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Ell
Ell
17:00
@Columbo lol. can you ask for rematches?
in tournaments
@Ell Yes.
That's what it's all about.
Ell
Ell
I didn't know that
You piss someone off by playing good chess (well, not in my caseā€¦) and then the tension rises
user406009
@wilx But it is an interesting question. Are some forms of entertainment more valuable than others?
user406009
Who can say if reading Twilight is better or worse than reading Shakespeare?
user406009
17:02
To me it seems like you can't.
@Lalaland Literally your mom
user406009
All entertainment is valueless and thus of equal value.
@Ell Dude, I was playing online
lol
Ell
Ell
Oh
@Lalaland Obviously untrue.
Ell
Ell
17:03
I thought you meant a physical chess tournament
@Ell Nah, that would've been spectacular
@Ell chess, where?
Ell
Ell
idk :P
We had chess tournaments at school
ell o ell
Dijkstra is seriously legendary.
17:15
> To scale horizontally (or scale out) means to add more nodes to a system, such as adding a new computer to a distributed software application.
When you need to add more entities you add new nodes (tables) or views or triggers
Relational databases are not very good at it
It's all flat
lol
That's not "scaling"
Might as well say you're scaling your program by adding new functions
It's dumb, it doesn't apply
17:16
@CatPlusPlus How so?
You even quoted the definition
I guess I meant that it scales nicely when you need to represent more different types of data
Or augment the one already existing
As opposed to what
As opposed to having to redefine hierarchies or reinvent the whole design of the application
Which fits nicely into this definition:
> Scalability is the capability of a system, network, or process to handle a growing amount of work, or its potential to be enlarged in order to accommodate that growth.
@Jefery That does not follow from using non-relational model
17:19
It can
That's prevented in the relational model by the flat design of the tables
What's prevented
Yes some DBMS allow for compound types
is jefery advocating mongoDB yet
But I'm not really talking about those
If you define your data model badly then you have to redefine it, but that's not inherently solved by using relations
17:20
I'm waiting for the ridicule phase to join in
It takes about the same amount of design effort whether you model is relational or not
To be able to extend it without pain
@CatPlusPlus Fixed hierarchical and compound structures
Relational databases that need to change once in use are painful to deal with
sorry bout it
Why are they "fixed" and relational DB aren't
Hell schema changes in relational databases are painful long-running and dangerous operations
Its easily broken
17:22
Because tables are flat and they cannot contain other tables. In regular languages, records can contain other records and define the way they relate to each other by putting themselves in hidden matrioskas
Tables can reference other tables and queries are also part of the system
Which also introduces scope
@CatPlusPlus Yup
Relational model might shockingly be better for relational data but it doesn't make it inherently better at everything
Especially not dumb things like 'scaling' whatever that means
"Tables are flat" is Cinch-level of revelation
What even is "relational data"
Complex database is not any easier to extend or change than complex object-oriented system or whatever
17:24
I don't think that's true
Hell, it might be harder because the combined system of application and database is inherently more complex than application by itself
phew
I've added all 30 additional include dirs for my project at work
by hand
now VS fuck up at CONST macro
And relational databases scale vertically better than horizontally because foreign key guarantees are hard to do in distributed systems
So there's that for scaling
oh glory nodeJS sources contain that
what a piece of shit
17:26
@Jefery Then it's as simple as 'you never worked with a complex database'
How does something that is hard to do in an unrelated topic cause databases to scale vertically better than horizontally again?
It doesn't even have to be that complex, just have a lot of data and be deployed in production
What unrelated topic
It's not an unrelated topic, it's what makes relational model relational model
Like seriously that statement is extreme :psyduck:
node has paths that end in /include/src/
The relational model doesn't have to be tied to distributed systems
It's orthogonal to it
Horizontal scaling is distributed systems
17:30
The platform doesn't have to be tied to the cloud
It's orthogonal to it
@CatPlusPlus Yes, we dismissed the "horizontal scaling thing" a while ago
The relational model is just a way to organize, query and modify data.
No really
Wow
The fact that some databases implement some sort of relational model has nothing to do with distributed systems.
Yes really
I never knew that
I'll just leave this here and go back to log parsing then
It's the idea that you only have flat tuples and you have to work with those
17:32
I'm pretty sure Cat knows that.
lol stackoverflow
"how do I make recursive macros"
A1: "you can't"
A2: "impossible"
A3: "Here's how"
Which makes organizing data simple enough because there are not thousands of ways to design the system. In fact if you follow the rules of normalization that are very few design choices you can make with regards to a specific use case.
Compound data is inherently more complex because it allows stacking different data types into themselves.
lol
Good logic
Nice proof
17:34
That's why I mentioned "flat" as a pro of the relational model.
oh for fucks sake
now only 30 lib dirs to add
fuck that
I'm going home
but my custom build is almost ready which is nice
Ven
Ven
you got that going for you
@CatPlusPlus What? Compound data is by definition complex.
In fact one is a synonim for the other.
Ell
Ell
@bart custom build?
17:36
Good response
Nice argument
lol
What's the difference between compound data and a flattened representation of the same data
Ven
Ven
GDB in Visual Studio? Damn RMS must be mad
no difference
And why is unflattened representation somehow more complex
Ugh
@CatPlusPlus Because it's compound.
