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15:00
Yes yes, I mean is 'packages' really what it is managing?
Doesn't change the fact it's an incredibly useful tool that fits my needs despite its fuckwitness
user1804599
The dependencies are packages.
Well, you gave it as an example of what you'd like to have in C++.
Ven
Ven
> "It's just like X but written in pure Go!" gph.is/18SfqgZ
@райтфолд :\
15:00
Cabal is somewhat infamous in parts of the Haskell community, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that would be enough for me to make my C++ experience much more pleasant, yes. If you can offer an ever better thing, sure.
C:\Users\tomalak\AppData\Local\Temp\ccunKEt9.s: Assembler messages:
C:\Users\tomalak\AppData\Local\Temp\ccunKEt9.s:206: Error: incorrect register `%ecx' used with `q' suffix
loads of these
The point is, when I'm writing C++ I'm lacking even something as primitive and broken as cabal
To the point where I commited sources of dependencies to my projects because that was the easiest way to include them
user1804599
15:01
Alright, now I can implement type checks.
I know it's a shitty solution but I tried everything I could, I asked a lot of people and basically that was the option that offered the least amount of hassle
there's basically no way to have what cabal offers, i.e. a simple project setup and build
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz haskellexists.blogspot.de/2015/03/… <- this looks amazing
API-based packages.
@BartekBanachewicz With a single tool? No. But then SRP.
Ven
Ven
(Elm does something kind-of similar, if your signatures changed, you have to bump a major – basically something like that)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I frankly don't mind the fact it's a single tool. It's convenient. I dunno what else to say.
@Ven mmm automating that check could be cool
15:04
There's biicode and nuget for package management, and there's a zillion of build systems.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Perhaps you're patient/clever enough to be able to hack away with ninja and *ix package managers without problems, but I'm simply not, then.
@BartekBanachewicz yeah this really is a problem... but not one with the language. It's a tools problem.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, I've already mentioned biicode multiple times as a possible thing that can improve the situation IMHO.
If you think putting dependency sources in your repo is better than any of those, well, have fun.
@R.MartinhoFernandes SRP doesn't forbid composition though. :P
15:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes in practice it was. I didn't have to spend hours finding what's causing the linker error.
That really sounds like your problem.
I'm not the only person having this kind of problems; far from it.
The reality is you are in the minority of people that don't have this problem.
If it was 'duplicate symbol' or 'missing symbol', there's no way you can justify hours with it.
@BartekBanachewicz [citation needed]
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wrong package version? Wrong compiler flags for the dependency? All that static/dynamic complication.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Look how many people are spectacularly failing when trying to use SFML. It shouldn't look like that.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, that's the workflow.
15:08
IMHO you assume that because you were able to find a way to cope with all those problems, everyone else should be able to do the same
@BartekBanachewicz Look how many people are not... oh wait. They are not vocal because they have no reason to.
@BartekBanachewicz Textbook selection bias.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So you're basically denying that the problem even exists?
woah
@BartekBanachewicz No. I'm disputing your claim that a majority of people have it.
Sorry.
@Foreveranoob no gifs.
Ven
Ven
I find it pretty incredible how bad is everything organized in c++ after so many years
15:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, that.
Ven
Ven
it's the same for common lisp, actually. Well, at least, asdf and quicklisp work for CL.
@R.MartinhoFernandes vOv maybe I'm just bad then.
@BartekBanachewicz FWIW, yes, the C++ ecosystem sucks indeed. It's not as bad as you paint it, though.
Ven
Ven
does boost even offer a maybe_front on its boost::range::xxx ranges...
Boost.Range is quite basic.
15:14
Range-v3 is the thing I suppose
hmpfh GetTime :: IO (Maybe Double) is a joke
@Ven Good afternoon
you know what
I'll learn Haskell
Ven
Ven
@sehe good afternoon to you too
15:16
> On success, the value of time in seconds since the Epoch is returned. On error, ((time_t) -1) is returned, and errno is set appropriately.
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz maybe?
I guess it's due to that.
gonna boot up linux and install haskell crap
@Ven the "after so many years" part is what should make it less incredible, considering that backwards compatibility is one of the design goals
(not saying I'm a fan of that design goal)
Ven
Ven
15:17
@AndyProwl what I mean is -- after all this time, no one figured a way to centralize things a bit?
