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14:00
SaaS ain't easy
And also gets expensive fast
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, because I totally have an idea of how most of that stuff works. Missing domain knowledge there :)
well, I figure that it's kinda like PHP.
I mean, it's one thing to have an HTML file and then template it with PHP a little
and it's another to write whole programs in PHP.
@Xeo What domain? "Everything fails in MinGW"?
there's a point at which you say, "This thing is a program, not a template".
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I never used MinGW! :D
14:02
@DeadMG ITT Wide is like PHP.
creating template meta-programs is like programming websites in PHP.
better to just cut the crap and write a real program in a real language.
PHP > Wide?
instead of pretending that it's a template when it's not.
Writing it is one thing, another thing is to operate it
And even when writing you suddenly have way more issues related to untrusted input
what are you on about?
oh, uh
14:04
@DeadMG I find no significant difference.
I meant compiler as a library, not a service as in a cloud-based compilation service or something.
Well, you still have to compile the library
@Xeo FWIW, I didn't either :P
yes, but that's simple.
Unless it's header-only library then it's not that much simpler
14:07
well, the vast majority of the implementation is the implementation of the compiler, so if you can compile the compiler, you can compile compiler-as-a-library.
I already shipped some compiler-as-a-library to support my VS plugin and it's pretty easy.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus If you depend on LLVM and clang it's already not simple by definition. :P
just a lot of legwork to expose the whole C++ interface as a C interface.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but but...we're having that meetup soon anyway :v sbi was the first lounger/SO guy I met in person. Well, unless you count the guy who came to chat to tell me he was behind me on the train :p
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you write a function with compiler-as-a-library with the Wide compiler, it's a lot simpler than the same function in C++ template metaprogramming.
14:16
@CatPlusPlus are you whatting to me?
Doesn't make them any less of a program.
well, you're right that technically, they are programs, but trying to implement them in terms of a templating system is needlessly frustrating and time-consuming and the tools to do so are even worse than debugging C++ at run-time.
C++ is horrible, but defining programs in terms a "templating system" doesn't imply any of that.
well, you could happen to have a system designed to produce simple template instantiations and have it somehow work out to produce complete complex programs in a nice, readable, easily-debuggable fashion
but AFAIK there are no examples of such actually occurring.
Other than every declarative programming language out there.
14:23
name one
> I called it the PUSSimulator (PUS = Packet Utilisation Standard from ESA). I didn’t notice the (not intended) pun until my girl friend told me: “that must be a quite sexy application…”. Well, the name stayed
SQL does not produce complete complex programs (also, not that I've used it extensively myself, but I find that it's quite unreadable and difficult to debug).
you can't use SQL to produce a compiler.
as for Haskell, that's a bit stretching "declarative", don't you think?
user1804599
You can, but it's extremely retarded. (Even more so than doing it in C++.)
14:25
Functional programming is declarative
Haskell was clearly designed from the outset to produce programs, not simple templates of existing documents.
Functional programming is quite the poster child of declarative programming.
Haskell programs are essentially sets of templates.
@DeadMG IME, it's almost impossible to use SQL to implement a working database scheme:(
PROLOG is declarative.
foo x = (x, x) means "foo followed by something expands to a pair with that something twice."
@DeadMG Yes.
14:27
that's no more declarative than an equivalent C++ or Wide function.
prolog, the sudoku solvers programming language of choice
Xeo
Xeo
Is Puppy trying to argue that Haskell is not declarative?
user1804599
Macros or GTFO.
@DeadMG I don't think Turing-completeness is a requirement to build complex programs.
14:30
I'd tend to agree with the Puppy that (at least so far) declarative programming has mostly worked out to much more the attitude you take toward the code than much of a tangible difference in the code itself.
I'll GTFO
something like HTML is declarative (and surprise: the programming part is done in another language, JS).
although personally, I find little meaning in the label anyway
user1804599
"This is that" vs "to do this, do that."
Xeo
Xeo
You could substitute every function use in a Haskell program with its declaration, resulting in a giant expression, and it would be exactly the same. Doesn't quite work for C++ or Wide.
