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15:00
@Jefffrey we're only talking about interfaces, I thought.
I have a logging routine and what it wants is a sink
of course Writer might not be greatest example of a context in the world, but it is one.
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah? If you are going to write to a file, that's... part of the interface?
@Jefffrey If you're a logging routine, you shouldn't be concerned with where the log ends up
that's why you go through that "context interface"
which is what a monad family is, incidentally
There's a big difference between "this logger won't create side effects" and "this logger will write to a file".
15:03
@Jefffrey yes, but not from the perspective of the call site of a logging routine
Yes?
Because if the logging routing calls the logger that does side effect, it is doing side effects itself and that should be reflected in its own type?
@Jefffrey that's like the basic principle of modularity. Each part of code should be concerned with the minimal amount of information it needs.
@Jefffrey What is it? How can the program tell?
Even a C++ program has no way of telling if std::ofstream("path/to/file") << "foo" << std::flush; actually wrote something somewhere.
@R.MartinhoFernandes awesome, will do. I just removed the need of over-aligning everything by fixing how any allocates/deallocates memory (all any objects are still over-aligned, but that is a good enough time invested/result ratio), if you want I can post the gist somewhere.
With a C++ program there's no way of telling anything, so I'm not sure what you are talking about there.
15:05
does anyone know a community based music/song identification platform? :P
@BartekBanachewicz This has absolutely nothing to di with modularity.
Ell
Ell
@Gizmo musicbrainz
@Ell Will check it out, thanks :D
Ell
Ell
it's an online database, but I'm p sure they have an api or library
@Jefffrey A C++ program can tell if x = 0; actually set x to zero (if(x == 0) while(true);).
15:06
@Jefffrey well, it does. It's the outer context that has to provide the "backend" for the context. That's the beatury of monad families; you can express expectations about contexts without tying yourself to one
(Replace while(true) with something suitable that actually terminates or not)
@Ell doesn't it have something like, you post a link or something or click links to help identify music? :P
because all the programs I have tried fail because of the noise in the clip
you can separate the parts basing on the actual context needs they have
You can for example have one logger frontend in MonadWriter, and two backends for it, one writing to file and one to console.
Ell
Ell
@Gizmo Maybe I'm misunderstanding
and see if it does what you want :P
@BartekBanachewicz Also yes, the logger interface says that some IO is going on because... some IO is going on, and it's part of the interface not the implementation.
Ell
Ell
15:08
it identifies song/album/artist/etc. from their database
Woah is this IO discussion still going on?
Why wouldn't it?
Ell
Ell
waf has nice output
@Jefffrey yes, but the code using that logger might be pure and might be specified without IO, despite the fact that a particular logger implementation uses IO and in the end the logger will be in IO
@BartekBanachewicz It can't be pure. That's the whole point.
15:09
I certainly can try that software (didn't try that one though, did try a few like Shazam, and uploading the clip to YouTube). But I'm really looking for a "stackexchange site where people can help each other recognise music" XD
@BartekBanachewicz That's because code with IO is still pure.
@Jefffrey Nothing against it, just surprised that it is still going on. I remember following it a week ago or something
@Jefffrey well, then you don't understand how monad families work.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh boi, again.
@Jefffrey I can write a MonadState x y operation that runs in a state backed by IORef
15:10
@BartekBanachewicz Possible, and that's also why I'm not talking about monad families: you are.
that doesn't mean that my operation isn't pure
@BartekBanachewicz You do realize that monad-families is just an implementation of transformers using a different set of extensions, right?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm kinda stretching the term to focus on MonadX classes. If that's incorrect/too far, I'll stop
but then I need another short term to say "Generic monad classes"
GMCs?
Ell
Ell
genetically modified crops :P
or maybe Transformer Monad Classes, TMCs
I like that.
15:12
Transformer Haskell Classes
So yeah, when you write against a TMC, you're writing code that's as pure as if it was written against a non-transformer context @Jefffrey
@Jefffrey I don't understand why you insist that IO behaves differently from the rest of the language.
I just realized that we are trying to do 2 opposite things: you are trying to embed IO things in pure code, I try to embed pure code in IO things.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It doesn't.
