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21:02
> Rust allows to write much safer code than the usual arduino sketch. It means less problems in the runtime. You cannot bootstrap zinc with a simple setup() and loop() though, in a foreseeable future all supported platforms will be ported to platformtree, which means that a hardware specification must be written for an application.
That one, while adding some typing to the “hello world” style application makes sure that hardware constraints are met at compile time (i.e. one cannot simply share same pin with a led and UART transmit and toggle it in different code paths, which makes sense for
this sounds really nice
How does one save the cursor position on Linux?
(<ESC>[6n doesn't work)
Google's so useless on this, ugh
Hey @Bartek. Don't you feel like there could be so much more to programming then what we have right now?
Shit ain't right, bro.
user3790646
21:19
Good evening.
@Jefery elaborate
@BartekBanachewicz Like programming should be much easier.
And programming languages today are pretty much all the same things revised decade by decade with small improvements that don't tackle nearly enough shit as they should.
With the possible exception of paradigm shifts, of course.
I mean, you are average C++ programmer joe is still programming with the same concepts they used in the 90'
25 years ago. That's a shitton in terms of computer science.
it's not the computer science that matters, it's the programming science
No real improvement has been accomplished. Software is still way too complex.
I don't know, I feel like that sometimes.
It's like we are stuck.
it's way too complex because we successfully implement so many more features.
21:24
Software will always be complex because were always tackling new/harder things.
@Puppy Sure. But the more features grow, the more the complexity esponentially increases.
It's not a linear thing.
Or at least it doesn't feel like it.
well, that's not necessarily true.
depends on what features you're adding to what.
@Jefery that's why we should think long-term
Fine. Then it's me.
js frameworks wont fix anything
haskell and rust could
21:26
@Jefery Not necessarily. Some features definitely do produce that.
seems to me bartek that you don't really know anything about JS frameworks
Ell
Ell
lol, I typed monkey instead of make
@Jefery Not really
They used to be like object are amazing, let's use new everywhere so we can mimic java
so I've heard at least vOv
user3790646
@Ell That's another proof that you're getting more and more crazy everyday,
With the same concepts I mean "There's a stack, there's a head, there's manual memory management, there are functions, there's a sequential control flow that starts from main, and so on".
Sure they built many more beautiful features on top
But maybe there's a better way to write programs then a sequential control flow.
Maybe there's something we are not seeing
Ell
Ell
What about functional programming?
what about coq and the like?
We are all so into this way of thinking that maybe we'll keep going around and around to the same concepts over and over.
Ell
Ell
21:32
We have made significant progress
You are just ignoring progress :(
I'm not saying we haven't made progress.
@Jefery Well, all programs have to lower to a sequential control flow. So there's really nothing you can do with sequential control flow hardware other than build things on top of sequential control flow.
It's just not nearly enough for me.
it's a hard process
and it's certainly not done by people like puppy who create langs out of thin air proclaiming how they will do all things
you might find something different with quantum computers that are not sequential control flow
Ell
Ell
21:33
@Puppy Not necessarily
but I think you'll find they're much harder ;p
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz what is the point in that?
It's definitely not done by people like you @BartekBanachewicz that just like to belittle other people's efforts
it's sad
ah, he's just whining because he had a bad day or whatever
ignore him
So much hate
he's capable of reason but this is not one of those times, and it hasn't been for a week or so at least
21:35
@Ell I'm not just doing that
@Ell How could you possibly implement anything on a CPU that offers only sequential control flow without lowering it to sequential control flow?
Finally done with the dishes
Fucking boring
Ell
Ell
@Puppy well, you could implement things on an FPGA instead of a cpu
@Ell to make people realize that actual knowledge is important
Ell
Ell
but I guess nothing sequential on a CPU
21:36
PL research is fairly new, but it's still a lot to learn
not really viable, I'm given to understand that they don't offer remotely comparable performance to a traditional CPU
that could be the wrong impression, but I suspect there's a reason why FPGAs are mostly used in specialized applications.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I think it depends entirely on the workload
@Ell That raises the obvious question as to why we don't have FPGA co-processors.
Ell
Ell
21:37
They're good for massively parallel
I think there just should be more "Oh fuck that. How about I don't start with this assumption. What could I do then?" kind of thoughts.
Ell
Ell
which I know gpus/compute cards are good at too
practically every computational device in existence has a graphics co-processor, which depends on the workload but that workload is common enough to justify their inclusion.
@Jefery this is what happens in the FP world
As opposed to "Oh yeah, so assuming we have memory management, how about we wrap it into a class and make it so it's safer to use?"
Ell
Ell
21:37
but FPGAs are more flexible
I mean logical programming and functional programming kind of did that.
the first thing you need to do is stop giving a fuck about CPUs and machines and whatnot
@Jefery exactly
Ell
Ell
@Puppy yeah I agree
@Jefery Because it's fundamentally unavoidable.
