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user1804599
23:00
I might go to a Perl meeting in Amsterdam.
Perl 6 is nice.
@Jefffrey you're not my friend anymore
@BartekBanachewicz Dude, Perl 6 is not Perl at all.
@Columbo Oh. I forgot it sucks when things mean things
user1804599
@Jefffrey Yes.
23:02
@BartekBanachewicz It even supports static typing.
@sehe Read my fucking next message
@BartekBanachewicz #lookMaNoLoops
@Jefffrey I am pretty sure I still don't want to learn it
@Columbo Yes sir!
@Jefffrey you mean those poor man's static annotations
let's make a deal
23:02
Don't make me write Perl 6, please.
don't have to
I can try that fucking thing
I had enough with languages that match m/^Perl/.
if I endure half an hour without flipping the table I won't say anything bad about Perl 6
if I don't you're sending a bottle of wine to me
I'm too fond of local Italian wine
23:04
So, what do I win if I win?
me not talking about P6? :D
okay, I can send you something too
What's the estimated cost of sending a bottle of wine from here to there?
probably around €10
So, more than a good bottle of wine.
23:05
See. Causing revolution on YT. Non-lame comments. Thoughtful, welcoming responses. Cats And Dogs Living Together!
@sehe What's up with that right bar?
@Jefffrey Yeah dunno. Ask @Mysticial
@Jefffrey New Youtube captcha.
What the hell is that.
@sehe That is pretty sweet piping.
23:07
@sehe Did you censure the suggestions?
@Nican Yeah. Boost ICL rocks. Quietly
@Jefffrey You're too smart
I'm pretty sure the first video is "How to kiss"
I thought no one would notice
@Jefffrey ssssh!
user1804599
Isn't it just beautiful?
user1804599
> 1 xx 10 Z+< 1..*
2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024
23:07
WTF
The sixth is probably some One Direction song
user1804599
+< is bitshift, Z is zip, xx is repeat.
user1804599
Z defaults to , operator but you can apply it to different operators like +< and +.
Zip your dipshit lip, repeat.
BAM
@рытфолд Is this Perl 6?
23:10
Does it smell of poo?
Does it kill small furry animals?
If so, then: yes, this is Perl Sex
user1804599
> map * ** 2, (1, 2, 4 ... 64)
1 4 16 64 256 1024 4096
user1804599
@Jefffrey Yup. :3
@рытфолд A lot saner
Ok, @BartekBanachewicz, deal is off.
user1804599
So many ways to do it!
user1804599
23:10
> say 1 <<+<<< (^10)
1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512
user1804599
No idea how this works, but often when you paste an example on #perl6 people start posting thousands of alternative ways to do the same thing.
@рытфолд do you use homebrew or macports?
user1804599
Homebrew.
user1804599
Works fine for me.
23:12
hm, I use both
but homebrew is pretty good recently
user1804599
@sehe but different
user1804599
I like 1 xx 10 Z+< 1..* the best.
Man spends life purging Wikipedia of one single grammatical error. Fascinating backstory. https://medium.com/backchannel/meet-the-ultimate-wikignome-10508842caad
Hey, an interview with LightnessRunsOnCarbonicAcid?
user1804599
I wonder if I can make it infinite.
@рытфолд Well duh
user1804599
23:14
Ah.
user1804599
> 1 xx * Z+< 1..*
2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024 2048 4096 8192 16384 32768 65536 131072 262144 524288 1048576 2097152 4194304 8388608 16777216 33554432 67108864 134217728 268435456 536870912 1073741824 ...
@рытфолд It would be mighty braindead inconsistent if map * ** 2, (1..*) didn't work as well
Or similar. I didn't do the intro course
user1804599
Also works.
inb4 puns
1 min ago, by рытфолд
I wonder if I can make it infinite.
?
user1804599
The other algorithm.
user1804599
23:16
Yours does this:
user1804599
> map * ** 2, (1..*)
1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81 ...
user1804599
> map 2 ** *, (1..*)
2 4 8 16 32 64 128 ...
user1804599
Infinite lists are great.
user1804599
> (1 xx * Z+< 0..*) Z== (map 2 ** *, (0..*))
True True True True True True True True True ...
23:21
I have an infinite list of things that are great (my ∞⋙ your ∞)
user1804599
@StackedCrooked I clicked your link and had the urge to post it here, just to find I already got it from here.
That never happened to anyone in the lounge
user1804599
@sehe the shortest one:
user1804599
> 1, 2, 4 ... *
1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 ...
23:23
Wait. Why would they special case inductive relations like that
I though you hated special casing
user1804599
It's not a special case.
(though this sure reads pretty nifty)
user1804599
It's the job of the ... operator.
user1804599
It does geometric sequences.
@рытфолд The question begged, of course is "what is?!"
@рытфолд mmm. If they defined it rigorously - like that... might be less surprising
user1804599
23:25
It finds the factor and then continues the sequence.
Otherwise, there's just too many different relations that could be induced. And then you get "partial ordering" for sequence inductions ... :)
user1804599
They're also working on lexically-scoped Perl 5 embedding.
user1804599
So you can say foo(); { use v5; … { use v6; … }; … }; ….
user1804599
@ScottW set allow-origin header on the different server's response to the domain name of the app server.
user1804599
You need to be able to specify which response headers it sends.
23:27
Would be so WIN if it weren't such an oxymoron: polite PHP
user1804599
@ScottW Maybe you can try Flash.
user1804599
Or contact the webmaster.
user1804599
@sehe You can do that in Perl 6.
user1804599
You can specify a sublanguage named would_you_mind that parses that until the second closing brace.
-5
Q: Moving learning from VB to C++?