@Ven It's not just that.
Ven
Ven
or rather, get some kind of automated process running
@Ven What do you mean by "centralized"?
@AndyProwl Nobody is. But it lends the language the credibiity that D (and so many others) lacks
15:17
@Ven After all this time, there is a huge amount of stuff that needs to be considered.
@Blob good idea
You can't just say "From now on everyone will do this."
It's utopic to think so.
Ven
Ven
@sehe so perl5 is a very credible language?
@Ven there's like literally 0% chance this will crash
but then again I'm scared of this 0%
time = fromJust <$> GLFW.getTime
@Ven After so many days in chat, have you still not figured out how to reduce on the loaded statements a bit?
@Ven q.e.d.
15:18
@Blob you don't need linux. HP works on windows just fine
Ven
Ven
@sehe but mooom, I try to be shocking in my statements!
Thank god for straw men. They really brighten up a sad and swoonful friday afternoon
a bartek a day...
@Ven Yeah. it's a big turn-off.
Real world evidence: Python2 is still a thing.
15:19
is it
@BartekBanachewicz Why yes, it is.
Is all this obliviousness of yours on purpose or accidental?
I'd just take the python 2 download link down from their page and see what happens
Ven
Ven
@sehe would you say that c++ is in a better place than perl, ruby, python, nodejs, or even go, when it comes to package management
@BartekBanachewicz A bunch of things would stop working.
Ven
Ven
(note: they're fixing go's)
15:21
> Welcome! This is the documentation for Python 2.7.10rc0, last updated Apr 03, 2015.
@Ven No. Why would I have to consider such a statement? Would you say Ruby is remotely comparable to C++?
@R.MartinhoFernandes mostly on purpose
There's still commitment to it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes maybe that's the problem
Because there's still demand for it.
15:21
they didn't say "fuck python2" loud enough
Ven
Ven
@sehe with regards to needing a package manager? yes, very much so. I consider that every language needs a package manager
Wow. You could have just opened the discussion with this :)
user1804599
go get is terrible.
@BartekBanachewicz Alienating your users is a surefire way of... alienating your users.
15:22
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes People are lazy. They won't update unless given a good reason to
Ven
Ven
@райтфолд there's a proposal to fix it
@sehe I don't know, I can only speak for myself, and I wouldn't mind having to fix my codebase to get a simpler language, a better syntax, and so on
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would think that a backend-agnostic renderer would actually be great. DirectWrite does this as well with its rendering callbacks for fonts.
a big DEPRECATED sticker is one such a reason
15:23
@BartekBanachewicz Or until they simply have the reason
(IOW I would not mind if backwards compatibility weren't that great)
Ven
Ven
@sehe I don't get what's your point
@BartekBanachewicz exactly, so they stick with Python 2
@sehe this takes ages
@BartekBanachewicz no, it's not.
15:23
the point is the python team inflicted the double support on themselves partially
user3010322
Problem is that many of the graphics solutions are very... integrated, with other parts of the graphics engine.
not really.
user3010322
And wrapping up things like shaders is kind've difficult.
15:24
Who in their right mind rewrites everything for the sake of it?
user1804599
aaa auto kind = {"check", "require", "ensure"}.at(instruction.op0); is a syntax error.
it's not about rewrite, it's about not writing legacy code
@BartekBanachewicz Depends on what the reason is. My point is: "until they're given a reason" implies you have to manipulate them into it. That won't be necessary unless the update really does not hold benefits
the benefit for the maintainers is not having to maintain the older version
@BartekBanachewicz Of course they did. They did it when they decided to break the language. That was the decision that brought the work, not the keeping support for Python2.
15:25
I would rather suffer any language than have to re-implement from the ground up decades of development. Yes it's a fucking shit mess of a project, but at least it mostly works.
Not keeping support for Python2 would be plain dickish.
any way, I'm off home
48 secs ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
it's not about rewrite, it's about not writing legacy code
latters homies
@Ven This appears to criticize the language/libraries (you know, C++)
Ven
Ven
15:25
@thecoshman you just need Inline:: modules
@R.MartinhoFernandes there's a difference between abrupt cutoff and a planned deprecation
So, I was surprised to find you're actually lobbying for package management
Ven
Ven
@sehe aaaaaaah. but the discussion was geared towards modules for a while now...