@Ell Unless you actually need to program them.
21:38
@Puppy bullshit
like let's say
@Puppy I understand that at low level you kind of have to have it
no.
But that doesn't mean you have to write thinking about it
fundamentally completely unavoidable.
21:38
yeah and we have abstractions for low-level things
regardless of level.
Hello everyone! This is my first time here. I was looking at your book recommendations (stackoverflow.com/questions/388242/…) and I noticed that you have only a single book in "introductory, no previous experience" category. May I propose my book "Programming for Beginners - with C++" for review? Some chapters (slightly shortened) are available online at www.programming4beginners.com .
In Haskell you don't think about memory at all.
fundamentally, adj. - Puppy thinks so
yes, but memory is only the most trivial example.
21:38
You could say that wrt Haskell, memory doesn't even exist
there are lots of resources that follow the same pattern where you cannot just throw a garbage collector at it.
It's all just values floating somewhere that doesn't matter.
for example, resources that exist on a remote server.
@Puppy What about them? I don't understand.
@Jefery you're both talking about totally different things
21:39
Yeah, I figured.
puppy is still in the "I'm solving real world problems with available technology"
and you're saying "how can we create new technology"
@Jefery Well, you argue that in Haskell memory does not exist, but that's bullshit because you can't employ the GC to collect memory of a session on a remote server.
You can't? Why?
Servers written in Haskell exists.
And they are probably GCed
yes, but they're collecting their own memory.
not the memory of other machines.
You mean databases?
21:41
that fundamentally doesn't matter
well, just any other machine.
like if you are the client, and you establish a session with the server.
Ok, go on...
Ell
Ell
shit I gotta do this work ahh
the server can't employ GC in that fashion because what if, for example, the client simply crashes.
or decides to DDOS you by never telling you to free up that session?
The server can't employ GC to garbage collect unused memory on the connected client?
21:42
@Puppy the socket gets closed and the low level component notifies the higher layers about that. The failure control flow takes over.
@KevinC Oh dear the brace style on there.
even high-level code has failure modes
and those exist precisely to handle lower-level problems
@BartekBanachewicz Right, but you need an explicit failure mode to collect that session when the socket is closed. If that's your model.
because high-level code is never wrong and never crashes (in principle)
Oh come on, that's not true.
21:43
you can't just assume that because the socket is closed, you're gonna collect the session.
the client might come back and ask for it again later and you might need to still have it when they do.
and your point there is?
@EtiennedeMartel I was thinking of something extremely simple and readable for beginners.
we're talking about middle layer here, yes
I don't understand how sessions have something do dynamic memory management.
my point is that you can't just collect the session.
21:44
code built on top of that need not to be concerned with that at all
you fundamentally do not know if the client still maintains a reference to it.
If you need persistance you can use a database or a file and save it there.
@KevinC Wait... it's your website.
@Puppy you specify that as a failure mode
The haskell client and server would still not need dynamic memory management.
21:44
you can wait a set number of times for reconnect and then release the thing
@EtiennedeMartel It's supposed to be for people who have never seen code before. Have mercy on them!
if you have a stateful server, you have state
@BartekBanachewicz Right, except you've just released the thing.
so you must have the concept of releasing the thing.
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, it is my website
@Puppy did I?
21:45
Oh I see what you mean now
the whole idea of having to release the thing yourself based on the correct conditions must exist.
but that's not related to memory at al
it's absolutely the same thing.
you have a resource, you need to know when it's no longer being used.
if I have a list of elements [1,2,3], I can %= drop 1 it
memory, files, GPU buffers, remote connections, whatever.
it's all the same.
21:46
@KevinC Looking at it, I don't know. I think you go into graphics way too fast. Hell, you talk about Allegro, which is essentially a C library, before you even start talking about pointers.
that's the same with arbitrary state as well
from the high-level pov, there's no difference between removing an element from the list and freeing a file
yes, there is.
no, not at all.
you can automatically detect whether or not anybody is still using that element on the list.
you can't automatically detect if it's safe to delete a file.
It's like "absolute beginner stuff" and then before you're even done with the beginner stuff it's just right into advanced things.
21:47
@Puppy no. That's halting problem.
what if there's another process running concurrently that's still reading it?
what if someone asks you for that list element from GUI
It really feels like there's a bunch of missing chapters in the middle of it all.
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, I simply misunderstood what you meant.
user3790646
Good night :)
21:48
but yes, you could consider that element a resource and you must determine when it's safe to release it.
@EtiennedeMartel The book has more chapters between functions and Allegro. When using Allegro, I avoid pointers (I mention them only briefly). I use Allegro for graphics, not to explain pointers. It is possible. Only about 40% of the materials is online. Full chapter list is under 'printed edition' menu link.