@Jefffrey no, that's false.
It's what IO is tagging that is unique.
15:13
I'm also embedding pure code in IO, but in a different way from you.
Ell
Ell
Man. I just downloaded 1.1GB in 3 minutes. What a world we live in today, eh?
@BartekBanachewicz Such as?
@Jefffrey How is it different from any other type constructor?
Most importantly, in a way that composes in an effectful contexts nicely
@R.MartinhoFernandes gist.github.com/gnzlbg/dcd7f2d7408e763bd416 In case you are interested.
15:14
Also give me 15 minutes that I go to the library.
@Jefffrey well, I code against TMCs
I was under impression you don't use them
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not. Who says it's different.
It's what IO represents, not what IO is.
BBL
@Ell lol what a crappy uplink
@Jefffrey I don't know what you think "unique" means.
@Mgetz It's not any more of an attack vector than HTTP request already is
If the server is malicious or compromised then the protocol used doesn't really matter
15:16
Is it weird to create a class solely to inherit from to gain friend-like access to something? Like is that a bad design pattern?
@CatPlusPlus yeah... right, I don't believe that because currently in HTTP it's up to the user agent to request more resources. If in HTTP/2 the server pushes a compromised resource and the UA begins parsing before request... I see exploits
Uh it's the same thing, client initiates the connection anyway
Pipelining has been in use for years also
Also long polling and WebSockets
It's exactly the same, only gets more efficient and with a better API
"Oh no, server can send me stuff" is uhhhh well yeah that's the point of the entire thing
5
From HTTP 0.9
Or whatever the first published version was
And browsers don't ask whether they can request attached content or not anyway (plus JavaScript)
And if you want to stop that then the steps are exactly the same in the new protocol
Now someone tell me why green paprika is so hard to fiiiiiiiiiind
Ell
Ell
cos it ain't a thing
@CatPlusPlus probably because nature doesn't like green
@CatPlusPlus I have to agree with cat here. Even if the server waits for a client to request data before sending it, the client doesn't have anything in the request to meaningfully evaluate whether the data it's going to receive in response is good, bad, or indifferent.
15:24
@Ell You're not a thing
Guess it's called pepper when it's whole
> There is really only one way to "perform" an I/O action: bind it to Main.main in your program. When your program is run, the I/O will be performed. It isn't possible to perform I/O from an arbitrary function, unless that function is itself in the IO monad and called at some point, directly or indirectly, from Main.main.
Ok MusicBrainz doesn't know what the music is too ;<
Any people here who listen to trance/techno and would be able to identify a piece of music ? :P
@CatPlusPlus 'green paprika' is a thing? I've only seen the red stuff.
ffs hackage is missing docs for GHC.IO
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus green bell peppers
It's a pepper
Ell
Ell
or just "green pepper"
Same thiiiiiiiing
Ell
Ell
15:28
paprika is a mixture of (dried) stuff
3 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Guess it's called pepper when it's whole
Not in my language so
Ell
Ell
f.e.
@Gizmo The very fact that somebody listens to trance/techno is a good indication that they don't know what music is. :-)
Ell
Ell
w.p.
@Gizmo I want to hear it anyway :P
But yeah, here as well the green ones seem to be rarer @CatPlusPlus
15:29
where the fuck is IO defined
It's State
ffs "import GHC.Types"
@JerryCoffin also how come? I listen to almost anything, from rock to (heavy) metal to classics to the more noisy ones like trance/techno/hardcore/drumstep/trap etc
there's no such file as Types.hs
15:31
I just listen to what my ears like
It's in ghc-prim
@Gizmo see the problem is that you think "drumstep" is a music genre :P
@CatPlusPlus is it different from base
Yes, that's why it's called ghc-prim, not base
15:32
ah there we go, thanks
@BartekBanachewicz because I don't care about genres / types, I just listen and enjoy ;)
oh look it's State
I already said that
@BartekBanachewicz It's isomorphic to ST RealWorld.
oh look you already mentioned it's State
15:32
@BartekBanachewicz State# is not State.
welp, wut is State#?
is this the magichash thing
It's a primitive. Ignore it.
