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10:00
@BartekBanachewicz no, the argument is "for a coder"
the macros strength is because of the syntax. A coder can easily work with the syntax.
Unecessary noise doesn't help in understanding anything
@FlorianMargaine You won't be able to convince Bartek of anything because ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, okay. it still outputs things that are unreadable by a human
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, looks like so.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's not something that a human can either write or read!
seriously.
10:01
Seriously what?
given a 20 line block of code above, can you instantly answer whether the parens match?
The closing parens are produced from any serious text editor, and they matter not when reading Lisp code.
You're just showing off your lack of experience with Lisp.
@R.MartinhoFernandes They are most unneeded for a human when reading Lisp source code.
10:02
BREAKING NEWS: Bartek is wrong. More later.
@BartekBanachewicz That's what I said. You seem to be hung up on insisting they are needed.
So if I had an editor that hide the closing parens I would be able to read Lisp code perfectly well
Have you actually seen Lisp code?
yes.
let's say
(defun qsort (L)
   (cond
   ((null L) nil)
   (t (append
      (qsort (list< (car L) (cdr L)))
      (cons (car L) nil)
      (qsort (list>= (car L) (cdr L)))))))
It sounds like ))))))))))))))) is all of what you saw.
10:03
I know the match of the closing paren :P
@BartekBanachewicz Seems pretty readable to me.
> All program code is written as s-expressions - why @TonyTheLion likes Lisp
Indentation does wonders.
@R.MartinhoFernandes exactly.
Exactly what?
That doesn't really further your claim that Lisp is unreadable.
10:04
if you removed the unnecessary parens but kept the indentation the code would remain perfectly readable
@BartekBanachewicz No, it wouldn't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I consider the existence of unnecessary parts as something that hinders, not improves readability.
You're again being blinded by the fact that you started from the conclusion.
which parens are unnecessary there?
I'll just go back to work instead of backpedaling you all the way back to sanity.
10:07
defun qsort (L)
   -- dunno what cond / null L do so I omitted them
   t $ append
      qsort $ list< (car L) (cdr L)
      cons (car L) nil
      qsort $ list>= (car L) (cdr L)
cond is a "switch"
I am not sure how this machinery works but that looks better
You don't know what primitives do?
Go back to your Lisp book. Now.
tried that enough times. I can't get through it.
I really, honestly to god tried.
But I can't learn, read or use this language. I respect and value it, but that's it.
Haskell's whitespace-sensitive syntax is something way more natural and readable to me, which is easy to write without a specialized editor
10:09
Guy knows how to run a project
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, I should have figured this was just another Haskell plug and really had not a lot to do with Lisp.
I don't write Haskell without a specialized editor, btw.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, snowflake, I do.
Syntax is like the least important part of any language, seriously.
@R.MartinhoFernandes if I had just said "I find what Lisp does bad", it would beg for "what's good then"; at least imho
oh I'm getting the scrolling vote buttons now
10:12
@milleniumbug I don't agree.
@milleniumbug Syntax plays a huge part in the direct human-code interface.
It's perhaps not important when you say design a system for implementation in a given language.
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, that's stupid. Things can have flaws by themselves. The flaws don't manifest only when things without them appear.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Would it be OK if I said "Python"?
It would still be missing the point, but at least it wouldn't feel like I've been tricked into hearing some more of your propaganda.
you're heavily biased.
4
10:15
lol Bartek sorry but this is a bit funny to hear from you
You wanna know why I call it propaganda?
(I'm not the starrer)
@AndyProwl it's still true.
Because your Haskellization of that code is so damn broken.
In your eagerness to dismiss the parens as extraneous you dropped some very important ones.
It would probably help if I could understand that code alright
10:16
@BartekBanachewicz ohai
You just assumed the conclusion that they were extraneous and didn't quite consider that maybe they weren't.
@milleniumbug functionally, yes, syntax means nothing, it's either write or wrong. Practically, it's one of the most important things. No one wants to use a big ugly language that is hideously verbose... well, except Java
2
"write or wrong" is very... heterological.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I assumed the indentation should follow the parens, but as you can clearly see in that code, it doesn't
basically the mere existence of
(a
(b
(c)))
So, something completely different from the real code you posted.
10:18
if (a) {
if (b) {
if (c) { }}}
amazing indentation innit
@R.MartinhoFernandes note the (cond
Yeah, still something entirely not the real code you posted.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
I guess it's prolly like switch
@AndyProwl It's also alliterative. I'm in love with cosh now.
switch(a) {
case 1:
    code;
case 2:
    code;
}
10:19
@BartekBanachewicz It's like Haskell guards.
learn write not wrong
this is readable, but a) some people would still dismiss that indentation b) case looks totally different and stands out.
