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user1804599
18:00
have fun sehe
87uy lol
uy stands for unsigned 8-bit integers :c
user1804599
What language is that?
user1804599
Oh wait, that's F# yes.
Woah
let ``square, negate, then print`` x =
    x |> square |> negate |> print
This is actually interesting
user1804599
18:05
lol, that function name
user1804599
Don't name your function square, negate, then print.
@sehe I don't want to, but it happens in my mind. I should visit India.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ so print(negate(square x))?
user1804599
x |> f is basically let __x = x in f __x.
let rec ... and ... reminds me of OCaml
user1804599
18:07
let rec is needed for shadowing.
@BartekBanachewicz yes. Come over here!
@AlexM. Looks like it
user1804599
let x = 1
let x = x + 2 // shadows the x defined above
print x // prints 3
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ They were trying for "ugly" and succeeded in spite of the minor typo.
user1804599
let rec x = x + 2 would reference this x, not the one defined before.
18:08
what would the above looks like in haskell with compo
@elyse I'm not sure I follow
print . negate . square x
?
@AlexM. print . negate . square $ x
Function application is sticky
I'll take haskell's over F#'s
user1804599
let x = 1
//  ^---v
let x = x + 2

let y = 1
let rec y = y + 2
//      ^---^
18:09
So it would parse that as print . negate . (square x)
user1804599
That's what rec does.
@AlexM. print . negate $ square x or print . negate . square $ x
user1804599
It brings the function in scope in its own body.
@elyse So you basically have to give the compiler and hint that in y + 2 you don't refer to let y = 1 but to y itself?
we need more people to reiterate that
18:10
Sometimes you have to go with print $ negate $ square x though (not this time)
@elyse I prefer Haskell's way of "I'm importing the function in body without asking" tbh
user1804599
rec says you start shadowing in the function body, instead of after the function definition.
@AlexM. He has me plonked
// Lists use square brackets and `;` delimiter
let list1 = [ "a"; "b" ]
// :: is prepending
let list2 = "c" :: list1
// @ is concat
let list3 = list1 @ list2
18:11
why would you plonk jeffreggio
Yup, OCaml style baby
he's pretty cool
user1804599
[1, 2] is a single-element list of tuples. :(
He plonks many people, I'm not offended
user1804599
it's so confusing and terrible
18:12
@elyse ikr :P
user1804599
Standard ML uses , for lists.
You have no idea how many times that bit me in the ass
I only keep pretty cool people and cicada unplonked
@AlexM. Really?
<silence>
user1804599
18:13
I prefer F# with #light "off".
user1804599
Because significant indentation I consider moronic.
array.[0] is weird
Seems also unnecessary as syntax
user1804599
It's necessary.
user1804599
array[0] would apply array to [0].
Wait, so [0] is interpreted as a list containing 0?
user1804599
18:15
In array[0], yes.
user1804599
In array.[0], no.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Your familiarity with C++ is handicapping you. You must remove these ugly burdens from your mind (and get used to new ugly burdens instead).
user406009
We should all just program in Lisp.
user406009
No syntax. Only ()
@Lalaland MLs free you of those brackets. It’s otherwise the same.
make sure to only use your operators in function form though!
18:18
@JerryCoffin he he
Of course F# doesn't have retarded record types, which makes it automatically 10x more usable.
user1804599
> ["Cat Plus Plus"; "elyse"; "Jefffrey"] |> List.filter (fun p -> p <> "elyse") |> List.iter (printf "%s is a loser\n");;
Cat Plus Plus is a loser
Jefffrey is a loser
val it : unit = ()
hi , can someone give me a book name(PDF) which have exercises or examples of DATA STRUCTURES implemented by c++ ??? I want to fully understand the concepts of all linked lists and trees and how to implement them correctly in c++ ?
