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@Elyse FreeNode?
Excuse me
user1804599
No, Freenode.
is there a way to group code without affecting the source besides indenting?
12:01
@AnalPhabet I have to go, but I will definitely try that later. Thanks again for all :)
@VermillionAzure vertical whitespace
user1804599
@AnalPhabet You're doing it wrong.
@AnalPhabet I want more than just that
user1804599
"so" must be followed by a noun which must not be followed by anything else.
@Elyse So, how are you doing today, Rightfold?
user1804599
12:02
Good, you?
@Elyse How is not a noun
@VermillionAzure comments :p
@melak47 Isn't there some way to do something like that?
user1804599
e.g. I know putting things in brackets creates enclosed scope.
12:04
putting things in a scope puts them in a scope? wow :)
@melak47 I just find it strange that we can artificially do this without having a proper, eh, conditional block or function block?
e.g. {int a;} {int a;} {int a;}
{ unique_lock l(mutex); do_locked_stuff();} /* lock released */ other_stuff();
@VermillionAzure spews standardese
Whatever
I think I'm going to write a real C++ project tonight
8
It's going to be an automatic string pattern recognizer
@VermillionAzure sort of like GREP?
12:07
@edition no
It's going to create a list of logical statements derived from the sequence of strings
user1804599
@VermillionAzure depends on the code.
user1804599
If it's a series of statements, enclose it in braces.
@Elyse just variable declarations
user1804599
If it's an expression, enclose it in parentheses.
user1804599
If it's variable declarations, you're doomed. Use Go:
12:09
AzureVerbibols
user1804599
var (
    a int
    b float32
)
fmt.Println(a, b)
user1804599
I am not interested in Scala anymore.
user1804599
It is too complex.
12:10
interesting
So what are you interested in these days?
user1804599
And subtyping is literally Hitler.
It's just I was interested if I could make a mini program that can do some sort of pattern recognition
user1804599
@fredoverflow Haskell, Perl, PureScript and Rust.
What is PureScript?
@fredoverflow PseudoHaskell -> JS
user1804599
12:11
PureScript is a language with only referentially transparent expressions, and a JavaScript FFI.
user1804599
And a type system that is similar to Haskell's.
so you can only set metatables on tables
makes sense
simplifies things I a bit as well
@Elyse But statements exist for side-effects?
I can just change TableData to be a record of Map Value Value and TableRef
user1804599
@fredoverflow No, there are no side-effects.
12:13
<- Who needs pattern matching?
@Elyse Monads?
@JohanLarsson this looked bigger than your mom johan
@JohanLarsson C# 7, apparently
user1804599
@fredoverflow You can use monadic operations to compose effectful actions, yes.
user1804599
12:14
Just like in Haskell.
yeah, hope they get it nice
user1804599
Here is the hello world program written in PureScript:
user1804599
module Main where

import Prelude (Unit())
import Control.Monad.Eff (Eff())
import Control.Monad.Eff.Console (CONSOLE(), log)

main :: forall eff. Eff (console :: CONSOLE | eff) Unit
main = log "Hello, world!"
Looks like a lot of typing for such little effect
user1804599
Luckily you don't give a fuck, since you never write the hello world program.
user1804599
12:19
PureScript doesn't do tutorial-driven design, which is very good.
Morning
@Borgleader Progressing well, although I was forced to create a lot of custom stuff because everything that exists is depressingly inadequate/generic/drab. I'm hoping to be done by mid November.
@Elyse So you are totally fine with Java's Hello World as well? ;)
public class HelloWorld
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        System.out.println("Hello World!");
    }
}
user1804599
To some extent.
I must say Captain America is not as bad as I thought.
user1804599
12:21
PrintWriter shouldn't exist.
@wilx You mean Barack Obama?
user1804599
println should be a static method taking any Writer instead, as that works just as well but is more versatile.
user1804599
public class HelloWorld
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        Printing.println(System.out, "Hello World!");
    }
}
user1804599
Something like that.
@fredoverflow Heh. No. The movies.
user1804599
12:22
Also add a private constructor to the HelloWorld class, and make the class final.
@Borgleader Yup, but aliasing in general kinda is the unwanted signature of realtime graphics. :D
@wilx So... Barack Obama is as bad as you thought? ;)
...
@wilx nvm, just trying to be funny, not into politics
user1804599
use std.encoding.ascii
use std.io

