because it just allowed me to make the exact monad I wanted :F
if your function runs in Glisha YourState a, you can use safe draw commands I exposed, and because it's an instance of MonadState, you can treat it like a regular StateT/State monad
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, it's about a value issued as a processor immediate, I believe, so "compile-time" means "Compiler must know value at code-generation time".
@R.M do you have any idea, besides specifying everything explicitely, how to avoid the ambiguities between Control.Monad.Trans.State.Lazy and Control.Monad.State.Class? Could splitting "inner" (StateT) and outer (Glisha as MonadState) parts into separate files work?
IIRC one of those is supposed to be for advanced usage, i.e. you know what you're doing. There's some more general module that exports the relevant stuff from it.
There are two libraries involved with monads and their transformers - 'transformers', which has StateT, ReaderT, MaybeT etc, and 'mtl', which depends on 'transformers' and has MonadState, MonadReader, MonadMaybe etc
> I think the best part about C is that it is very simple in comparison to C++. The changes in the new languages are things you would expect to be standard - not drastic changes to the way code is written (expanded types, variable length arrays, built in threading, etc). Time has also not created an expansive standard library or way of doing things that will take you years to master as in the STL/Boost camp or even Objective-C.
auto Correct(int i) {
if (i == 1)
return i; // return type deduced as int
else
return Correct(i-1)+i; // ok to call it now
}
auto Wrong(int i)
{
if(i != 1)
return Wrong(i-1)+i; // Too soon to call this. No prior return statement.
else
return i; // return type deduced as int
}
@BartekBanachewicz Well, I suppose the only improvement you could make is that if there are any non-recursive calls then take the return type of the first of those.
@BartekBanachewicz Because recursive calls don't help the inference machine. Just ignore them, and deduce the return type from the non-recursive returns.
@BartekBanachewicz Sure. Ultimately you have to pick one, so you have something to compare against and ensure that they do all match. It needn't be the first but I think this would make the most intuitive diagnostics when they don't match.
> Several scripts used in the Philippines and Indonesia, such as Hanunó'o, are traditionally written with lines moving away from the writer, from bottom to top, but are read horizontally left to right.
Could have sworn there were others
And that example isn't even really a good example
> The Ancient Berber developed from the Phoenician script and like Phoenician, was originally written from right to left in horizontal lines, but became more commonly written from bottom to top in vertical columns running from right to left.
> The following writing systems are written from right to left in vertical lines running from bottom to top: > > Batak, Hanuno'o, Tagbanwa > > Note > Tagbanwa is traditionally written in vertical columns running from bottom to top > and from left to right, however it is read from left to right in horizontal lines.
From the docs:
[Y]ou often don't even need the SPECIALIZE pragma in the first place. When compiling a module M, GHC's optimiser (with -O) automatically considers each top-level overloaded function declared in M, and specialises it for the different types at which it is called in M. The optimi...
MIT Lisp Machines had a cool feature to help find the mouse cursor: if you moved the mouse back and forth quickly, the cursor would magnify (the documentation described it as "big like Godzilla"). — Barmar14 hours ago
I had that with Ctrl for a while. It caused problems when I borrowed someone else's PC (lab machine, school, etc) and they hadn't turned off Sticky Keys or the Accessibility stuff
Now I seem to mentally sort of "click" various parts of the outside of my monitor, with my mind. Naturally it takes a few times to get it absolutely right, which is frustrating.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ah I know such things too well... there's some Ctrl/Alt/Shift combination that gets pressed way too easily and it changes between Keyboard layouts - and if you are used to a German layout and it suddenly switches to US layout it's a mess, because especially all the brackets, braces etc. are somewhere else
I have a statistics question. I have an A/B test with multiple independent tests. I want to check which one is significantly better than the others. Which test would I need? (iirc I can use the T test for 2 tests, but I have more).
@anthony-arnold True. I can't see one either. Edit: OH GOD HERP DERP I CAN'T READ VALGRIND SAYS THERE IS NO LEAK. Lulz. Now we can get back to how silly this guy is. :D — user1357649 Apr 15 '13 at 2:34
@FredOverflow IMHO it's never time to switch to Stepanov. I mean, he has some wise ideas but I find his auld style and slow pace hard to bear. Almost as bad as B. Milewski.
@ArneMertz voice control obviously. That thing where it overlays a grid of numbers over the screen, you call it out, then it does a smaller grid inside that cell etc.... :p