Still I'm just saying, that maybe we should think outside the box.
Not only with regards to memory.
That was just an example.
Ugg, I need to write an OpenGL application
@Puppy sure, but that's not related to memory directly, as you can see I'm sure
@KevinC You cover classes after Allegro?
21:49
it's a problem of resource handling
memory is just another resource.
there's nothing special about memory.
right.
@Mikhail Fun!
so you must have the concept of freeing resources.
21:49
but then again resource handling need not be concerned with any particular hw or sw backing
since you must determine what the failure modes are and when it's safe to release those resources in various circumstances.
it doesn't matter what does the resource represent internally at all
you cannot pretend that resource handling does not exist.
And the std lib is covered way too late.
Now I know that as soon as I mention "relational model" people will mock me with for the "flat" argument of yesterday, but if you take SQL, it basically just offers structured memory. Memory that is not only accessible via addresses, but as things and predicates to select those things with.
21:51
@Puppy well, you can if you build on top of that. If you have an updateAllConnectedClients function, it can simply utilize the collection held by lower-level component
I cover structures and classes with graphics. The first structure is a ball, the second is a 2D vector, and then all that again with classes and member functions. It all gets displayed on screen in a nice dynamics simulation, so that people can intuitively grasp what structures and classes are for. I was sick of examples with struct student and whatever.
As opposed to "here's you named variable: store whatever you want into it".
if a client is deemed disconnected, the function will just receive a collection sans that client next time
updateAllFlatClients :p
that's only true if your business logic is that that's what it should do.
21:51
updateClient function, which could be pure, is absolutely abstract
which is why you have to make that decision and write it to do the thing that you need.
@EtiennedeMartel 2D vector as in mathematical 2D vector, not std::vector
which is why the language and libraries must include the necessary concepts.
@Puppy I simply believe that those things belong in different layers
as in one is strictly above the other
Haskell enforces that partially in the type system (and allows you to manually enforce it fully)
it's irrelevant what layer it's in, since you have to write this particular bit of layer yourself.
since the business rules are totally application-dependent.
you can't write a socket that assumes that just because the client disconnected means to throw away your session immediately.
that's stupid.
21:53
@Puppy there are some universal rules that can be reapplied to different scenarios
E.G. ZeroMQ
@Puppy Maybe the concept of "socket" needs to go in some other layer
Lower layer
@Jefery It doesn't matter.
it doesn't matter what layer it's in.
if your application fits the ZeroMQ model, you need not be concerned with that at all
that layer doesn't have enough information to make that decision and it must escalate.
@Puppy In lower layers you can use whatever language you want.
21:54
@Puppy unless what I said
@BartekBanachewicz Doesn't matter.
it does a lot
clean layer separation even in one codebase is tremendously important
fun fact
zeromq is written in a language.
so it doesn't goddamn matter if you can use zeromq.
somebody had to make zeromq.
so you need a language that can make zeromq.
21:55
I believe neither me nor jeff argued against that
not just use zeromq.
otherwise you're making a language that's uselessly limited.
Oh yeah, I'm not claiming we should throw away everything we have right now
that being said, using a high-level language/library can effectively mean you cut out resource handling
Good afternoon.
in the end what matters is what you need to write and design
21:56
nah
I believe Conduit is a brilliant example
@nick Backlit Pok3r coming out.
from the perspective of the language, what matters is what needs to be written and designed.
who does which part is irrelevant.
Go get one in blues!
@Puppy one language doesn't need to cover all layers
21:57
I mean, it's useful to split the parts up if you can, but you can't avoid meeting all the requirements.
you can well design a language without memory allocation at all
@BartekBanachewicz It doesn't need to cover all layers. But it certainly should cover several of them.
and a language that cannot express the concept of freeing a resource can't be used for basically anything non-trivial.
@Puppy I think "certainly should" without backing up is way too strong
@EtiennedeMartel Anyway, there is only one recommendation under 'Introductory, no previous programming experience', and frankly, it doesn't quite seem like it is a fantastic one. The Stroustroup book is basically for students, and it has many issues.
open a file? make a Web request? database transaction?
21:58
@Puppy you are forgetting that DSLs exist
and they are used to create VERY nontrivial logic
I am ignoring DSLs because so far they've mostly proven to be a gimmick rather than having actual value
@KevinC Well, maybe that says something about C++ for people with no prior experience?
that's... absolutely unbased and untrue
off the top of my head, Orion
the cost of inter-language interfaces that aren't explicitly designed from at least one language is rather high, and often even those interfaces are terrible e.g. Lua and C.
@sehe :)
21:59
C++ was my first language, but my teachers made me spend dozens of hours just grinding through programming exercises.
@Nooble Alright I'll get it

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