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16:00
Mixing tabs and spaces sounds like trouble.
I'm just wondering if a source control that stores versions of an AST could be somehow more efficient or more clever than one storing text. The "semantics/presentation" separation can already be achieved today.
@BartekBanachewicz But then you're mixing tabs and spaces
@R.MartinhoFernandes what's the point of keeping the text-based representation, though?
@Mr.kbok No, you're not.
9 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@Jefffrey by using better visualization tools that can align automatically or don't need alignment at all
7 mins ago, by gha.st
@BartekBanachewicz It is human-readable without advanced tools. Unlike e.g. an XML representation of the underlying AST >.>
16:00
using tabs for indentation and spaces for alignment isn't mixing tabs and spaces
4
who'd want to use XML :p
JSON master race, amirite
@Puppy A binary format is even less readable, though.
wtf is xml and wtf is json
@BartekBanachewicz In the same file you are mixing tabs and spaces.
16:01
@BartekBanachewicz No.
@Jefffrey That is not the same thing.
@BartekBanachewicz What's the advantage of a binary format?
@Jefffrey i have spaces between words too
@Puppy Not the same thing as...?
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
way faster operation, parsing, whatever
16:01
actually mixing tabs and spaces.
@BartekBanachewicz [citation needed]
@Puppy There might be an english problem here. And it's probably my fault, given than English is your first language.
@Jefffrey It is. But even without spaces, tabs cause trouble all by themselves. Some tools interpret a tab as "N spaces". Others interpret them as "move to the next spot that's a multiple of N". That makes it essentially impossible to maintain decent formatting across different tools if you use tabs, even without spaces getting involved.
@BartekBanachewicz That would work if all editors your teams uses supported it
16:02
@gha.st nice one
@BartekBanachewicz I still think it isn't worth it ;D
@Mr.kbok supported waht?
@JerryCoffin Yup
@gha.st See, we can already handle that without sacrificing the ability to handle source code with the current ecosystem.
i changed to spaces (for Vim, at least) when github kept fucking up my alignment
16:03
6 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@R.MartinhoFernandes have you noticed the one message when I used the word "primitive"?
I'm an idealist
@Jefffrey Mixing tabs and spaces refers to using both for indentation. Using tabs to indent and spaces to align is (relatively) harmless and pretty much what you should do if you decide to use tabs.
@BartekBanachewicz Using both. In most editors editing such a file would result in an horrible mess.
@Puppy I see
@Mr.kbok That's why we use spaces everywhere.
obviously if you're using tabs that does not immediately ban spaces from anywhere in the file.
that would make many language constructs unusable.
16:04
@BartekBanachewicz Anyway, that's actually just a cached compilation step vOv.
how would you declare an int parameter in any C-derived language without a space between int and the name?
@Puppy But what if you are aligning 1 line in a 1 indented block with a line in a 2 indented block?
@Puppy With a tab. :P
@Puppy with a tab between?
ugh.
does anybody actually do that?
16:05
        int     x;
hehe
that would make every function like 10000 characters long.
those are spaces liar
@Jefffrey What situation do you even mean? I cannot figure out what you are positing here.
Let me make an example.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see the point of working with anything before that step except backwards compatibility of discussable gain
16:06
@BartekBanachewicz A semantic diff tool doesn't require any particular form of storage.
@BartekBanachewicz "discussable gain"?
You're nuts.
I hate you people. This debate killed my pizza.
Being able to use pretty much every single tool in existence is "discussable gain"?
the whole backwards compatibilty issue only arises because of all those tools use a broken (IMHO) representation
int main() {
<tab>int x; // something line 1
<wat here> // something line 2
}
change every single tool to use the new format and the problem disappears
3
16:07
tab.
yeah I'm reading that. I know how unrealistic that sounds. And I don't care.
Here's a friendly guide to getting a haircut in Hong Kong: 1. don't
@BartekBanachewicz I already said you were nuts. You don't need to convince me more.
@Puppy That wouldn't align // something line 2 to // something line 1 though
@Jefffrey as many tabs as you can, and spaces to fill the rest
16:08
@Blob Problem is that the number of spaces is dependent on the tab width.
@R.MartinhoFernandes add support as a separate module and deprecate the old one
phase out the textual representation over the years
@BartekBanachewicz For every tool out there, yes.
@BartekBanachewicz What for?
write a compat layer that renders to text
@Jefffrey No, it wouldn't. You would use a tab to indent it and then a space to align it.
Besides purely idealistic expectations.
16:09
@Blob Only as many tabs as you have indentation levels...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd PoC it first, I s'pose
You're asking for countless man-hours of effort in the name of some perceived purity.
1 min ago, by Jefffrey
@Blob Problem is that the number of spaces is dependent on the tab width.
@BartekBanachewicz Change all people to breath CO2 and prefer higher temperatures, and the whole problem with climate change disappears.
@Jefffrey this is a big issue
16:09
@JerryCoffin Yay!
@Jefffrey No it isn't.
@JerryCoffin So simple
within any company, it should be addressed by coding standards
you already used the same number of tabs on both lines, so they will have the same width.