Yes, if you remove all meaning from it, it doesn't have any left.
14:34
@Xeo Actually, I think that you probably could make that work with polylambdas if you were desperate.
boo macros are templates as well.
@DeadMG No, you can't because things like foo x y = x screw you over.
I've never seen that syntax in C++ or Wide.
Meaning something that ignores one parameter.
If you replace the call with the body, you lose the argument that was being passed in.
((x, y) => x)(a, b).
That's not really very interesting templating, since the substituted part has no variables: it's one constant for another.
14:36
wait, what C++ or Wide code are you suggesting is equivalent to that Haskell anyway?
I'm not gonna try to argue that all Haskell has obvious translations to C++ or Wide.
brb shitter
int f(int x, int y) { return x; } would be enough.
f x _ = x -- Haskell is pretty neat
If you treat the function as a template and substitute it by its body, f(std::cout << 1, std::cerr << 1) turns into std::cout << 1.
Is there any place anyone would recommend where I can read how exit is implemented and why this way? (that is not the obvious man page)
f(1, std::cerr << 1) => 1, just in case std::cout and std::cerr are allowed to be the same and UB and whatnot..
14:42
@BenjaminGruenbaum ...using a syscall.
@Griwes obviously...
Why this way? Because no other ways make any kind of sense whatsoever.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Side-effects are fun they said!
@BenjaminGruenbaum There isn't anything more to it on the userspace side.
@Griwes yeah, but when you call exit and induce a system call, what happens at that stage and in what order and why? I'm asking about the design decisions made by the people who build that mechanism.
14:44
f x = (x, x) is another example.
Perhaps I should have been clearer, I'm not asking about the userspace side
It sets the exit code and triggers the process cleanup
Anything more ask your friendly local OS developer
So you aren't asking about how exit() is implemented; you are asking what exit syscall does.
user1804599
Other languages typically implement it using exceptions.
Yeah, hence the "perhaps I should have been clearer"
14:44
@CatPlusPlus Oh hey, I am here already.
It feeds the process its own cyanide pill.
Well I meant Windows/Linux/OSX developers, implementation details and shit
@CatPlusPlus pretty much summed it up. Kill the threads, free the memory, tear the address space down, free other resources, notify anyone waiting on the process, its threads or its resources, set the exit code, done.
libc exit() is not a straight syscall though, it also processes atexit handlers
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's not the whole function, though.
14:46
can someone help me with codechef.com/MAY14/problems/COMPILER
_exit goes straight to the OS
flush streams, etc.
@DeadMG What did I miss?
a more fair comparison would be int x = std::cout << 1; int y = std::cerr << 1; /* use x */.
OS buffers, yes, local buffers no
14:47
Yeah, that's what the docs say, I was just wondering how I can better understand that (shutting down a process), just personal curiosity nothing important
@DeadMG Why more fair?
13 mins ago, by Xeo
You could substitute every function use in a Haskell program with its declaration, resulting in a giant expression, and it would be exactly the same. Doesn't quite work for C++ or Wide.
Because it changes the rules of the game?
@R.MartinhoFernandes The parameters are part of the declaration too.
Xeo was quite clear there.
and it's not a fair comparison because Haskell is, as far as I know, statementless.
user1804599
@RohanVerma Hi too.
14:48
@DeadMG It's a fair comparison because that's exactly his point.
it's easy to substitute to create one giant expression when the function body is pretty much just an expression anyway.
Xeo
Xeo
And that's the point!
user1804599
Get out.
2 messages moved to bin
Pinging random loungizens with random snippets of code is not acceptable.
14:49
not sure what point you're trying to make, then.
ok srry
Can't you see I'm busy?
user1804599
@DeadMG There's a problem with side-effects there though.
user1804599
Uh.
Xeo
Xeo
With statements, you can have unrelated effects. If you only allow expressions, all effects have to relate to each other in some way.
