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07:45
-1
Q: How to extend a Singleton class

Amruta BorkarHow do I extends a Singleton class? I get error : Implicit super constructor Demo() is not visible. Must explicitly invoke another constructor. package demo; public class Demo { private static Demo instance; private Demo(){} public static Demo getInstance(){ if(instance ==null){ ...

 
5 hours later…
12:47
Please enter C declarations like int x, without the semicolon.
> int a
Int
> int*b
Pointer(Int)
> int*c[7]
Array(7,Pointer(Int))
> int(*d)[7]
Pointer(Array(7,Int))
@rightfold Oh yeah! The solution was simple; adding a level of indirection :) Instead of threading types through the parser, I now thread type constructors through the parser:
type TypeConstructor = Type => Type

val id: TypeConstructor = t => t

def parse(input: String) = parseAll(declaration, input) match {
  case NoSuccess(msg, next) => Left(msg)
  case Success(type_ ~ typeConstructor, _) => Right(typeConstructor(type_))
}

def declaration: Parser[Type ~ TypeConstructor] = typeSpecifier ~ declarator

def typeSpecifier: Parser[Type] = literal("int") ^^^ types.Int

def declarator: Parser[TypeConstructor] = rep(literal("*")) ~ directDeclarator ^^ {
  case stars ~ base => stars.foldLeft(base)((b, s) => (t: Type) => b(types.Pointer(t)))
...But I'm pretty sure there must be a simpler solution :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow There is: use an existing library.
But how do they do it?
user1804599
Years of experience.
Maybe it's easier outside of the straight-jacket of a parser combinator library? Just set some global variables or whatnot.
user1804599
I do not know.
12:54
I could dump the code on codereview and ask... but I don't think anybody would be willing to read it :)
user1804599
What is ~?
Sequential parser combinator. a~b first parses a and then b.
user1804599
OIC.
user1804599
Y u no type inference.
Because I want other people to be able to read signatures without looking at the implementation.
"Other people" including me next week.
$ ls
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$1.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$atom$1.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$atom$2$$anonfun$apply$8.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$atom$2$$anonfun$apply$9.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$atom$2.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$declaration$1.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$declarator$1.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$declarator$2.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$declarator$3$$anonfun$apply$1$$anonfun$apply$2.class
CimplifiedSyntax$$anonfun$declarator$3$$anonfun$apply$1.class
lol Scala's implementation of lambdas.
It will get a lot better when they support Java 8 bytecode.
user1804599
13:11
Hmm.
user1804599
Can’t they just use static inner classes?
They also get their own .class file. Or what do you mean exactly?
user1804599
Oh, I see.
As I understand it, Java 8 creates classes for lambdas on the fly.
user1804599
Oh, I see.
13:15
@user3619972 Welcome to the Thunderdome.
user1804599
lol legal disclaimer slide
user1804599
Lemme guess: removeIf is impure. :L
@rightfold correct
user1804599
Java 8 also sucks.
But you can also use .stream().filter if you want pure.
@rightfold On a scale from 0 to 10, how much does Java suck in each version?
user1804599
13:24
map (const 10) versions
13:40
@rightfold And how about other languages that run on the JVM?
user1804599
Depends on the language.
user1804599
Scala, for example, is like 2/10.
What what exactly sucks about Scala?
user1804599
List(1, 2, 3).toSet() returns a Boolean.
user1804599
Well, just the whole parameter list and calling with/without parameter lists thing.
13:46
@rightfold What does () mean on a set?
user1804599
It calls apply with () as argument on the set.
user1804599
And since it is Set[Int], it casts it to Set[Any].
user1804599
Then apply returns false because the set does not contain ().
Why does it call apply with ()? Wouldn't that be toSet(())?
user1804599
Because toSet has no parameter lists.
user1804599
13:49
The rules are as follows:
user1804599
0 parameter lists => can be called only without argument lists
1 parameter list => if empty, can be called without argument list or with empty argument list, otherwise can be called with an argument list
more parameter lists => can be called with many argument lists
user1804599
In the 0 case, adding () means “call the result of this with () as argument.”
user1804599
And this is what you get when you take inspiration from Ruby.
user1804599
HAVE ONE AND ONLY ONE SYNTAX FOR CALLING AND STICK TO IT DO NOT ALLOW BOTH CALLING WITH AND WITHOUT PARENTHESES FOR FUCK’S SAKE
@rightfold You mean like Java does it? ;)
user1804599
13:54
Yes. That works fine.
love this guy
 
7 hours later…
20:34
Please enter C declarations like int x, without the semicolon.
> int f(double)
Function(Double) -> Int
> void (*f(void(*)()))()
Function(Pointer(Function() -> Void)) -> Pointer(Function() -> Void)
@rightfold Yay, parsing function declarations works as well now :)
user1804599
Hurray!
user1804599
Do you have a hard test case for complicated declarations?
user1804599
Oh it works now, nevermind.
Involving arrays, pointers and functions?
Where is this chat that you wrote, can I test it?
user1804599
20:36
@FredOverflow const int volatile (*volatile bar const)[64]
const and volatile are not supported yet :(
> int(*bar)[64]
Pointer(Array(64,Int))
user1804599
@FredOverflow chat.rightfold.org
user1804599
> int a[sizeof(double)]
Array(8,Int)
:)
user1804599
Nice. :3
user1804599
20:45
Can I have negative-size arrays as well?
How would you compute a negative size? You can only use integers and sizeof expressions :)
Have you received my QQQ message in your chat? I don't see anything anymore. Too many messages onscreen maybe?
Or has Erlang crashed? :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow No, I shut it down.
user1804599
@FredOverflow If you sent an invalid message then your process would have crashed.
user1804599
But mine wouldn’t have crashed, and I could still chat.
user1804599
Every client has two processes; one that does WebSocket stuff and parsing and generating client messages, and one process that keeps a finite state machine of authenticated and unauthenticated states with authenticate, send_message and join_room events.
user1804599
20:50
There is one authentication process which does authentication and one coordination process that does the message distribution.
user1804599
Well, and one process that listens for WebSocket connections and spawns WebSocket handlers, but that’s from a WebSocket library.
user1804599
And then the usual Erlang system processes for I/O and cryptography etc.
You sound like a web programmer.
user1804599
Why?
Because I understand almost nothing of what you just said :)
user1804599
20:52
:D
user1804599
In Erlang you spawn processes for everything so that you can write bad code and still have a robust system.
user1804599
Bad code crashes, and the supervisor will restart it.
WebSocket, client, message, process, authenticate...
user1804599
Other processes won’t be affected.
Is that really the motivation behind Erlang? Bad code?
user1804599
20:53
Nah. :P
Anyway, gotta brush my teeth, will be gone some time...
user1804599
But for example: I don’t have any code for handling invalid packets from the client. I just crash (because of pattern match failure) the process that handles the client and the socket will automatically disconnect with it.
user1804599
This is a pattern you see in Erlang code a lot. Invalid input means crash, because who cares, really.
user1804599
Huge separation between non-error handling logic and error handling logic.
22:40
Coplien said Java is the only programming language among the mainstream languages where it's not possible to do object oriented programming.
It was somewhere in the first 15 minutes.
user1804599
room topic changed to Java Sucks: If you work at Oracle, I bet you have to wear a suet. [boilerplate] [checked-exceptions] [covariant-arrays] [design-patterns] [erased-generics] [inheritance-hierarchies] [java] [singleton]
23:17
If you hate Java you hate OOP
user1804599
23:55
@BDillan That’s like saying “if you hate bicycles you hate transportation.”

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