Can we get someone who is not a help vampire in here, sometimes?
user406009
@ElimGarak People should be allowed to ask questions.
user406009
18:25
@AlphasSupremum I would just pick up a generic algorithms book. The only special thing for C++ is memory management, and most data structures don't have that complicated memory management requirements (that are not trivially solvable with either shared_ptr or unique_ptr).
@fredoverflow nice
@fredoverflow <--- @Lalaland :P
thank you very much ^^ fredoverflow
user406009
@AlphasSupremum For more specialized data structures, it is usually best to go straight to the research papers IMHO.
@elyse Can you have immutability without purity in functional programming languages?
I guess you can.
18:27
@Lalaland yeahhh research papers have bloody brilliant implementations almost always! ^^
user1804599
Well, if you exclude mutability of the outside world.
user1804599
Or if you have some stateless source of random numbers, such as background radiation.
user1804599
You can even have mutability with purity. :)
user1804599
Through uniqueness types.
Isn't that what OCaml does?
I don't remember IO monads or the likes in it
user1804599
18:28
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ No.
user1804599
OCaml is impure.
Yeah, so it has immutability without pureness?
user1804599
Yes.
user1804599
It also has mutability.
user1804599
let mutable x = 1 in
x <- 2;

let y = ref 1 in
y := 2
18:30
right
Hello
user1804599
where ref just creates a record with a single mutable field
user1804599
F# has the same things.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ When I was in High school I heard about a girl like that (though the phrasing they used was a bit less genteel--something about "incurable slut").
Yeah, F# looks very OCaml-like
user1804599
18:35
One pain point of F# is .NET though.
user1804599
Not on Windows? Doomed.
Not using Visual Studio? Doomed.
yeah, but nobody cares about either of those conditions
Now I feel like I want to write a PL
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Fairly directly derived from Caml/OCaml. Part of the original intent was that a fair amount of Caml code should compile as F# (and vice versa). Looks like the official docs don't mention this much any more, but a quick look on the web archive shows the manual from back when it was new
18:38
Not supporting labels is a plus. I've never liked those in OCaml. Especially when they were required IIRC.
user1804599
What are labels?
Like named arguments for functions
user1804599
Ooh that.
user1804599
I like them.
Swift has a real problem with named arguments.
18:39
So you had something like List.map ~f:function
And then I don't remember the other label for the list
And they were required in some old version of OCaml
user1804599
You can label arguments when calling non-F# methods.
user1804599
x.F (1, 2, z: 3)
Ell
Ell
int i = 0;
int j = ++i;
// assert(j == 1, "I forgot which value is returned. Will this assert trigger?"); what is j?
what are you expecting, the compiler to leave a kind comment?
user1804599
it'll fail to compile
user1804599
18:45
assert takes a single argument.
Ell
Ell
ah balls
okay. what is the value of j then?
@Ell With a pre-increment, the resulting value is the incremented value. (i.e., in this case, both i and j will be equal to 1 after the assignment).
user1804599
@Ell 1
Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin okay thanks!
I always forget which way round it is
I should have just tested I suppose though
user1804599
Never use assignment/increment/decrement operators inside other expressions.
18:46
I have a similar problem with your face and your ass
I thought it was a joke and I was trying hard to get the point
user1804599
Only as whole expression statements.
user1804599
Reasoning: CQS.
not sure that I ever believed that CQS was actually a thing worth doing at all
@cubuspl42 The sequence point?
user1804599
18:47
They have side-effects, and side-effects must stand out.
I disagree
Ell
Ell
CQS?
it's really not a "side" effect considering it's the whole point
user1804599
Command–query separation (CQS) is a principle of imperative computer programming. It was devised by Bertrand Meyer as part of his pioneering work on the Eiffel programming language. It states that every method should either be a command that performs an action, or a query that returns data to the caller, but not both. In other words, Asking a question should not change the answer. More formally, methods should return a value only if they are referentially transparent and hence possess no side effects. == Connection with design by contract == Command–query separation is particularly well suited...
@Ell Command-query separation (I'd guess).