14:49
:lol: get out
@R.MartinhoFernandes i misclicked
you can substitute a function body that's an expression into another expression, and you can substitute a function body that's expressions and statements into another that's expressions and statements.
user1804599
43 secs ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Pinging random loungizens with random snippets of code is not acceptable.
14:49
@DeadMG And if you do that in C++ you break things.
itt ref transparency is hard
@RohanVerma have you tried using a stack? :p
Even if you stick to only expressions. You don't have to make it complicated.
ya i used a stack
Have you tried not posting here
14:50
want the code for the stack?
> member for 2 years, 11 months
How old were you when you created the account, 9?
user1804599
@Griwes Member of Earth.
@RohanVerma uh, I'm good...I already have one :s
Or just 8?
@RohanVerma, Stop.
user1804599
14:51
You're not even a help vampire.
Oh man.
He is so clueless.
user1804599
You're a help zombie.
is there some link about etiquette here?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Expressions only is a meaningless comparison, since the language is clearly designed to be controlled by statements.
user1804599
Apr 23 at 16:38, by Cat Plus Plus
New here? Read The Law.
14:52
@RohanVerma Obvious troll is obvious.
@DeadMG That is the point.
what, that the comparison is meaningless?
Declarative programming is not "controlled" by statements.
statements are declarations too.
well, not all of them, I guess.
Xeo
Xeo
14:53
uhm
but parameters certainly are.
Xeo
Xeo
The "declarative" in "declarative programming" has nothing to do with "declarations" in C++ or the likes
Declarative is as much about declarations as functional is about functions
2
user1804599
20 mins ago, by rightfold
"This is that" vs "to do this, do that."
14:56
@codinghorror It is basically a Q&A site. Sometimes some good questions get closed down, but it mostly works. You should try it.
Awesome reply
I wouldn't put it like that.
I would never say "You should try it".
Lol.
The context made this a funny reply.
user1804599
AAaarrgh nooo.
@sehe It'd be interesting to see how long Jeff could keep him going by playing dumb.
Cruel, but interesting.
user1804599
15:01
We use imperative mood for all butans in the software, except for this one butan I found that uses an infinitive form. :<
Xeo
Xeo
Change it?
Change it to declarative mood.
user1804599
Sure, but these things make me cringe nonetheless.
the word imperative always makes the think of Roman imperialism
user1804599
int x = MMCLXIV; // imperative programming
15:06
when is roman numeral support coming to C++?
user1804599
Right now with UDLs!
JBL
JBL
Good afternoon!
@ÓlafurWaage Always reminds me of the Imperator Angelfish.
neato
@rightfold romans had no support for negative numbers, so it's unsigned int
also no zero support
user1804599
MMCLXIV - MMCLXIV
15:07
also 3888 is the max, unless you start using the top line thingy
user1804599
LaTeX-to-C++.
Or go Medieval on it.
user1804599
LaTeX-to-SQL.
I have no idea how you can have math without zero
MMMMCCCCXXXXIIII
15:08
It does not compute
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus The SUM of no numbers is NULL! Who needs zero!
> A hackable text editor for the 21st Century
> Download For Mac
Or go French Medieval on it.
@CatPlusPlus does not compile on fedora
15:10
IVXXM = "quatre-vingts mille" = four twenties thousand = 80000.
tried for about 30 minutes, got some strange node errors, left it at that
user1804599
@ÓlafurWaage I'm going to release a distro named Kerchief.
(Not making this up; someone at some point in History did use that)
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Crazy Frenchman
yay for Arabic numerals.
15:11
in denmark 21 is spoken as "one and twenty"
user1804599
Same here. :D
what country
user1804599
And AFAIK in German too.
user1804599
@ÓlafurWaage Netherlands.
15:12
Why is everyone copying Emacs when it comes to key bindings and ignoring modality and composability
21st century my ass
user1804599
EINUNDZWANZIG
any swede frequent this channel?
EINUNDSCHWANZIG
@CatPlusPlus Because modality is evil.
user1804599
@ÓlafurWaage @JohanLarsson is sometimes here.
15:13
ty
Norwegian?