Think of ST RealWorld.
user3010322
My homework solution is 30ish lines long.
user3010322
I made it 60 by inserting a giant rant about Java in the comments.
user3010322
Do you think my Professor will penalize me? .-.
15:34
@BartekBanachewicz stToIOand ioToST witness the isomorphism.
ST RealWorld has no hash types.
newtype IO a = IO (State# RealWorld -> (# State# RealWorld, a #))
stripping decls it's
@BartekBanachewicz TMCs are...?
State# RealWorld -> (# State# RealWorld, a #)
@Jefffrey The Monad* classes
23 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
or maybe Transformer Monad Classes, TMCs
Ell
Ell
15:35
@Gizmo flying lotus?
album 38 cartoons
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, what it represents is unique, at least in the standard library (base). Of course you can make it non-unique by creating another monad with the same properties.
Ell
Ell
track 14
that's what picard says :L
Oh hey, there's a new Nickleback album coming out.
but State X -> (State X, a) is just
State (State X) a, no? @R.MartinhoFernandes
Ell
Ell
@Gizmo but srsly this isn't music
it sounds like just a scene from a film
or do you mean just the song at the start?
15:37
@Jefffrey I guess that's where we disagree. I simply don't think it's useful to consider the separation at that level; that using in conversation doesn't really help to reason about Haskell programs. There.
Is ST a b ~ State (State a) b ? I don't think so
@Ell it is a scene but the music has to exist, movies just use ready music.. always. and if it's made for the movies, it's always released somewhere
Oh, wait, it's already out.
@BartekBanachewicz No, forget the hashes.
ST s a is a state thread.
@BartekBanachewicz No
Ell
Ell
15:37
there's a few seconds of the music
It's not very different from State.
Ell
Ell
do you know what the film is?
Shit I forgot why I decided not to use virtual inheritance in this code.
Probably because you hate yourself
@Cat @R.M but why is there the state over state with those hashes :S
I'm just curious
15:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ok, then. I do consider it extremely helpful to reason about programs.
well I'll ask on SO
@BartekBanachewicz It's all GHC primitives. You probably don't want to know.
@BartekBanachewicz It's a Core thing afair
Now I definitely hate myself for forgetting why I decided not to use virtual inheritance in this code.
It's actually 40% of the reason why Haskell is so appealing to me.
15:38
@Ell "Bella and the bulldogs" episode 6
yeah my sister was watching it and I heard cool music XD
Ell
Ell
lol
just look up the music for it
@Jefffrey Well, I find a lot more appeal in being able to reason without considering side-effects because they simply don't exist.
That begs the question as to why you don't think they exist.
@Ell I'm trying and trying, being creative with the search terms in google, but my luck is close to a nullptr and dereferencing it could cause the world to collapse
Probably something with them not being special or whatever.
15:41
@Jefffrey Because the language doesn't have them, and that's the level I find useful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes meh, that's a perfect Q for SO
> It's gone. What was wrong with this ad? a) Inappropriate; b) Irrelevant; c) Repetitive
I need d) it was an ad
Because 1 + 4 is probably doing side effects too right? Isn't it modifying some CPU register somewhere?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You don't consider writing to a file a side effect?
Haskell doesn't write to files.
Are you bragging because it's not the language but the OS that is writing to files?
15:43
Bragging?
It's that, isn't it?
Gosh, you're really bad at Hanlon's Razor.
writeFile writes to file
@Jefffrey It's GHC that happens to put the magic in RealWorld.
@R.MartinhoFernandes thanks
15:43
Programs don't care about the implementation of RealWorld, though.
type IO a = RealWorld -> (a, RealWorld)
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's irrelevant.
this makes it clearer
They don't need the magic.
The language doesn't have it.
I can create an Haskell program that writes to a file. That's what is relevant.
15:44
@Jefffrey but you don't because you're too obsessed with purity ha ha
@Jefffrey And it doesn't unless you use an implementation that puts magic there.
really though, robot is right in that language puts a firm barrier between the language itself and the implementation
Haskell programs warm boxes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And that will happen only when the IO action returned from writeFile is performed.