sub main(stdout: io.Writer): () {
    io.write(stdout, ascii.encode("Hello, world!\n"))
}
user1804599
12:24
Here is hello world in Vlinder on Unix.
:-)
@Elyse Way too complicated, I prefer it this way:
> on Unix
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
    println("Hello World!")
}
So it's not platform-independent?
user1804599
12:25
That is complicated.
user1804599
It automatically picks some stream to write to. Why stdout?
user1804599
It automatically picks an encoding. Which one? How can I tell?
@Elyse Because that's what you need in 95% of the cases?
user1804599
@AnalPhabet How do you want to run a program that writes to stdout in a web browser? Web browsers don't offer stdout.
user1804599
use std.log

sub main(console: log.Logger): () {
    log.info(console, "Hello, world!\n")
}
user1804599
12:26
Here's the program for a web browser.
I don't know, I don't do the whole Web shit.
@Elyse See: console: Object. I was referring to Windooze
@Elyse ???
@Elyse Why does it matter?
user1804599
Different platforms have different environments.
user1804599
You can't just take something from one platform to another platform that doesn't have it.
12:27
@Elyse Is true
user1804599
It's idiotic to think you can.
Wait what language is this again?
That doesn't mean that outputting to fucking console is different
@VermillionAzure Vlider
...which is...?
user1804599
You have to write different main subroutines for different platforms if they aren't compatible.
12:28
Use Assembly
Assembly.js?
user1804599
If you want to use some Windows-specific networking API, you have to take a Windows-specific network in main, and you can't use the same main subroutine on Unix.
@Borgleader Ah, the RAD tools guy's guide... But it is very much out of date beyond the high-level conceptuals, it was written on the eve of GPUs getting virtual addressing (2011)... Just as GTX 480 was chugging along (Fermi, not exactly proper next gen GPU). GCN's tech specs and presentations ought to be preferred over that. :D
@fredoverflow NASM
@Elyse Can I ask The Runtime for a networking API further down the line?
user1804599
@fredoverflow Write an x86-64 VM in JavaScript!
user1804599
12:30
@AnalPhabet all environment resources are passed as arguments to main if main takes them (decided by parameter name).
user1804599
This includes stuff like the network, the filesystem, the working directory, the environment variables, the standard streams, etc.
> parameter name
It's name-dependent and therefore it sucks
user1804599
For web browsers, it includes stuff like the console and a websocket factory.
It should take by type
user1804599
No, because stdout and stderr have the same type.
user1804599
12:31
I don't see a problem with looking at the name.
what gcc does this linux use: 4.3.5
user1804599
OH NO I CANNOT NAME stdout PARAMETER meow WHAT DO I DO NOW
user1804599
12:33
Scala's collection library is utterly retarded.
Same with C#'s
at least the old interfaces and the readonly stuff
user1804599
Clojure's are even more retarded. Clojure defines its own equality function which does not use Object#equals. However, maps do use Object#equals for keys.
user1804599
Java interop my ass.
@fredoverflow Well, Java is the worst language ever designed. PHP, on the other hand, is just the worst language ever.
user1804599
PHP at least doesn't have a universal base class.
user1804599
12:37
I like the name of Perl's universal base class: UNIVERSAL.
@Elyse Are you ditching the JVM entirely? I hope we can still be friends?
user1804599
No, I still have to try Kotlin.
Kotlin is just Java without the warts. You'll probably be very disappointed.
user1804599
:'(
user1804599
How about Frege?
12:40
That's just Haskell on the JVM.
user1804599
Is there a systematic way of computing the number of inhabitants of any potentially quantified type? For types without forall it's trivial. Also disregarding bottom.
Elim, that's my line, you bastard
@Puppy I know, from 2012., I think. :D
@Elyse I have no idea what you're talking about.
user1804599
E.g. Bool has two values.
user1804599
12:45
Maybe Bool has three values.
ah, got it
user1804599
forall a. a -> a has one value, but how can you compute that?
@ElimGarak Resign Pattern
@Elyse What about non-termination? Does that not count extra? Oh wait, is that bottom?
user1804599
@fredoverflow That is bottom, and bottom is ignored.
user1804599
12:48
As is unsafePerformIO and other lies.
How many functions (a, a) -> (a, a) are there? Four?
@Elyse I would suggest n(Maybe t) = 1 + n(t), now where is my Turing award?
user1804599
Yes. :P
user1804599
@fredoverflow No idea.
user1804599
Four, I think.
user1804599
Identity, swap, duplicate first, duplicate second.
12:52
agreed
Shall we share credits on the award?
Your name first, I am shy.
Anyway, gotta watch some Scala videos and bathe in complexity.
> // TODO: Learn about icons in Linux
why can't i pass const std::string& again?
move semantics and copying gets in the way?
maybe the function takes a std::string& instead of const std::string&?
@chmod711telkitty i'm designing the function
Cinch designing stuff. Probably involves armadillos.
it's std::vector<std::string> func(const std::string& file) { ... }
I do nothing with the string
So take it by const&
@AnalPhabet ....
user1804599
0
Q: Is there an algorithm to compute the number of inhabitants of a given type?