Modality is what saves your fingers
@sehe Like this 1̨ ?
(That's a 1 with a combining ogonek)
unicode alert
user1804599
I've used Sublime Text for a year now after a year of Vim and I don't miss modality at all.
15:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes lel
user1804599
And recently Emacs and IntelliJ. Works fine.
kdevelop here
@rightfold I have used Sublime Text for a few months (until they killed it with ST3) and I don't miss mediocrity at all
ooooooooooo
Lone wolf. I believe it has KatePart's Vi bindings, right. Those are pretty spartan for me
Also my eyes are shit
@sehe yup, i can be a mini vim geek while using all my fancy ide things
15:16
@ÓlafurWaage yeah, mostly lurking. There are two other Swedes who are semi regs, CaptainGiraffe & Filip Rosen
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Maybe you should wear two monocles then.
Alter Schweder!
I'll have to wear glasses inside soon
Sucks to be me
@JohanLarsson I'm moving to malmö this summer, just wanted to see if there were any there
Xeo
Xeo
Glasses are cool
15:16
@sehe Not that lone, no.
user1804599
Have your eyes lasered.
And risk going blind yeah no thanks
@ÓlafurWaage ok I live in the north
that reminds me
@JohanLarsson kk
15:17
DWP haven't sent me anything for a while
kinda worried.
@Griwes Thanks for confirming it :)
WGP.
District Welfare People ?
Department of Work and Pensions.
So close
Drugs, wombats and power
they should have messaged me complaining that I didn't send in a new medical certificate
15:19
How do you post pictures in your chat post like that?
I'm a wizard
Speaking of some funny stuff may the 6 was revenge of the sixth. oh no! lol
he's a wizard, motherfucker.
@melak47 Are you secretly a sith lord? walks back slowly watching for a lightsaber to be used on me
may the 4th, revenge of the 5th, the 6th strikes back, the phantom 7th
15:23
Return of the January.
no pls. I don't like the cold.
@ÓlafurWaage thanks for the correction
@melak47 Winter is not coming.
I just got why May 4th was Star Wars day.
15:25
woosh?
@melak47 i.imgur.com/E6qyZGN.jpg I don't like the cold as well.
@Jefffrey its may the "4" be with you insead of force.
instead
because some people are just too dumb to let it go?
clearly we need to devote an ENTIRE DAY to a shitty film franchise.
IM SMARTZ RITE?
THX was developed because of star wars so its not shitty.
15:26
Are there smaller Slowpokes?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Make one.
irrelevant
I'm not a Slowpoke male.
The SLOWPOKE (acronym for Safe LOW-POwer Kritical Experiment) is a low-energy, tank-in-pool type nuclear research reactor designed by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) in the late 1960s. John W. Hilborn (now retired from AECL) is the scientist most closely associated with its design. It is beryllium-reflected with a very low critical mass but provides neutron fluxes higher than available from a small particle accelerator or other radioactive sources. Basic design The SLOWPOKE-2 uses 93% (originally) enriched uranium in the form of 28% uranium-aluminum alloy with aluminum cladding....
And neither a Slowpoke female for that matter.
15:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes A quick google search only revealed bigger Slowpokes.
Do Pokémon even reproduce sexually?
I'm sure we can find some Redditors who want to have sex with Pokemon.
and ponies
@DeadMG And trees and horses, but they can't reproduce.
@ÓlafurWaage Those were already found.
@R.MartinhoFernandes because it's a kids game, it's always explained as "we don't know how this happened, but here's an egg"
@R.MartinhoFernandes They lay eggs.
> Pokémon Eggs are produced by breeding two Pokémon of a compatible Egg Group and opposite gender together and will contain, by default, the lowest species in the evolutionary line of the mother.
Which makes for some weird shit.
@EtiennedeMartel That doesn't say anything about it.
So, you put two Pokémons of the same group together, you wait, and an egg appears.
The lack of details is probably for kid friendliness.
I mean, it's not that much more complex than the "flowers and bees" analogy.
