@Jefffrey The good thing is that you can delete repositories if you can't improve them. So basically you publish stuff, get the feedback, feel ashamed for a while, and then improve the code or delete the repository if it's not worth it. Or just don't give a fuck. Next repo will be better.
I mean it seems like the compiler is here to really manage properties of data and make sure they line up with operations to mutate such data and their properties.
From what I can understand of 'contracts' in C++... the proposal is basically you define an 'interface' that some class has to implement, but it doesn't have to explicitly implement it.
/// <summary>
/// This is the heart of the navigation and links.
/// - Synchronizes SelectedSource, SelectedLink & ContentSource on INavigator
/// - Updates IsNavigatedTo & CanNavigate on ILink
/// Side effect fest
/// </summary>
It's difficult because creating the physics simulation is hardly any of the actual work. You also have to make sure it performs reasonably well, for example. Right now, I have an N-body physics simulation (roughly). Do you know how much code that takes up? About 1-200 lines of it deals with the p...
What that means is that if the compiler can manage types and concepts, we can unify types and allow the compiler to mutate properties while keeping it managed, keeping zero overhead but allowing both flexibility and safety decided upon by context.
that's the wrong approach. have a symbol class, and a letter class that inherits from the symbol class, and a word class that's composed of multiple letter classes. then make a person class that's has a map of words and their meanings. then have write/speak/comprehend functions in the person class that operate on a group of words
@thecoshman I'm saying that a compiler might be able to deduce the state of an object's properties based on where it is. There is no runtime component.
@Cicnch you can do what you want, but you basically would have to build it all up and pass it at run time. You need a dirty 'generic object class' and then it needs a map of properties, which in order to hold data type would need to use some vodi* crap, or maybe a variant. Every function call would have to look up this map, and see if the instance you called this function on actually has had the function you wanted added to it. It would be hell to work with in C++
any way, whilst I have patients to understand the ramblings, I lack enough to sit around around and try to explain to a brick wall why it is where it is.
@Cinch Conversation requires communication. Communication requires listening. That way you can establish common ground. Otherwise, it's like the pirate said
@Griwes But static typing check with properties at compile time. We collapse the property system to a static-typed system at compile-time and enable the checking if we so desire for a dynamic system.
> "When I read code, I'm not reading “Hard Times”. It's more like studying 17th century French poetry — what the fuck did this guy mean" - David Heinemeier Hansson
@Ell It might simplify it. What if we need to apply new operations to an already existing type? Must we attach an operation to a certain type or class?
I thought that in haskell where you have BasicEq a which requires an implementation of isEqual :: a -> a -> Bool, the c++ concept would be requiring the operator==(a, a) to be implemented
@Ell In a sense the directions are opposite: in C++ the concept comes after, refers to, existing (overloaded) operations & associated types; while in Haskell you start with the type class to introduce overloaded functions & associated types.
@Ell In all likelihood the answer you’re looking for is 'no'. There are things like Data.ByteString.Lazy and Data.ByteString.Strict that are kinda like it, depending on what you mean.
@LucDanton I don't think I'd be able to tell you what I mean, I don't know haskell well enough - really I'm referring to the duck typing that c++ has in templates
but I don't think that transfers over to haskell really
I don't think the conversation is particularly meaningful. In simple terms, hating evil is supporting its negation, which is good, so that can't be evil. But of course evil and good are relative things, so there isn't much to discuss in objective terms. Also, I don't literally "hate" the guy, I just very much dislike him professionally. I thought the Lounge could take a bit of exaggeration in the tone