@thecoshman Note that I didn't say "not important" - I said "least important" which is different. From my recent experiences even languages themselves are less getting important than, say, community, libraries and frameworks.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, but it's still not the code you posted earlier. It really doesn't have as many extraneous parentheses as you think.
defun qsort (L)
   | (null L) = nil
   | t = append
      qsort $ list< (car L) (cdr L)
      cons (car L) nil
      qsort $ list>= (car L) (cdr L)
2nd try
10:21
Still broken.
¬_¬ pattern obsession
You're trying to push the Haskell syntax beyond what it can do.
@R.MartinhoFernandes interesting
The way to fix it is to add the parens you took that shouldn't.
I still have the lowest reputation score here :/
10:22
where now? To append?
  (qsort $ list< (car L) (cdr L))
  (cons (car L) nil)
  (qsort $ list>= (car L) (cdr L))
Yeah, totally.
They were there in the original.
10:23
What for.
Open your eyes.
huh... I guess this is nice enough way of showing patterns
you turned a; b; c; into (a); (b); (c);
@BartekBanachewicz No, I did not.
@BartekBanachewicz You turned f(g(x), h(y)) into f(g, x, h, y).
If you remove the parens in the Haskell program, you get a different program.
@R.MartinhoFernandes as far as I can see, the 'best' thing about haskell is being able to make things obscure.
10:24
lol write or wrong
@R.MartinhoFernandes well it's not directly haskell syntax because there's no do
And append on its own can't take a variable number of arguments
so you could write it as
 append [
      qsort $ list< (car L) (cdr L),
      cons (car L) nil,
      qsort $ list>= (car L) (cdr L)
]
@BartekBanachewicz Oh. It's syntax-I-made-up-on-the-spot-that-makes-the-code-mean-exactly-what-I-want-it-to?
for example
@R.MartinhoFernandes precisely.
Can't blame me for having trouble reading it.
I assumed you'd go over the fact that variable number of arguments and parens are totally unrelated here
10:26
The worst part of "all these parens" is that all code looks the same. The best part of "all these parens" is that all code looks the same.
Here's a simpler one, then: defun qsort L cond null L nil t append qsort list< car L cdr L cons car L nil qsort list>= car L cdr L
No parentheses at all.
My syntax > your syntax.
keep slippery sloppin'
@BartekBanachewicz No they are not.
(defun f (a) b...) oooh, that could get tedious :\
You need the parens to differentiate one argument from the next one, since you got right of the mathematical f(x, y) notation.
10:28
if you slap do then you just need a newline
So it's essentially a fight between whitespace-sensitive and whitespace-insensitive? Meh, not a new thing.
or a comma if you wrap in an array (because yes that's one thing Haskell can't do)
@BartekBanachewicz Which you didn't quite get rid of, because you just brought it back here in a different form.
See any random Python forum thread.
@R.MartinhoFernandes f [a, b, c] > (f (a) (b) (c))
10:29
@BartekBanachewicz You also get a completely different program.
Just sat core 3 cc @Ell
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, it's also not the same function anymore.
yes haskell functions can't have a variable number of arguments lel
I'm well aware of it
You need something else.
@BartekBanachewicz I thought you had said it was unrelated!
I winged it in my first examples, and then said how you can replace that in real haskell code.
10:30
@BartekBanachewicz But they don't have to. You can pretend it's append3 and only takes three arguments.
@BartekBanachewicz no, f [a,b,c] translates to (f a b c)
You need the parens there. It's simple.
good lord I thought you were half smart.
@R.MartinhoFernandes true.
@BartekBanachewicz Oh well. Then I guess you were right and all those parentheses were unnecessary bullshit.
10:31
if you treat that as regular multi-param curried application then you need parens
I'm almost sad that it took you so long to realise how important they are.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wouldn't write it as a regular application. I'd use a list.
@R.MartinhoFernandes They are important if you want to write it in a way I wouldn't use in the first place.
so.
What now?
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, but the way you would write it seemed broken.
well, assuming you could craft your own functions that worked like do... (yes that's out-of-thin-air-assumption)
it's just, a newline is there already
Gee. Guess those parentheses are really stupid. We just need a whole bunch of crazy features to replace them.
10:33
how is it crazy?
I was going to roll with whitespaces all along.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well now, you can't expect a simple solution to be ok.
And now suddenly a construct that wants to utilize them is crazy
@BartekBanachewicz Making some functions magical.
Ell
Ell
@Columbo how did it go?
Unless you want to make them all behave like that.
Ell
Ell
10:35
Im on mobile I can't use reply arrows
Then your code will look reaaaaaaaaaally funny.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, if you used do and probably broke some monad laws...
How is it not crazy, then?
touche.
how is direct application better than taking a list though?