@BartekBanachewicz What do you think they did?
user1804599
Breaking Python 2 backwards compatibility was a good decision.
user3010322
15:26
Is Python 2 still supported?
Of course it is.
@Ven Which is only tangentially related to package management, really (see portage or nuget-cpp)
user3010322
It's been like... 6 years, right?
@BartekBanachewicz linux is my coding OS. I use windows exclusively for gaming
user3010322
I wonder when they're going to actually formally stop shipping security updates...
Ven
Ven
15:27
they "signed" – last year or so ? – for 10 more years of python LTS
@ThePhD ^
@Ven I wasn't there, sorry
user3010322
@Ven Damn. That's a long-ass time.
@ThePhD Some timescale effectively equivalent to never.
Ven
Ven
@sehe well, that was my phrase's context
15:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes sounds a lot as "deprecation plan"
I.e. from their perspective, they just won't.
It's the users that will drop Python2, not the maintainers.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Python's already open-source, right? 'Cause if not, then if I was in charge I'd just hand the entire python2 project to the community and let them save themselves.
user3010322
Focus on Python 3, put most of the hard work there
@ThePhD Wait, who do you think is maintaining Python2?
Oompa-loompas?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't rightly know.
15:29
@ThePhD The maintainers come from the community.
user1804599
why is std::bad_cast in <typeinfo> lol
Ven
Ven
:22612855 well, I'm just saying that because – as noted – the meaning of what I said changes a lot with said context...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Curious how you come up with that one :)
@ThePhD Cpython is open source for both python2 and python3
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then it'll stay relevant for as long as those maintainers exist! \o/
15:30
@Ven s/a lot// but yeah. This is exactly what I meant 8m ago. I even said "sorry" (although I really don't have to be :)) Carry on!
Ven
Ven
carries on indeed.
user3010322
I honestly don't know how I'd ever deal with deprecation of anything.
@sehe It's from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
I know. That's why i liked it
user1804599
boost::iterators::detail::operator_brackets_proxy is so fucking stupid.
15:32
@ThePhD If you're lucky, you won't have to worry about it.
user1804599
It makes […] completely unusable for random-access iterators.
huh
user1804599
src/builtin/always.ipp:4:46: error: no member named 'data' in 'boost::iterators::detail::operator_brackets_proxy<…>'
        auto a = arguments_begin[0].template data<boolean>();
                 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~          ^
user3010322
My opinion on the matter right now is that I'd love to just do hard breaks.
@ThePhD Mark things as deprecated, provide an alternative, provide a migration path, wait. Removal isn't really required unless the continuous existence of the deprecated entity is actively harmful.
15:33
@райтфолд What leaks this implementation detail?
user1804599
Boost.
user3010322
E.g., slap DEPRECATED on the old stuff and just stop updating it.
@райтфолд Great. Thanks for being so helpful
user1804599
I don't know exactly who's calling this.
user1804599
Wait a second.
Ven
Ven
15:34
oh, there's a sc2 lounge group? haha
@ThePhD The only thing removal gives you is annoyed users.
(The logical conclusion is that removal is safe once there are no more users; but then you only gain some sort of purity bragging rights anyway)
user3010322
(But if you want your thing used there will always be users.)
user3010322
q_q the cycle never stops
@ThePhD I mean, no more users for the deprecated entity.
user1804599
@sehe Somewhere in the any_iterator library I use.
user1804599
15:35
Perhaps it's a bug in there.
user3010322
This is why I'll never release my stuff.
user3010322
As long as it's internal nobody has to see it. No users, NO PROBLEMS! \o/
@райтфолд interesting
user1804599
Instead I'll do iterator arithmetic and ->.
user1804599
Which works fine.
15:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, with that logic, there are always going to be python2 users. The problem with python3 was that it was not compatible with python2
Thanks for explaining to us what Python3 is.
@khajvah Yeah, you can always alienate those users, but then you're that project that alienates its users.
user3010322
"What will they do to us python3 users when python4 is ready?"
@R.MartinhoFernandes You are always welcome(if you were talking to me)
@khajvah Here's the thing: when I'm writing my code at work, the last thing I want to deal with is Visual Studio some mandate to rewrite a ton of code that comes from an external entity.