How that actually happens is irrelevant.
@Jefffrey Which only happens outside of main.
15:46
So? It's irrelevant. What is relevant is that you can write things that cause side effects.
I suppose Jeff that you should talk about Haskell less and write it more :P
And those things most of the times (if not always) have IO in their signature. They are tagged IO that is.
@Jefffrey You can do that without IO. The implementation can put magic anywhere.
(+) :: Int -> Int -> Int can write to a debug log.
@BartekBanachewicz Why? I love talking about Haskell much more than writing in that crap.
Ell
Ell
if the implementation chooses to do so
15:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes So? The point is that it doesn't, and decided to tag those actions with IO.
@Jefffrey Or it does.
I like to reason about Haskell programs, not GHC.
Do you seriously not see what I mean?
@Jefffrey Because all the talk becomes moot if you don't put it into action. I couldn't defend the language I don't believe in. I believe that haskell actually is a great thing to write in, not just conceptually think.
@BartekBanachewicz Exactly because of that.
@Gizmo Your ears don't like or dislike anything. All liking and disliking is done by the brain. Regardless of that, however, the mere fact that I like a sound doesn't make it music. I personally like the sound of a well-tuned race car, but if I ever claimed it was music, it was purely metaphorically.
15:49
That's why I write in it. And once you start writing in it, you want functionality and the whole talk changes tone
@R.MartinhoFernandes Funny, said by the only one here that mentioned GHC actual implementation to make whatever point.
@BartekBanachewicz If that happened for you it must happen to me too.
@Jefffrey I mention the implementation because I want to make clear which properties are provided by it and which properties are actually properties of the programs.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin The phrase "Music to my ears" comes to mind, though I'd probably be very concerned if you seriously called cars racing on a racetrack "A Beautiful Symphony with no equal." :P
BBL around 8pm
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'll ask you again. Do you seriously not see what I'm talking about?
Ell
Ell
15:50
bye braket
@Jefffrey Hate is waiting for you
@Jefffrey I'm not reasoning about any particular program. I'm discussing what IO is and isn't.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz ominous
Because I have stuff to study and I'd hate to waste time just because you want to be pedantic over something.
@ThePhD The same phrase occurred to me--but I think it's normally intended metaphorically.
15:52
I'm assuming you do know what I mean. So see you later folks.
@Jefffrey I already mentioned that I do and that I just don't find the idea useful.
At least not in the contexts you keep bringing it up.
user3010322
Java has a weird foreach loop. :o
user3010322
It's actually pretty similar to C++'s!
user3010322
for (BigInteger factor : factors) {
	System.out.printf( "%s ", factor.toString());
}
user3010322
Just missing the "var" or the "auto" that'd make it super deductible goodness.
user3010322
15:55
Does Java have a concept of "var" already?
No
It's called type inference btw
Ell
Ell
jefff is fiesty of late
user3010322
Awww.
user3010322
There's no var. ;~;
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Does "type deduction" also work? Or is that usually for a different context?
Ell
Ell
inference is what you do, deduction is how you do it vOv
the wolfram alpha website is so broken
maybe it's firefox.
@ThePhD Last time I saw someone propose it, it got shot down by the community because "why would you ever need that?"
It's like the Java community lives in a bubble where C# is taboo.
user3010322
@EtiennedeMartel The same thing is said about operator overloading, and now my BigInteger code looks like a pile of turd. ;~;
Every once in a while I'm reminded that Java doesn't support function/operator overloading and I cry imagining the pain I'll feel next year ;_;
Java supports function overloading.
16:03
oh it does?
yay
Well, it's a pretty fundamental concept.
i consider operator overloading a "pretty fundamental concept"
Ell
Ell
not operator overloading though
@Blob it's syntax sugar
(operator overloading)
@EtiennedeMartel Tell Rust guys that.
user3010322
Rust doesn't have function overloading?
16:05
@Griwes I think he meant that it is fundamental in Java.
Ell
Ell
rust has typeclasses doesn't it?
or concepts
Fucking empathy.
@Ell Exams.