18:49
Why do Managers classes get so much hate?
user1804599
@cubuspl42 because their names aren't descriptive.
Why write a class that doesn’t manage anything?
Like many (most?) of Bertrand Meyer's ideas, it's superficially attractive, but showing real benefit from it seems...problematic at best.
@cubuspl42 Unclear naming
lifetime_manager there, plenty descriptive :p
18:50
@elyse revolutionary
user1804599
CQS-violating APIs tend to be very confusing.
user1804599
IME.
user1804599
CQS-violating UIs even more so.
@elyse That's interesting
user1804599
18:51
Fuck interfaces that do more than one thing.
I guess that's the base of the reasoning behind pop not returning the popped value in std::stack
Huh? The C++ draft is written in LaTeX?
stuff.do_something(); if (stuff.did_something_happen()) { ... } ...eh :/
how do you think it looks so good
user1804599
@Boni Why would it not be?
18:52
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ no--that's about exception safety.
user1804599
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ IIRC it's because of C++ being bad at memory management and exceptions.
it's because of no nothrow move guarantee.
there's nothing preventing std::stack::pop from returning T in the infinite majority of cases.
@Puppy It's because that guarantee would be required?
@Rapptz I don't think it looks significantly different from the way did did when it wasn't in Latex (IIRC, it was converted to Latex in the C++11 time frame).
yes
which IYAM should be a given.
18:54
@JerryCoffin The C++98 standard looks radically different.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ how would you do that though? you can't return std::move(back()) and destroy it in pop() - you'd have to move it out into a local and return that by value..or pop(T& here) I guess
@melak47 You could move it into a local and return that by value.
@melak47 Double move, yes.
I can't imagine throwing move
@Puppy ...not to mention the minor detail that when it was designed, the whole concept of moving (and rvalue references to allow/support it) hadn't been invented yet.
18:55
@elyse The syntax in LaTeX is just so ugly. I expected it to work off of a markdown converter or something (if there is such a thing).
return a reference to a local?
@JerryCoffin Well, arguably, they should have swapped it into an out parameter or something.
@cubuspl42 Keep in mind that a copy is a valid implementation of a move.
user1804599
#define FIRST(a, b) ([]{ auto FIRST_x = (a); b; return FIRST_x; }())

FIRST(stack.top(), stack.pop())
user1804599
if you want both in a single expression :p
18:56
@melak47 Oh yeah, nevermind.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ That would be extremely bad.
The C++03 standard actually looks closer to the C++11 one though.
Looks.. off though.
Are you allowed to do auto x = move(stack.front()) and then stack.pop()?
yep
user1804599
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Sure.
18:57
front?
you mean back?
but yeah that's legal
Let me check
I guess I mean top
user1804599
There is no reason that should not work.
user1804599
You're just moving from the top element.
lol they call it top?
user1804599
Then pop destructs that moved-from element.
18:58
why not? it returns the top of the stack
why use std::stack when there's std::vector.
@Puppy IMO, what they should have done was have you pass a reference, and assigned to that, then removed the value from the collection. Easy to make exception safe, easy to add a timeout (and return false) for multithreading, etc.
user3790646
Ah. I'm going to vent my feelings again here, as all of you know I'm just a troll
user3790646
My ex gf blocked me today
user3790646
18:58
after saying she still loves me just a few weeks ago
who cares
@JerryCoffin Yeah? What do you if/when the assignment throws?
nothing.
it's a copy so the original stack is not mutated
you can just let it throw
@Andrey Good for you. Ex is ex.
@Rapptz You can model a std::stack with std::vector? Seems to me like they have different guarantees.
18:59
@LucDanton Nothing--if the assignment throws, the code to remove the item from the collection doesn't execute.
user3790646
@fredoverflow Oh well, thank you.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ You can model a std::stack with any sequence container.
@fredoverflow And Vi is vi. :P
Weirdly enough that can’t really be improved much with moves, can it?

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