It's different.
They express fundamentally different things.
(But... everything is a list in Lisp anyway...)
10:37
whistles
@BartekBanachewicz The point is that you need syntax to accomodate both.
Lisp does it with a single syntax.
BTW, have you seen Z language?
Lisp does everything with the same single syntax. I am not sure if that is really a good thing, since you no longer can recognize constructs just by their syntax.
12 mins ago, by milleniumbug
The worst part of "all these parens" is that all code looks the same. The best part of "all these parens" is that all code looks the same.
Ell
Ell
It makes parsing easy vOv
Parsing is the least important element of a programming language.
That argument stopped being relevant quite some years ago.
@BartekBanachewicz anything particularly not bad about it?
Horrible, you need to indent everything yourself.
@thecoshman it's a research language. Javapeople should probably move along.
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't look very readable TBH.
10:42
Instead of letting tools to do it for you.
@BartekBanachewicz so it's just useless crap like Haskell?
@thecoshman I have a few options here, from trying to point out you're wrong, getting angry, showing factual data, arguing on what does useless mean... But since it's just a troll, I'll ignore it and leave it without a comment.
3
> If the variable snue has the value (bar baz) then (foo ,snue) evaluates to (foo (bar baz)), while (foo ,@snue) evaluates to (foo bar baz)
bro, I don't even :\
@BartekBanachewicz well, you sure failed that :P
but seriously, what is Z offering as a language?
how about you read the article.
is this too much to ask?
hey @buttifulbuttefly if you remember any issues you had with jsonpp could you add them to the issue tracker so I don't forget?
10:45
I know you struggle with English but you can try at least.
@BartekBanachewicz how about you give me a few fucking words seeing as you are saying I should spend some time reading about it
@thecoshman I don't think you should spend any time reading it.
@thecoshman It's essentially whitespace-sensitive Lisp. Carry on, nothing to see here.
@milleniumbug 'whitespace-sensitive' foook that
or maybe not
I agree or maybe not.
10:47
stupid examples have made me doubt the stupidity of significant white space
or maybe they didn't.
It's irrelevant.
I'm not using Python because it's whitespace-sensitive. I use it because of standard library.
whining about whitespace-sensitivity is pretty meaningless imo.
Yeah, just realised this statement can be parsed both ways. Fuck English.
10:51
lol
@Mgetz ffs that conflicts with Yuuzhan Vong (past-Empire) series :/
at least I'm pretty sure it does
well what fucking now.
@BartekBanachewicz all of which was scrapped when disney bought it
fuck everything SW related that pisses on EU
@BartekBanachewicz YEP, the entire cannon was scrapped
except for the movies
@Mgetz Canon
I hope some authors will decide to continue the EU
good lord Z look painful to work in. I get that brackets can be tedious at times, but if you need to group shit, it's like the best way. fuck this nonsense of using a newline to separate elements of a list.
what about the Jedi Academy on Yavin past movies?
@BartekBanachewicz It was always very clear that the EU was to be ditched.
10:52
What about Leia becoming a Jedi
@BartekBanachewicz don't hope for anything official being part of the real EU
no fucking way
it's all shit now
@BartekBanachewicz what part of the entire Expanded Universe?
no I don't believe it
it's impossible
they couldn't
10:53
it's been shit since "Clone Wars" became more canon than the books
The Star Wars canon is what is officially regarded as "canonical", or officially part of a story, in the Star Wars media franchise. The official Star Wars canon consists of the six released Star Wars theatrical feature films, the Star Wars animated film and television series The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels, and any expanded universe material released after April 25, 2014. The upcoming feature film Star Wars: The Force Awakens (along with the untitled Episode VIII and Episode IX) will also be a part of the official canon. On April 25, 2014, Lucasfilm officially revised and solidified the canon...
It's likely some stuff like Leia becoming a Jedi will come up in the new movies
that series introduced one good thing, and it's the plot of the last real star wars book series
fuck that shit.
this is the most retarded news I've heard all week
I like whitespace sensitivity. We use indentation anyway in most languages so getting rid of unnecessary boilerplate is a good thing. Sure we lose some freedom when it comes to personal preferences on formatting but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
10:55
@BartekBanachewicz Not exactly news now.
@Griwes Well I remained oblivious for quite longer.
anyway, what about the Old Republic?
was that also a part of EU?
Yes, Old Republic is part of European Union
:P :P :P
@BartekBanachewicz Why? You were expecting to just go and watch the story you knew already?
I find this much more exciting.
(It's gonna suck)
@R.MartinhoFernandes The books have gaps.
@R.MartinhoFernandes WHISTLES
10:59
@thecoshman go get them, charlie
eh who cares it's going to be centred about lazers

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