Ell
Ell
@Jefffrey fair enough
I'm sorry, I know I'm being an ass.
I honestly do.
Ell
Ell
Nah you're not
Exam stress is hard
I'm struggling with running out of letters in my integrals atm :P
@Jefffrey when are your exams?
16:16
The couple I talked you guys about is fighting I think.
I feel awful and I don't know why.
Ell
Ell
empathy?
@Ell 23 is the last one
Ell
Ell
of this month?
Yeah
Ell
Ell
good luck :)
16:16
i would hope so
I wouldn't live for another month like this, I think.
Ell
Ell
Mine start mid june
end at the end of june
@Ell Yeah, but I should be happy about it.
Can't analize this right now.
I'll rationalize that later.
Ell
Ell
moreover, it doesn't matter
your exams are more important
user3010322
I wonder if it's Academic Dishonesty to host my homework solutions to my coding problems on Github.
Ell
Ell
16:22
somebody please write lounge<chat> already
I need mathjax in chat
user3010322
... I'll just make all the repos private.
user3010322
And un-private them after the homework due date.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD just license them
so that you have to get credit
that way anybody cheating is breaking license and you can sue 'em >:D
user3010322
Pffff.
Ell
Ell
and if they hand it in with credit to you then... well they'll fail presumably
16:24
@ThePhD When I was in university I wrote walkthroughs with full code for all the exercises in the OS classes, and made them publicly accessible.
Didn't feel dishonest at all.
user3010322
Well, you're a Robot, you don't have feelings!
user3010322
Silliness aside, I'll just make the repos public. COME AT ME, PROFESSOR.
OK, shopping done and it's nearly time for 'Design and Development of Three-Spool Turbofans' lecture at RR. Yes, of course it's a thinly-veiled excuse for a piss-up. An 'unlecture', I guess:)
Would you consider it dishonest to help out a classmate that asked you something?
user3010322
No, I do that all the time in the Lab sessions. I actually help the TA help people all through the lab, every Thursday.
16:26
Why is that less dishonest?
user3010322
I don't know; my words aren't easily copy-pastable?
The person who is handing in a copy of your solution is dishonest, not you. Also it's the prof / staff job to check for plagiarism. You might only run into a problem if yours and some douchebag's solution gets flagged for plagiarism - you'll have to prove that you did the original solution.
Ell
Ell
∫ln(2)²dx
@ThePhD Jokes apart, I have a lot of repect for TA's. They are usually willing to move meetings to, say, fast-food places:)
source: teaching assistant
16:29
@ThePhD You drop in occasional spelling/punctuation misteaks into you online copy?
user3010322
The revision history on Github helps me prove I was the first to do it and to have it in a place if the hand-crafted, primitive submission system of my Professor bites the dust.
user3010322
@MartinJames I'll just make it public and leave it up there, intact and all.
user3010322
I'll do it with all my solutions that have code... which will really only be 2/3 classes.
@ThePhD presuming your university doesn't issue a DMCA takedown first like the University of Illinois did recently
Also, the plagiarist is usually easily identified with very few questions ;-)
Ell
Ell
16:32
Who wants to help me with an integral :D
@Mgetz How the fuck do they issue a DMCA takedown for content I created?
Only the copyright holder can issue DMCA takedowns, no?
@R.MartinhoFernandes They claimed derivative work because the assignments on github contained code created by the professors (I personally think that's a horribly weak argument and would be destroyed in court)
but students don't retain lawyers
Ell
Ell
they should have got someone from the law department to defend them :P
there is a group of student lawyers somewhere that did something recently
user3010322
@Mgetz The good news is none of my assignments look like the originals because I sometimes do obtuse things with the code since I'm bored!
user3010322
And,there.
user3010322
16:47
Finished the assignment with a less than 24 hour turnaround, awww yeh.
due to weird problems, I'm going to rely on some symbol to mean "print to stdout"
suggestions? :D
moderately amusing
@JerryCoffin I love how it's the intersection of three things, and then you have a list of four.
@райтфолд ew
now i'm at the point where I add conditionals to my glorious language
help ;_;

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