LordOfDonkeysI have been learning Visual Basic 2010 Express in school for a good few months now. I have learnt it very well and am quite good with it. I also use Visual Basic 2013 at home for my own personal uses as they are quite similar. But I hear that C#/C++ are more widely used in practical applications ...

23:29
@рытфолд ... you can do something else with Perl 6
user1804599
And executes it as try { … CATCH { … } }!
@ScottW *cis
user1804599
@ScottW disable cross domain policy.
user1804599
You can do that with a Chrome flag if I'm not mistaken.
user1804599
Beware of security issues if you use the browser for anything else.
user1804599
23:30
Yes it's completely client-side.
Ell
Ell
Evening chaps
@ScottW can't you proxy somehow?
Oh there you go
In any group of n people the chance that at least 50% of the population hates combinatorics can be expressed as k-over-n where k is the blabla bla bla
user1804599
> @array »+=» 42; # add 42 to each element
user1804599
Whoooo shiny.
23:35
@рытфолд How do you type »?
Shitty to type those guillemets o.O
@wilx inb5 FAIL at accentuating without markdown
user1804599
You can also use >> instead of ».
WAT
So >>+=>> Weird.
He's pulling our leg.
He's pulling our leg.
He's pulling our leg.
He's pulling our leg.

He's pulling our leg.
Not convinved.
He's pulling our leg.
He's pulling our leg.
23:36
@sehe I suspect that's Perl 6.
AAAAARAG MAKE IT STOP
user1804599
@wilx ⇧⌥\
user1804599
« is ⌥\
I mean. The amount of CRUFT is so stupendously high that it really makes up for all the nice features that the sane people have managed to slip into Perl 6
"Suppose that we wish to form strings of `p` coloured beads each, and that we have on hand enough beads to permit unlimited use of each of the `n` colors. How many different strings can we form?"

I just....ahh, fuck these pedagogic teaching methods
23:37
Use the hammer
user1804599
> my @xs = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5;
1 2 3 4 5
> @xs >>~=>> 'a';
1a 2a 3a 4a 5a
> @xs
1a 2a 3a 4a 5a
user1804599
Yup, >> works.
@рытфолд TIL
what in the fresh hell is ">>~=>>"
user1804599
~= is concatenate–assign.
user1804599
23:38
~ is concatenation.
1
Q: Do all threads in boost::thread_group share the same thread with respect to boost::recursive_mutex

Jason HarrisonI suspect that based on the behavior of my code that if I have a boost::thread_group accessing an object protected by a boost::recursive_mutex that the mutex does not prevent threads from within the group from simultaneously entering the protected area. This is confusing because I see all of the...

