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user1804599
22:00
It explains the problems in detail.
@EtiennedeMartel sure, for server side
@thecoshman You don't run Node.JS on the client.
user1804599
Async I/O is a workaround for threads being expensive. If you're that worried about that, because you think it'll be a problem (it probably won't), use Erlang, Go or Haskell which do it behind the scenes so you don't have to bother with it. Or hell, CPython with Greenlets, or Stackless.
Python's runtime errors annoy me so much
@EtiennedeMartel like I said, for server side stuff, the world is your oyster, client side, suck it up and use JS (or something that boils down to JS)
22:02
@thecoshman We're talking about the server.
For the client I'd probably just use AngularJS.
frankly
I'd rather just never ever use JS if I had a choice
so Node is pretty much out regardless.
@EtiennedeMartel I've not used Angular but I actually quite like React.
But anyway, that's all hypothetical since I have no plans to do Web stuff in the near future.
My blog runs on Jekyll and that's that.
user1804599
Using async I/O is an optimisation.
user1804599
Don't do it until you measured spawning threads and using sync I/O is a performance problem.
All I/O is async. With sync I/O you're just waiting for the (relatively) slow ass hardware to respond.
People like sync I/O because it's simpler. It means you can read from a file or a socket just like you would from a range.
22:06
@EtiennedeMartel so I see
@EtiennedeMartel <3
But that's a leaky abstraction and it has problems. In my case, I mostly work on GUI apps, and blocking for I/O means my app could hang and that leads to poor usability.
user1804599
Also, for your average web app, handling requests on a thread pool works just fine.
@EtiennedeMartel "All I/O is async" "people like sync I/O because it's simpler" Contradicting yourself is hardly convincing
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz Hai
@BartekBanachewicz join us on skype?
22:10
@MooingDuck I mean, async is the real way of doing it. Sync is just there for convenience.
I'm not sure you really lose performance with sync i/o if you have threads doing other work that can be switched in whilst you're blocking
but that's a fairly big if I think
It's not about performance, it's about waiting.
There's a reason why you can't use sync I/O on WinPhone.
well, the real IO is abstracted by OS, which AFAIK, for the most part, always handles it via 'blocking' but in threads that can yeild...
user1804599
Theorem: maintaining code that uses async APIs all over the place is more expensive than running more powerful hardware.
@rightfold It's the speed of light, not the hardware. It's not all Disk I/O. Network I/O is bounded by the speed of light, and if a client in NL wants to use an app with a server in Los Angeles, they shouldn't have to deal with blocking UI for 100+ ms.
user1804599
22:13
@thecoshman Threads yield on blocking I/O operations.
user1804599
Not yielding them would be incredibly moronic.
@EtiennedeMartel There is; that doesn't make it a useful, good, or relevant one
@rightfold Theorem: managers make this a near impossible problem to come to the obvious conclusion.
user1804599
Well, I suppose you can yield them lazily.
user1804599
They may not yield until somebody else wants to resume.
22:14
Hmm...
user1804599
Context-switching is expensive.
"If we put a lot of effort in, and have real flaky code, we can save a little bit on the hardware" "Amazing! do that!" "Yeah... but it will cost most more to ma..." "Oh look at my shiney bonus!"
@Puppy You don't put long operations on a GUI thread. Blocking I/O can take some time. Therefore, you don't put blocking I/O on a GUI thread. If you're about to offload the I/O to another thread, why just not use an async API?
Wouldn't async I/O make more sense for encapsulation?
But I guess I'm the only one here who does GUI.
Scrubs.
user1804599
22:15
@VermillionAzure No, on the contrary.
@EtiennedeMartel GUI brofist
Oh yeah and then GUI
@EtiennedeMartel don't put IO on GUI thread, blocking or not.
user1804599
Now you have to make all your interfaces (that may potentially be implemented in terms of I/O operations) async.
user1804599
You're leaking the implementation to the API.
22:17
@thecoshman Yeah, but where are you going to put it, then?
Your GUI thread is your main thread.
@EtiennedeMartel You're assuming that I'm on a GUI thread to begin with.
2 mins ago, by Etienne de Martel
But I guess I'm the only one here who does GUI.
user1804599
@EtiennedeMartel Because now you are introducing complexity.
well yes I try to avoid that kind of mess.
user1804599
The only async API you need is spawn(F f) { std::thread(f).detach(); }.
22:18
that whole shit about some threads being special is silly
user1804599
Now you only have to offer sync APIs.
user1804599
Which is simpler, since you have fewer APIs.
