14:36
I enjoyed LYAH a lot
and it's rather well-structured
yeah, I might will move to that
also heh, you're in chapter 8 and doing IO already? :D
Xeo
Xeo
kinda hard not to do any IO
@BartekBanachewicz Why?
I didn't write any IO code until I understood do notation insides
@R.MartinhoFernandes because... you're a robot!
14:38
That artifact browsing thing is new in 8.1 btw so you might want to check out confluence.jetbrains.com/display/TCD8/…
@BartekBanachewicz apparently... it just explained that when you want to have functions with side effects you should have IO () as return type (with a dummy tuple), otherwise if you want to return something you use IO Type because IO is a type class of some sort... something like type IO a = World -> (a, World)
@Cat, btw, I set up cat_tmp as admin on my YT instance. How do I send you the password?
Mail. You can encrypt it with my pubkey if you want :v
@Jefffrey IO is not a typeclass, it's a Monad.
but it still does not explain how you define types like IO or what the type x = y syntax is...
14:39
Yeah, my order has shipped through Canada Post.
@Jefffrey type x = y is akin to C++'s using, really
IO is a concrete type, not a typeclass
@CatPlusPlus Nah, it's ok. I'll remove it as soon as you're done. Is it what? @piotr.pl?
14:40
lol
I'd make a shorter one but changing mails everywhere is :effort: and aliases don't work very well
well pl.pl is taken
pl.sex.pl is free though
@BartekBanachewicz thought so
Tell me when you're done with the migration.
Xeo
Xeo
14:42
@Jefffrey FYI: that 'dummy tuple' is called unit
@DeadMG LLVM is ready
> type IO = World → World
In general, however, an interactive program may return a result value in addition to performing side effects. For example, a program for reading a character from the keyboard may return the character that was read. For this reason, we generalise our type for interactive programs to also return a result value, with the type of such values being a parameter of the IO type:
type IO a = World → (a,World)
Expressions of type IO a are called actions.
^ this is what it says
Beh, trying to define IO
@Jefffrey you'll probably need to explore regular data declarations before moving to typeclasses
@Jefffrey meh
youtrack2youtrack.py [-p] [-t TIME_SETTINGS] s_url s_user s_pass t_url t_user t_pass [project_id ...]
Xeo
Xeo
14:43
@CatPlusPlus type IO a = {-# LANGUAGE Magic #-}
alright.
It's not that magical
Wide builds successfully and we has artifacts.
yeah well, fuck that book
Oh. URL is http://bugs.flamingdangerzone.com/youtrack/
14:44
But it also not very helpful as an explanation
the CLI probably doesn't work too great cause it's been a while since I actually worked on it
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know, I just love the names of params :v
but it should be OK.
I'm downloading it, and it's going to fail, and I'm going to mock you.
14:45
@BartekBanachewicz it explains type classes and IO before data declarations
@DeadMG What's hellowideworld like?
<?xml version="1.0" ?><importReport><item id="borgleader" imported="true"/></importReport>
CONGRATULATIONS
YOU HAVE BEEN IMPORTED
try something like Main() { cpp("iostream").std.cout << "Hello, World!"; }.
Ah, no, everything else is there.
14:48
I don't believe this ever actually worked on Linux.
Were you using root as your user?
so, assuming I want a monad that only allows some of the IO operations
it'll probably crash the compiler.
youtrack.YouTrackException: Error for [/admin/project/wheels/customfield/Subsystem?emptyFieldText=No+subsystem&bundle=‌​wheels+Subsystems]: 400: Bad Request: Can't find bundle with name [wheels Subsystems]
14:48
@CatPlusPlus I've been what o.o
$ ./widec hello.wide
Triple: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'x86_64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
Ignore that pesky processor
@CatPlusPlus Yes.
14:49
Well, that will be broken then
hmm
I remember that bug.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz there are some questions on that on SO
not what I did about it though.
@CatPlusPlus Well, add me one.
14:50
maybe I simply never fixed it.
I don't know why wheels is broken though
try passing something like --triple=i686-unknown-linux-gnu.
or find out what GCC thinks your triple is and pass that.
@CatPlusPlus Oh well. There are two bugs there, so I can migrate them by hand.
14:53
let me ask in the LLVM IRC channel.
the default triple comes back from one of their functions so it's kinda wrong that they can't handle their own damn triple.
Should I sign up, or do you create me an user?
Ogonek imported fine, it's just wheels for some reason
You can register
I like captcha's that are just numbers. At least I can read them :D
FFS I am not OCRing door numbers, Google. This is too creepy.
14:56
lol
645498 No, I am not decyphering door numbers, FFS this is too creepy
It accepted it.
@CatPlusPlus Done. Gimme the projects!
huh
@R.MartinhoFernandes only checks first part
all those tests that totally succeeded on TeamCity?
the target triple is for MinGW32.
I just noticed that.
lol?
@BartekBanachewicz I know. I do this all the time. This door number thing happens way too often these days.
There used to be a time when we were helping out OCRing old books. Now we're helping with creepy mass surveillance-y shit or something.
@DeadMG I'd make that i686-w64-mingw32. Just so my driver code (when it finally gets upstreamed) works for you ;-)
> clangopts.TargetOptions.Triple = "i686-pc-mingw32";
15:51:50 ?133 rmf@ulmo ~/dev/sandbox
$ ./widec --triple=i686-pc-mingw32 hello.wide
Triple: i686-pc-mingw32
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
15:58:45 ?133 rmf@ulmo ~/dev/sandbox
$
maybe the LLVM JIT just doesn't give a shit what the target should be.
14:59
Slightly different.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Clang probably failed to code-generate that function again when it does on Windows.
@R.MartinhoFernandes eh, I'd guess they use it to get accurate addresses from their streetview photos for maps
@DeadMG Is this "Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)" LLVM forcibly taking down the process?

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