Wha
> Software Engineer with over 14 years experience creating novel image processing, computer graphics, and computer animation softwa...
That's the good old "14 years of experience" -> experienced the same noob year 14 times
user1804599
> (1, 2, 3, 4) <<=>>> (5, 6)
1 => 5 2 => 6 3 => 5 4 => 6
user1804599
Extremely interesting.
I must admit, in this area, Perl 6 has interesting innovations
And it relates to the history of Perl too.
Kudos for that.
im guessing perl isn't the most readable langauge
user1804599
23:42
Static typing too:
user1804599
> sub f(Int $x) { }; sub g(Str $x) { f($x) }
===SORRY!=== Error while compiling <unknown file>
Calling 'f' will never work with argument types (Str)
    Expected: :(Int $x)
@Pris Ordinary Perl 5 is OK. You cannot consider Perl golfing code as normal.
> ===SORRY!===
can you say... dodgy
user1804599
> sub SORRY { }
sub SORRY () { #`(Sub|140713011367008) ... }
> 'a' ===SORRY!=== 'b'
True
23:43
@DonLarynx fail
@рытфолд Looks all leftfold for me. Perl is, hmm meh.
user1804599
Fun-fact: !== and != are the same. You can prefix any Boolean operator with ! to negate its result.
@рытфолд Perl: The only language that compiles it's own error messages.
coöperative
@рытфолд And you can suffix it with arbitrary streams of UNICODE codepoints to achieve maximum effect
@Pris I was in that kind of mood (you have to be, to answer such a question)
23:46
moöd
user1804599
@sehe Unicode? You can use arbitrary brackets as comment delimiters!
user1804599
> #`[ a b c ] say 'hi'
hi
> #`( a b c ) say 'hi'
hi
> #`『 a b c 』say 'hi'
hi
@рытфолд lol, the Japanese must be exalted. :)
@рытфолд This will appease the grumpy old nerd-commentors that were slowly radicalizing in their basements
@sehe What is that?
Man, I should really try it. I just need something reasonable to code in it.
@VictorLopez Good morning
user1804599
Also interesting, is the sine of any of these values greater than 0.5? What about all of them?
user1804599
> @xs = 1..10; so sin(any(@xs)) > 0.5
True
> @xs = 1..10; so sin(all(@xs)) > 0.5
False
What is that language that you're coding in?
user1804599
23:50
Perl 6!
He's not coding, he's wanking. But it's alright. Somebody has got to do it.
Imagine the tears if no one used Perl 6
user1804599
January has just ended and I've already been learning a lot about two programming languages I've never used before.
@VictorLopez Questionable, if perl deserves to be called a "programming language".
user1804599
OMG PERL
user1804599
BEAUTIFUL SIGILS
23:52
@πάνταῥεῖ Wasn't it designed only for ASCII art?
user1804599
I still wanna learn more about Perl 5.
@VictorLopez Glorified, and later gnarly text processing from it's beginnings IMHO:
Perl is a family of high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming languages. The languages in this family include Perl 5 and Perl 6. Though Perl is not officially an acronym, there are various backronyms in use, the most well-known being "Practical Extraction and Reporting Language". Perl was originally developed by Larry Wall in 1987 as a general-purpose Unix scripting language to make report processing easier. Since then, it has undergone many changes and revisions. The latest major stable revision of Perl 5 is 5.20.1, released in September 2014. Perl 6, which began as a redesign...
Even awk was (and is) a better tool for doing this.
ZQ
user1804599
AWK is far from as powerful as Perl.
user1804599
And you can trivially construct an AWK DSL in Perl.
user1804599
23:58
Which reminds me, I should implement an AWK-like DSL in Clojure.
@рытфолд But is well focussed, and understandable.
ooooh exciting
which can be looked upon as an unofficial sequel to arx fatalis

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