@rightfold Right, I forgot the only thing you deal in is absolutes.
user1804599
If the API consumer wants to use it asyncly, he calls spawn.
@EtiennedeMartel Lol. I see what you did there?
22:18
@sehe Hihihihi
@EtiennedeMartel the actual IO happens in other threads, when finished, triggers a callback/event
Why not just use async/await?
Because it doesn't exist. Next.
@thecoshman That's actually a thing I end up doing quite a bit.
user1804599
@EtiennedeMartel I deal in isomorphisms.
user1804599
22:19
@Jeremy Same problem; leaking implementation to API.
I deal in cruft like this
user1804599
async/await is just syntactic sugar for futures. The data types and APIs don't change.
@EtiennedeMartel I don't see any other sensible way of doing.
@thecoshman Look up .NET's Async methods.
ITT: scrubs try to re-invent javascript
22:20
@rightfold If you're exposing a method that is doing I/O, you should probably offer both a synchronous and asynchronous version
user1804599
No, you should not.
@EtiennedeMartel IIRC, that's basically a handy abstraction for what I just said, no?
@nick You reinvented javascript but better, but that's no excuse
user1804599
You should only offer a sync version.
user1804599
The API consumer can make it async by spawning a thread if they want to.
22:20
@rightfold Thank god I don't use your APIs.
It's not quite the same.
He knows. Trust me.
I suspect he's trolling on high there
@thecoshman Windows has had APIs for dealing with async I/O for a while (they call that "overlapped"). It's not about dumping the work on another thread.
@Jeremy rightfold is the local erlang/elixir aficionado
@sehe Radek is always serious when talking about API design.
@EtiennedeMartel the main point is that the thread you have that is responsible for keeping the GUI updated should do not much else.
user1804599
22:22
Async I/O APIs offered by operating systems are for use in userland schedulers, like Erlang and Go and GHC have.
Yup. ALWAYS
You should only offer an async version.
The API consumer can make it sync by waiting on a synchro object in the callback function.
5
@sehe I thought pantoona was just the language slut.
Indeed.
@sehe ALWAYS you mean.
22:23
@MartinJames lol, so simple
But he's one of the few I know how can say something about the differences between Asio's reactor style asynchrony and... well the stuff we mentioned
@MartinJames Right on.
when I used to do obj-c, a lot of frameworks would have both synchronous and asynchronous method calls so you could choose what you wanted
user1804599
@MartinJames also works.
user1804599
IME sync I/O is what you want more often.
22:24
@MartinJames In C# you can just do await YourAsyncCall() and that does just that.
user1804599
If you need to do I/O in async manner go ahead and offer only async APIs, as long as you have the option to block anyway.
user1804599
Node.js doesn't offer blocking at all.
@rightfold Has the benefit that everything is async aware, and can in principle tie into the same executor infra/event polling system
Just return futures.
The same thread may want to make overlapping I/O calls. It can only do that if the interface is async.
22:25
The client can then choose what to do with that.
user1804599
@sehe everybody can post to event queue.
async is usually more work to implement, unless you're working in JS
in my humble opinion
Hang on, an hour ago I distinctly remember posting 'no-callbacks' lol
so what?
it's what you need
@MartinJames IKEA sells Små Treds these days
22:26
"it's effort to do it properly so let's just fuck it and not care"?
@MartinJames callbacks are crude, we have the technology to do it better
@sehe The pizza crumbs in my KB are getting critical again.
depends what the API is really
No pizza crumbs don't give a shit
if it involves networking then use async all day
user1804599
22:27
@sehe or do you mean something like libev?
@MartinJames best feed them, who knows what systems they are maintaining
@rightfold yup. It's forever hateful to have to integrate competing event polling mechanisms
user1804599
That's a library for scheduler writers.
@thecoshman Ooh.. never thought of that:( I'll feed them some curry later.
user1804599
See Erlang/Go/GHC.
22:28
@MartinJames this is a good one- xkcd.com/237
user1804599
@sehe How is implementing that difficult?
@nick lol
@nick not always. I think am FTP client is probably better doing the network IO sync.
Difficult? Hateful. It's annoying, hard to get right, and if you don't coordinate efforts, you'll crust layer on layer, hurting performance
user1804599
Spawn thread for each polling mechanism, make each send on a channel, use select statement to poll the first one available.
22:29
To me async makes more sense in terms of being a scalable concept.
Like that's how the internet works too
user1804599
select is a bitch to implement but luckily it's already done!