@BartekBanachewicz That solution sounds akin to "there's no problem you cannot solve by finding the right person and shooting them": "there's no problem you cannot solve in IT by modifying every single program in existence".
16:10
hmpfh
let's start with VCS diffs
@R.MartinhoFernandes Halting problem.
Oh wait, I'm dum.
@Puppy Modify the input program to halt. Solved. :P
For meaningful diffs you need a differ that knows the structure of the language
@R.MartinhoFernandes Modification not always possible :P
16:11
Whether you need to parse X or XML representing X makes little difference
@CatPlusPlus But then you don't need to change the whole world!
@Puppy Right
@BartekBanachewicz Do you feel like actually measuring the performance/size impacts?
@Puppy Not necessarily. If tabs are rendered as "move to next multiple of N character cells", <space><tab> can be a different width from <tab><space>.
16:11
@BartekBanachewicz It's an important truism. One that you've not taken into account properly.
@gha.st first I'd need a working implementation.
It's not feasible on any level
You need a differ that knows the structure of the language. That's it.
You don't need to change everything else.
@BartekBanachewicz All we'd need as a starting point is clang-format with a setting that strips whitespace where possible and replaces all other instances to a single blank
@CatPlusPlus Essentially making text formats a pain
16:12
@JerryCoffin Which is the typical interpretation of a tab.
[text representation] ---parse--> [ast] ---> differ
                                        ---> visualizer
@MomotapaLimpopo Programming languages are not 'text'
oh my god you are actually discussing tabs vs spaces
@CatPlusPlus Their common diffable representation is
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, now note that the representation makes no difference because you can't skip the rest anyway
16:13
@ScarletAmaranth It's the first time!
@BartekBanachewicz [whatever representation] ---parse--> [ast] ---> differ
@MomotapaLimpopo That boils down to the differ still
@BartekBanachewicz Assuming you agree that variable names must be kept in the AST as well
Also Lisp already does what you want
@gha.st that's actually irrelevant because of things like AStyle
16:14
@CatPlusPlus That would imply the differ does not work on text itself
AStyle is dumb regex formatter
@MomotapaLimpopo Yes
user3010322
What if your AST comes from bytecode instead?
That's what you need to do for semantic diffs
user3010322
Doesn't that make the whole thing a bit useless?
16:15
What sits on disk has no relevance to what differ does
@ThePhD What if it doesn't? Who cares? It really doesn't change much in the differ. If anything at all.
I think I'm actually converting to tabs.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hm. You're right, I guess.
You're dead to me
user3010322
16:15
I was just thinking of things like variable names.
user3010322
That might not exist in some formats the AST might be generated from.
@ThePhD Of course everyone here is assuming a non-lossy AST. Only (some) whitespace is considered disposable.
If you're diffing a thing without variable names you won't have variable names yes
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, alrighty then!
16:17
The only problem I had with tabs is that of alignment. But now it's solved so they are on the same level. Except that tabs allows for setting preferences. So it has a small advantage over spaces.
@Jefffrey In some contexts the preferences are not settable. It's always a tradeoff.
lol @ the SO developer survey with 3 people from North Korea taking the test
Setting preferences is not desirable
@MomotapaLimpopo what? i thought there were 0
Just wondering if the whole thing might not fail horribly with C++, as (most) programs depend rather heavily on system headers which are not included in the repository - and yet an AST cannot be generated without knowing the contents of all included files (think #define BOOL int)
16:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, well I guess they should. Like on pastebin vs github.
@Blob It says 3
Fuck C++
@CatPlusPlus Why?
Surprisingly developers are 92.1% male
@Jefffrey He just finds himself irresistible ;)
16:19
Who would've thunk
I'm 100% goat
@Jefffrey don't ever use tabs with haskell though
@MomotapaLimpopo rightfold is a developer and rightfold is certainly not 92.1% male
I see no stats on PHP I am disappoint
@MomotapaLimpopo hm, i was looking at devs per 1000 people
16:20
Also some foul sickness is befalling me
Would be great to see if there's a correlation between PHP and mental disorders
@MomotapaLimpopo Not now. We can't handle "gender gap" and "tabs vs spaces" discussions at the same time.
Change PHP to programming and yes
@AlexM. Oh, "cuprum" seems to be only in Late Latin. Nevermind then.
@MomotapaLimpopo Add SQL to the mix
16:20
@Jefffrey Maybe tabs vs spaces actually means female vs male
@CatPlusPlus Well, it is hardly my fault if you fail a simple DC 15 fortitude throw...
#mindblown
@CatPlusPlus "being Cat"
> JavaScript remains the most-used programming language. Node.js and AngularJS are busting out.
dear lord
jabbascript
16:22
Oh there's a stat on tabs vs spaces there too
in other news
@MomotapaLimpopo that's what started this "discussion"
what statistics are you guys reading?
@Blob No way
1995's Star Wars: Dark Forces is great
16:23
We've gone full circle
TIL about the term "growth hacker". What is this, some programmer for plants?
2
Single line it.
Also no way Node.js pays more than C++
And now they calculate purchasing power in term of Big Macs you can buy
Why am I reading this
@MomotapaLimpopo "now"?