17:37
lol
Keep repeating that
Again, compound is synonym with complex.
No it's not
It's something you can check by just taking a dictionary and looking it up.
Well if you want to go by dictionary definitions
Ven
Ven
WAT?
17:38
@CatPlusPlus lol
Ven
Ven
wait, where's the grandma WATing
No, let's go by your own personal definitions
"consisting of many different and connected parts" also applies to relational model
Woah, they started to film lessons in my uni
Now that I'm almost at the end
17:40
@Jefery what course did you do?
So how is relational model less complex again
Dear god, figure it out
I'm not gonna stay here trying to explain why flat structures are better than nested ones.
They're not inherently better
17:41
@TonyTheLion What course? I attended many courses
Also it's a matter of point of view
Ven
Ven
all your codebases should live in flat modules
@Jefery I mean, what degree? I guess CompSci
Yeah
Ain't done yet
Again, what's the difference between { a: 1, b: { c: 2, d: 3 } } and { a: 1, b_c: 2, b_d: 3 }
17:42
Hopefully this is my last year
@CatPlusPlus lol
That's not what flat is about
@Jefery It's your conjecture
@Jefery What is it about
And again, how databases are less complex when "complex" is "consisting of many different and connected parts" (also synonym to compound remember) and "In the relational model of a database, all data is represented in terms of tuples, grouped into relations."
Well okay, that second quote is not the full thing I wanted
Compare type Client { books: [Book], emails: [Email] } being divided into a table for clients, one for books and one for emails. And how to access all books or all emails I don't have to have all clients data.
This is of course just an example.
But databases never have only one relation
17:44
You can nest it even further and have more complex situations.
That's just a file
@Jefery So now you have 3 tables
I.e. something consisting of different and connected parts
So
It's complex
lol
Ven
Ven
I sure hope nothing references books the other way around, otherwise that structure is done for
The whole point is that they are not connected
They are independent from each other
17:46
Except you're not telling the whole story, because what you described is in relational terms table for clients and table for books associated with a client and emails associated with a client
Ven
Ven
Uh, sometimes my emacs does... weird stuff. Some part of my split repaint empty... Happens when I scroll with like 4 splits (2x2). Anyone ever had that?
In non-relational model this could still be a reference to a different collection i.e. it's not inherently an operation that suddenly becomes available only if you're using relational model
@CatPlusPlus That would mimic the relational model
Plus making some operations easier doesn't make the whole thing less complex which is your thesis
Just crippled by the fact that you probably don't have access to the relational calculus
@CatPlusPlus I'm claiming that the way the data is organized is much more easy to understand and less complex then nested data.
17:48
Also changing either clients, books or emails is exactly as difficult in either relational or non-relational version
How it is less complex when complex means "consisting of different and connected parts" and to replicate that structure in relational model you have multiple connected tables
Except that for example to change all existing email address format (just an example) you have to somehow access all your clients too.
In the relational model you don't.
In nested data you have to follow a specific path to the data. With the relational model the path is always at top level.
@Jefery ...and? That's not more difficult to understand than doing the exact same operation on disconnected table with emails
If you don't see how the former is more complex then the latter, well then I guess we can stop here.
Flat doesn't equal simpler
With regards to data is does.
Ven
Ven
17:51
^ that's not an argument, both of you
Ven
Ven
"for a rock, it's squishy! for bread, it's pretty solid!" ok. but it's data structures you're talking about
inb4 ad hominem
Whatever
Help me decide what I should eat instead
17:54
Just make everything a single EAV table.
There, maximum flatness.
@Ell we have the 'official' build and it's a pain to use outside CI so im crafting my own
@R.MartinhoFernandes so, mobgodb
Also use Perl so everything is flattened for you
@BartekBanachewicz Not really
EAV is worse
17:55
Flatten it into CSV
TIL std::function supports contravariance in parameters.
Ven
Ven
@CatPlusPlus what? itemization much?
@Morwenn it'd be wrong if it supporter covariance there :P
@Morwenn which is great
This flat thing with 3000 things in it is so much simpler than if it were grouped up
@Ven What what
Perl (5 at least) automatically flattens arrays
17:56
@Ven I thought it was invariant, like the built-in functions.
That's :thejoke:
Ven
Ven
@CatPlusPlus [] and {} do not flatten, "cmom"
@CatPlusPlus Strawman all the way, I see
Ven
Ven
@CatPlusPlus $@, ${}, etc
Congrats
17:57
@Jefery What
You said flat things are unconditionally better
That's not a strawman
It's a witness
I said the way the relational model orders data is using flat structures, and following the relation model to organize said data is inherently better to nested data.
Because flat is simpler
So how is that a strawman
Because I'm not claiming that we should put all things into a single "flat" table
why do some programs launch a gui window and also leave an empty console open randomly?
17:59
If using flat structures is inherently better then what I said is true
Which is what both you and robot are claiming here
@Jefery So you want a compound thing
lol
A database consisting of multiple tables
You are not very good at discussing
17:59
You keep failing to see equivalencies between these things for whatever ungodly reason
@ScarletAmaranth because not showing a window requires passing an option to the linker

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