ElyseIs there an algorithm to compute the number of inhabitants of a given type in Hindley–Milner? Assuming the following restrictions: All inhabitants terminate, i.e. no bottom. All inhabitants lack side-effects. For example (using Haskell syntax): Bool has two inhabitants. (Bool, Bool) has fo...

tMJ
tMJ
Can anyone take a look at this question, it went down in the stream. stackoverflow.com/questions/33192066/…
13:00
templatized
@tMJ VISUAL STUDIO 2008 NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
user1804599
Rewriting "Is there an algorithm to" to "How to systematically" should keep morons from closing the question as off-topic.
Flattener::flatten(flat);
dat function call ...
tMJ
tMJ
@VermillionAzure Can't help it because, Microsoft's visual studio 2015 installer sucks. My installation is now stuck at an unrepairable state.
@chmod711telkitty I see the redundancy
@Elyse +1 for your little question to survive the night <3
13:03
@tMJ um
@Elyse lol @ close vote
@tMJ Use MinGW
@tMJ isn't std::list<std::list<int>> different than std::list<int>
tMJ
tMJ
Anyway, if one could show me the way with vs 2015 too, I'd be very happy.
I know the issue (see comments in the question), but I am unable to achieve what I wanted to do. That is flatten an arbitrarily deep list.
user1804599
Also changing to System F as HM is needlessly restrictive.
user1804599
13:10
@Jefffrey yeah it's wrong.
user1804599
This is an algorithm, not a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource.
@tMJ So let me get this right
I like type inference for function bodies and function return types
@tMJ You first accumulate all the elements in the top-most level of the list, right?
but I'm not entirely convinced that type inference for function parameters is a better system than Traits (or Concepts or whatever you want to call them)
@Elyse ^
user1804599
13:15
I like type inference for all things that are not globals.
are functions at global scope globals by your definition?
user1804599
Also type inference and concepts are orthogonal.
user1804599
@orlp Yes.
user1804599
You can't infer the type of a global, since you don't know all uses of it.
tMJ
tMJ
@VermillionAzure top-most / bottom-most whichever way you think your top is. YES.
user1804599
13:17
module A where
f x = x // f inferred as Int -> Int or forall a. a -> a or String -> String?
g = f 42

module B where
import A (f)
g = f "x" // ???
tMJ
tMJ
@VermillionAzure I make an empty list of the type i'm supposed to accumulate, then I traverse recursively through all the lists to accumulate it.
Ell
Ell
> As a term rewriting system, System F is strongly normalizing. However, type inference in System F (without explicit type annotations) is undecidable. Under the Curry–Howard isomorphism, System F corresponds to the fragment of second-order intuitionistic logic that uses only universal quantification. System F can be seen as part of the lambda cube, together with even more expressive typed lambda calculi, including those with dependent types.
what the fuck does that mean
tMJ
tMJ
Atleast that's what I want to do.
user1804599
@Ell define "that"
user1804599
You quoted a lot of text.
Ell
Ell
13:19
any of it :(
@Ell um welll
@Elyse personally I just get a bit uncomfortable when the type of the parameters of a function get inferred
You know what Curry-Howard is right?
@tMJ yeah give me a second
I'm not a functional master but I'll try
tMJ
tMJ
@VermillionAzure cool! Thanks.
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure No
I should get a book about this
user1804599
13:21
@orlp also concepts are quite irrelevant to type inference, and "traits" is such an overloaded word that you really have to be more specific.
@Ell There was a video on here that they posted
Basically, it means that:

For every "concept" in math, there will be an equivalent concept in computer science.
user1804599
Templates are a terrible machinery.
user1804599
You want polymorphic values to be type checked once, not for every instantiation.
Right now, they're saying System F is an extension of this such that it's the equivalent of math's second-order intuitionistic logic, whatever that is
@Elyse when I said concepts/traits I meant statically non-inferred function parameter types, aided with concepts/traits to prevent millions of manual overloads, and to make general code possible
if I'm not mistaken then you should always be able to infer the return type of the function
user1804599
13:23
In what type system?
I don't know
I'm not too well versed in formalizations of type systems
user1804599
Inferencability depends on type system features.
Ell
Ell
> As of 2008, GHC, a Haskell compiler, goes beyond HM, and now uses System F extended with non-syntactic type equality, for example.
TIL
@Ell oh i see
13:28
Let's see... Second order intuitionistic logic seems to be...
Oh, universal iteration over sets?
Come on, 'tards. Come on, 'tards!
That's what I feared: Travis uses g++5.1 .__.
Ell
Ell
(λx.2 ∗ x + 1)3 = 2 ∗ 3 + 1
I don't really understand what the lambda does?
@Ell it's equivalent to: [](auto x) { 2 * x + 1 }
Ell
Ell
λ . (2 * x + 1)
so it's a λ.
literally
13:37
@Ell no
user1804599
@Ell (\x -> 2 * x + 1) 3 == 2 * 3 + 1 in Haskell.
λx. establishes a function that has one variable x
everything that comes after that is the function expression
(λx.x) is the identity function
(λx.x)y ==> (λy.y)
user1804599
No, (λx.x)y is y, not λy.y.
@Elyse ahhh sorry
tMJ
tMJ
@VermillionAzure Got anything for me?
Ell
Ell
13:39
Why does the x prior the brackets change to N here:
yx(λx.x)[x := N] ≡ yN(λx.x)
Oh wait
I get it :3
Thanks :)
user1804599
It indicates that outer and inner x are different variables.
user1804599
For a mathematician new to lambda calculus it may be confusing that in x(λx.x) the x inside the lambda is distinct from the one outside the lambda.
user1804599
For a programmer this may be obvious as they are familiar with shadowing.
Ell
Ell
yeah :)
At first I thought that [x := N] was just a comment or something. But I understand now
I'm going to try and cook pasta in a pan
13:44
@Jefffrey I did that yesterday.
user1804599
Also (λx.x) and (λy.y) are equivalent.
@tMJ why are you appending?
13:50
And seriously, SO needs to differently weight rep gain from answers (based on tags).
@GregorMcGregor Hehe.
@GregorMcGregor I've lived the thug life. :P
@Morwenn How was it?
Did you just put pasta and water in the pan?
@ElimGarak Did you choose it though?
@Nooble The thug life chose me, gangbangin' like we're still on dial up, you feel me?
13:53
@Jefffrey Great, but no. I cooked the pasta in a saucepan (is it what it's called?) then dumped the pasta in a pan with spice and vegetable.
What's wrong with cooking pasta in a frying pan?
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn yes this, always this
I have never tried cooking the pasta in the frying pan though
I guess it's simply impractical.
Ell
Ell
the pan just won't be deep enough
probably
that's what she said ( s/pan/peanus )
13:56
do you guys know a resource that contains many of the possible 3D homogenous transformation matrices?
So, I built a highway and went from 5k to -2k. Fucking Cities: Skylines.
@orlp A properly educated brain not looking for a quick, free meal comes to mind. :P
Ell
Ell
cities skylines is so awesome
@ElimGarak I feel you, my [withheld].
@orlp Ask on OpenData.SE?
@Morwenn I don't feel it would be applicable there
13:57
@Ell Have you managed to build an actual skyline in your city, tho?
Ell
Ell
No :P
I just like playing with roads really
I always go under once I get cocky.
Ell
Ell
I'm p bad at the actual game
I'm not very good at it either
cant manage traffic, and after a while i constantly get abandoned buildings
And fucking high schools are expensive.
13:59
@ElimGarak I've done some derivations myself in the past
it's possible, just a painful exercise
You must embrace it, the pain is just weakness leaving your body.
and doing it everytime rather than being able to look them up is silly

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