That actually makes sense
16:25
the Big Mac Index is old as fuck and used widely in economics
TIL Ukraine leads the development industry in terms of Big Mac purchasing power
we've been like taught about it in school
~the more you know~
> IX. Compensation by Stack Overflow Rep
lol
oh my god it is actually correlated
uguis tell me if I accidentally killed the chat btw
cicada you are half an hour late
damn, i need more rep
16:27
we had this exact same discussion 30 minutes ago
You guys were half an hour early
Nobody told me
As usual shall I say
are you saying that we should ping you every time there's a discussion?
Too bad they don't rank shitty questions by country of origin
@Jefffrey I was kidding
@MomotapaLimpopo Guess what country would win
@MomotapaLimpopo are you sure? we can do this for you if you want
16:29
@MomotapaLimpopo US and India will top that
lol guis
> V. Why Do You Answer?
> It feels good to help a programmer in need
@MomotapaLimpopo bullshit
IT FEELS GOOD TO SEE MY REP GET BUMPED
- It feels good for that number near my name to get higher
Alright finished reading this very nice article in a very detailed way
Time to sleep, you may now resume normal discussion
Bye ~ <3
With love, Cacadi
16:31
momotapa*
mamatopo
@MomotapaLimpopo It's trending
there are just too many js programmers
@Mr.kbok *trendy
16:38
@MomotapaLimpopo To be honest, it feels boring to see my rep get bumped now. :P
TIL a sequence is an ordered set
sets are by definition unordered
"ordered unordered collection"
@Blob but you can define an order, hence a sequence
@R.MartinhoFernandes Rep? I remember caring about that once...
@Blob nope. only distinct
16:47
@DonLarynx no
{1,1} is a valid set
4
but {1,1} == {1} and {1,2} == {2,1}
Sets are only unordered in the sense that no order needs to be defined to make a set a set
@Blob lol
0
Q: How to understand the "program ignoring my input request" from the C++ FAQ?

Martin DrozdikI am trying to understand the item: Why is my program ignoring my input request after the first iteration? from the C++ FAQ. I compiled the test program: #include <iostream> int main() { char name[1000]; int age; for (;;) { std::cout << "Name...

Thus, a sequence is the combination of a set and a total (iirc) order, resulting in what we colloquially might call an ordered set
@Blob Yes, you can always define an order. That makes it a sequence.
16:49
Therefore, if you want to be nasty, a sequence is a set of a total order and its domain
@R.MartinhoFernandes i was saying "no" to "distinct".
@Jefffrey ?
@Blob 1 and 1 aren't distinct
so it's a valid multiset, not a set though
@DonLarynx It is a set.
{1, 1} is the set of all x such that x = 1 or x =1.
16:51
ah, right. gotcha
Missing space left on purpose for eye soreness.
Which doesn't really matter, since it is only a question of notation
Tinnitus made me do it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't get it :( Isn't that a multiset?
And it is a valid question whether your notation implies that {1,1} = {1} or {1,1} = {(1,2)}
16:53
Sets should not contain two distinct elements that compare equal
@AndyProwl The set notation {1, 1, 1} can be used to describe the set {1}
when does read() return 11 ?
@AndyProwl The correct answer to that is "yes", but I fear it might confuse you more.
@AndyProwl if they're equal then they're not really distinct :p
@Jefffrey I still don't get it. Sets should not have duplicate elements
16:54
@AndyProwl And they don't. That set has only one element so it clearly doesn't have two that <who cares>.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yay
@AndyProwl They don't. It's just a silly notation.
@DonLarynx Even worse. Sets are not using Equality, but Same-ness
@R.MartinhoFernandes So that's a notation-only thing?
In mathematics, a set is a collection of distinct objects, considered as an object in its own right. For example, the numbers 2, 4, and 6 are distinct objects when considered separately, but when they are considered collectively they form a single set of size three, written {2,4,6}. Sets are one of the most fundamental concepts in mathematics. Developed at the end of the 19th century, set theory is now a ubiquitous part of mathematics, and can be used as a foundation from which nearly all of mathematics can be derived. In mathematics education, elementary topics such as Venn diagrams are taught...
16:55
I think it's a pointless notation if so
@gha.st oh, meths..i mean math
@AndyProwl {a, b, c, ...} represents the set that of all x such that x = a or x = b or x = c or ...
There is only one x such that x = 1 or x = 1.
> There are two important points to note about sets. First, a set can have two or more members which are identical, for example, {11, 6, 6}. However, we say that two sets which differ only in that one has duplicate members are in fact exactly identical (see Axiom of extensionality). Hence, the set {11, 6, 6} is exactly identical to the set {11, 6}.
@AndyProwl It's not when you consider the use of variables.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought {a, b, c} represents the set that contains a, b, and c, is it really meant to be used with "variable equals to" meaning?
16:57
{x} ∪ {y} = {x, y}, which does not in any way imply x ≠ y.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It generally does not, but I like the interpretation.
I likes teh sets
> The second way is by extension – that is, listing each member of the set. An extensional definition is denoted by enclosing the list of members in curly brackets.
@AndyProwl Is there a difference?
There is only one number one (typically).
This is not a set!

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