@thecoshman i suppose, so long as it isn't blocking the GUI
The more complex the handler, the more awkward the async approach becomes as the state-machine gets bigger. If there are unavoidable blocking API calls, you have a big problem.
@nick see my previous comments regarding keeping the GUI thread for just updating GUI
@thecoshman Oh - you must absolutely do that, yes. You gonna have I/O callbacks, you don't want it on there.
22:31
right
hold the pigging phone, has the lounge finally agreed on something? "Keep your GUI thread for just updating the GUI"
@MartinJames so, pass callbacks - little lambdas that push messages on respective queues. Problem solved. The API doesn't need to know about you organize your messages/queues/priorities etc.
@thecoshman Hey - I've agreed with Puppy three times this year already.
user1804599
@MartinJames we've never had a lounge consensus
fuck me that's a hard word to spell
22:33
@rightfold wat
@thecoshman Yeah - some in here even disagree with beer.
@nick a quick and dirty of what he was thinking of; of course, that's not realistic, but - sight - he knows.
user1804599
@MartinJames Bear disagrees with beer.
ohh i thought it was a program that prints 1, 2, 3
22:34
I mean after working with async callbacks I like it better because it puts enphesis on the action
@nick It is, in a way
user1804599
The output is nondeterministic.
@VermillionAzure that's what the continuations thing is about (future.then(), whenall(...), when_any(...) etc)
user1804599
Terrible.
@VermillionAzure Yeah, OTOH, if you already have a huge pile of sync lib code...
user1804599
22:36
Here's how I sequence I/O actions: ;.
@MartinJames like, everyone, all the time
@sehe Yes:)
> Bye Bye Mandriva, She's Being Liquidated
I mean signals and slots are async right?
It's kinda nice to just open a file, read stuff and then close it again.
22:37
@Ell would love to, but I have to sleep and wake up for the interview tomorrow :)
@VermillionAzure Not usually
user1804599
signals and sluts
The internet is async
@BartekBanachewicz Good luck. Sleep well
@sehe Old distros have to die off to make room for new ones.
user1804599
22:39
Install Gentoo.
... monomane
That said. When my new SSD arrives, I might give gentoo and Arch another whirl. I'm not very happy with ubuntu crop lately
@R.MartinhoFernandes hi robot
windows 8 on an SSD is very good, I gotta admit
22:42
I sent this message I spent all day composing! Now I'm checking my phone every minute.
And with restless leg syndrome
What's up?
Say something!
@R.MartinhoFernandes from the cycling, I guess?
Better a restless leg than tinnitus, I suppose
No, not from the cycling.
Anxiety.
i have restless leg and I don't do shit
@R.MartinhoFernandes lady friend fembot?
22:45
lady robot friend
@R.MartinhoFernandes S O M E T H I N G !
I need another drink
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'Network error'
@R.MartinhoFernandes I doubt it.
22:46
You doubt what?
@sehe better safe than sorry
@R.MartinhoFernandes the need for more drinks
I wonder how many nascent relationships have been ruined by spam filters?
My glass is empty
Is pretty obvious.
user1804599
No, it's full of air.
22:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes hehe. last time I checked people looked at their physical needs, not their surrounding beverage containers
@MartinJames not too many
My body says I need a drink.
> dirty puppy timed
@R.MartinhoFernandes As long as there's beer, there's hope.
@MartinJames I had one--about six months later ran into a lady who got a little irate with: "Why didn't you ever email me?", to which I could only answer: "But I did!" Unfortunately, by then I was dating somebody else...
raison d' puppy
22:50
raisin* FTFY
user1804599
lick my horse
for no raisin
@Puppy such a pawn star name
Once a friend sent out a goodbye email & contact details to a group of friends when she went to Europe, I never received the email, but she claimed that she sent the email and another friend said my address was on the email list. I wonder what happened to that email.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes get one :O
22:53
Just did
What kind of drink?
That's acceptable.
finished with lunch break
22:54
Random girl just asked me to dance
say no
Why do you think I'm still chatting?
a lot of snark, but you didn't actually try anything — sehe 1 min ago
I let my friend loose on her
Xeo
Xeo
Nyaa /cc @AndyProwl
22:57
@VermillionAzure grats
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm bad at names. I didn't write it down... Yu - well wait, he wasn't named in the lounge anyways
Oh. How did you know it was Yimu?
Anyways I'm going to say that I finally appreciate Node.js for what it is and I'm wondering what alternatives to it there are.

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