Actually, my current task is rewriting a lot of code because Visual Studio can't into a lot of stuff.
lol at visual studios
15:41
@ThePhD interesting approach
@ThePhD The most important part is providing a migration path.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes A "how to move from vX to vY" manual?
another JS vs Lua slapfight at work
sigh
user3010322
They occupy mutually exclusive spheres; why would anyone compare the two?
@ThePhD not just a manual
user3010322
15:44
I haven't seen someone take Javascript and use it as their choice script execution engine unless they've got something they want to play nice with a browser.
tools if necessary
@ThePhD node.js
@ThePhD um, well, have you ever been to JS room?
@ThePhD you can write in both standalone just fine
@ThePhD It's not unusual. Large knowledge base is an important factor.
user3010322
Hrm.
15:47
also there's the new easily embeddable JS VM
user3010322
Well, the place I have the most knowledge of is video games, and if they're not web-associated or web-ported video games I often see Lua as the choice for... well, everything.
user1804599
Yay, proc f(s: String) { }; f(42) now fails with a precondition violation instead of a bad cast!
Well I kinda moved away from my idea of hybrid approach once I started writing in Haskell
you know, the native+interpreted marriage
@ThePhD Well, within gamedev, Lua has a significant user base already.
Outside of it, not so much.
user3010322
I should probably step outside sometime then!~
user3010322
15:49
But even this chat server is built on lua...
@ThePhD wait you mean that everything you were doing so far was gamedev?
user3010322
Everything I was doing so far for which?
user3010322
I haven't really informed the lounge of... any of my serious projects.
thus earning the reputation of a programming halfwit
user3010322
15:50
Yay! \o/
so, what you've been doing seriously?
user3010322
Nothing important!
isn't that in conflict with "serious"?
user3010322
Like this.
I've seen those.
15:52
man, this mario cart game is the best thing ever.
haskell errors are scary :C
@Blob show us
> No instance for (Num (a0 -> a0)) arising from a use of `-'
Possible fix: add an instance declaration for (Num (a0 -> a0))
In the expression: succ - 1
In an equation for `it': it = succ - 1
or post into haskell room actually
@Blob you're trying to subtract 1 from a function
succ 0 works :|
ohh
it treats -1 as "-" and "1"
15:53
yep
succ (negate 1)
this is a well-known quirk.
@Blob note how it put spaces in the error, reformatting it for you
Ven
Ven
it is :[
@Blob in general if you see an error of form No instance for (XXXX (a0 -> a0)) then this means you probably didn't provide enough arguments
@райтфолд Have you ever used Clang's libTooling on Windows?
user1804599
What is libTooling?
user1804599
Also, unlikely, since the last time I used Windows was before I knew clang existed.
15:56
an API for doing stuff with the AST I guess
user1804599
I've only used Clang's C API and the Python wrapper.
allowedEvent (EventWindowClose _)       = True
allowedEvent (EventWindowFocus _ _)     = True
allowedEvent (EventMouseButton _ _ _ _) = True
allowedEvent (EventCursorPos _ _ _)     = True
allowedEvent (EventScroll _ _ _)        = True
allowedEvent (EventKey _ _ _ _ _)       = True
allowedEvent (EventChar _ _)            = True
sigh.
while we're at quirks /cc @Ven
user1804599
Awesome. :)
I still cringe when I see it
user1804599
15:57
Return type checks! Woo!
IIRC Scala can go around that
Ven
Ven
Scala does have better type errors than haskell... unless you try to use some advanced stuff
user1804599
In Scala you can make allowedEvent a method in the base class with an implementation of true, and override it only when it needs to be false.
Ven
Ven
gibbe non-global typeclasses instances.
@райтфолд there's allowedEvent _ = False at the bottom
@Ven this.
fucking idiotism
user1804599
15:59
Or you can do def allowedEvent(x: Event) = !x.isInstanceOf[T].
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Scala!
Haskell is pretty broken really when you think about it
Ven
Ven
@райтфолд eww.
what's more scary is that it's still the best language around
Ven
Ven
isInstanceOf is ugly.
15:59
> But, if that is not to your liking, you can manually open and compile the files in whatever editor you desire.
nice

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