15:42
@AlexM. Are you really still going on about this? I removed a long, fairly inappropriate rant from mostly-you about some relationship problems you had / thought you might have / whatever who cares it wasn't game dev and reminded y'all that the room was called "Game Development" and not "Alex's teenage angst".
ALL of the problems that followed were caused by your inability to take what should have been a fairly broad hint.
If you want your suspension lifted, then man up and talk about it with the game dev mods. Everyone else involved in this is long ago sick of your pointless drama.
Quick, hide the Pokémon eggs.
Anyone know how to answer this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/23500701/…. As far as may the 4, I think its a pun and that's star wars fans took ahold of it. I mostly like the word play but I do not throw a party over it. THX was developed after star wars episode 4: A New Hope to help with the problem of theater's not having quality sound or video(thx.com/about-us/the-thx-story).
@Shog9 Your rant sounds kinda drama-ish.
pokemon and star wars, is this high school again?
@Griwes and angsty
15:47
@Shog9 Yes, definitely.
Shog has never been to show any emotion
@EtiennedeMartel So you need a male and a female?
Xeo
Xeo
Or a Ditto
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's revolutionary, isn't it?
@jeffery Yes, I can downvote that for you.
hahahaha
wow
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animal_names is 60,815 bytes long and has citation warnings on it, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pokemon is 195,563 bytes long and in good standing.
The wiki article about lightsabre combat is longer than the article about modern warfare
That's because "modern warfare" should redirect there :)
@sehe I'd star you but it doesn't look well without the cited message :(
@ÓlafurWaage lightsab*er*
user1804599
15:56
Nooo a mod ;_;
user1804599
inb4 I get banned because of my avatar.
@Griwes rgr
Why would they ban Obama?
Xeo
Xeo
alright, I added a new feature, unbroke the stuff that broke while adding that feature and refactoring some related feature, and everything works as expected (for now). T'is a good time to go home.
user1804599
16:01
@Xeo Just make sure you don’t deploy before going home.
Xeo
Xeo
lol, as if
user1804599
Never deploy except when it’s Monday morning.
Xeo
Xeo
checking in directly before going home is the worst idea ever.
alias yolo='git commit -am "DEAL WITH IT" && git push -f origin master'
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of the same egg group, yes.
user1804599
16:03
@ÓlafurWaage alias yolo='ssh root@production rm -rf --no-preserve-root /'
7
@ÓlafurWaage Geeks have more time to spend on writing Wikipedia articles.
user1804599
Time to upgrade Erlang.
user1804599
MAPS FINALLY
oooh, even faster internet is here, and is indeed even faster :D
user1804599
Fuck lists of pairs.
16:05
and cheaper too
@rightfold oooh fancy
though, is there not a module for map the abstract that shit for you?
user1804599
There is dict and orddict, but they suck.
aye, that they do
user1804599
No reasonable construction syntax and pattern matching, for example.
user1804599
And you cannot use them as keys of other dicts or compare them with operators.
Maps aren't finished yet
user1804599
16:11
And there’s records but they’re even worse than using char* in C and calculating offsets using macros as a substitute for structs.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus I know (the change log says “experimental”), but at least it’s fun they’re already available.
user1804599
Not using them in production anyway.
user1804599
One limitation I found today when playing with them was that you cannot use variables as keys.
user1804599
You need to use maps:put for that. But they’re working on it.
user1804599
Also NAMED FUNS FINALLY SCREW FIXED POINT COMBINATORS.
16:18
@ÓlafurWaage Meh, plagiariasing John Cage.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I do that on a daily basis. With quite accuracy actually, some parts better than others though
16:30
@ÓlafurWaage I don't plagiarize, I remix it instead. I'm pretty proud of my extended version.
> Eric Lippert: any question of the form “why is the world not the way I want it to be?” is vague. The world isn’t the way you want it to be because you didn’t implement the world; someone else did and if you want to know why they made the choices they did, you’ll have to ask them.
4
or send a pull request
here is my input to your compiler language design chat. i.imgur.com/GJ6YdK4.png
16:47
world/world featreq fix the stupid in people

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