@Rapptz what? it costs X to commit to a print run... they are not sure if they will get a return for doing that... so they get people to commit to buying it, thus allowing them to do a print run only if it would be profitable
@Mikhail no other search engine has become a verb, I think it will stick around for some time. Lots of people 'hover' with all sorts of brands of vacuum cleaners.
What I meant is that the idea of an IO monad is of a "trapped" value that can't get out. If you really remove the monad interface then you can simply pattern match on the IO data constructor and use it just like any other non-opaque type.
@Jefffrey My side effects are also trapped in C++. Because, the whole program is in a monad (a PE monad, on my architecture). And the side effects only happen when the program is run
@CatPlusPlus No, it's trapped in the sense that you can't get (easily let's say, you probably can with some unsafe functions) the value out of an IO action.
@CatPlusPlus It really depends on the type of application and it's irrelevant anyway. Yes, applications that are naturally I/O bounded use a lot of IO.
> Now, while not giving a fuck may seem simple on the surface, it’s a whole new bag of burritos under the hood. I don’t even know what that sentence means, but I don’t give a fuck. A bag of burritos sounds awesome, so let’s just go with it.
@Rapptz Yeah. It's the UK. I think they're trolling the rest of the world to see when their former mandates overseas will send an intervention force to the motherland to sort out the malgovernment :)
@sehe lol, that dumb idea will not go ahead in the near future because 1) it's discriminatory - only benefits claimants would be banned. What about those wealthy people who don't have to work? Second, it's not practical, because there would be plenty of firthy dirty self employed people (i.e. builders) who pocket all the cash & claiming to not be working ...
@Xeo Yeah, and it's a bit silly. There's no std::move_if or std::move_transform. I think std::make_move_iterator is far more viable (although there we could have used concepts to overload std::move for iterators, so we could std::transform(std::move(beginit), std::move(endit), ...)