What is the meaning of always-waffle-in-iceland. Is there some joke meaning. Like this is the lame joke tag? Otherwise, should I report the tags as nonconstructive???
but I had to stop because my function definition grammar, which was totally LALR(1), would be way too much to implement that way
just because bison is too stupid to know the difference between type_expression identifier(stuff) and type_expression identifier(some_kinda_similar_stuff)
@DeadMG That seems really cool. Usual solutions involve lots of generated code, or manual placement of attributes on languages that let you inspect those at runtime (like C#, and I think Java too).
something like factorial is direct tail recursion, something like BST is binary recursion, and something like iteration would be infinite, potentially, recursion
I also don't see how it would help
recursion isn't really something that I ever labelled as "re-usable", that's like trying to make having integers re-usable
it's a basic language feature and doesn't require special help to be useful or usable
The fib function is the normal Fibonacci thing, because it uses "basic recursion" (the fix thing, which is better called rec). The fib2 if Fibonacci with the result of every recursive invocation doubled (I think, it's getting late), because it uses the "weird recursion".
If you replace the doubling part with something that actually memoizes, you get something actually useful.
I could ask you to write it in a way that memoizes, but that would not be fair because I didn't want to do it either.
But [](int target) {if(cache.has(target) return target; else return cache.put(target, fact(target)); } does not work very well, because it doesn't use memoized intermediate results.
For that you need to pass the lambda to itself.
(Can you use this in a C++ lambda to refer to itself?)
Another difference is that you can't store [](int target) { return fact(target) * 2; } and reuse it for a weird Fibonacci generator. It only works for that one fact. weirdRec is not tied to any particular function, it's just the recursion pattern.
Here is the same code converted into boost::bind notice the y-combinator and it's application site in the main function. I hope this helps.
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <boost/bind.hpp>
#include <iostream>
// Y-combinator compatible factorial
int fact(boost::function...