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10:00
Oh god, you're one of those people.
he likes Eyes wide shut - he's one of those people :-\
You like his worse movies!
groups you into category of people who enjoy Kubrick :)
@Elyse The second set of face pictures are laughing at you
Yes, you
you know what was a good movie? mad max
MEDIOCRE
10:05
I can't really enjoy any movie where it takes effort to disable a computer. Just waiting until the next Windows/Flash/whatever update usually works fine.
@ScottW The "those people" I was talking about was "those people who think 2001 is great".
@ScottW Not among my friends, by definition.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
@Prismatic yes.
user1804599
user1804599
fucking keming
10:07
I don't get Tarantino movies.
@ScottW Inglourious Basterds
So none of them.
sbi
sbi
@Jefery You don't? You can get them here in any supermarket.
@ScottW Django Unchained.
Yeah maybe Django is the one that makes most sense.
10:09
yeah I liked it
I enjoyed Django Unchained but it is one of those that ends too many times.
I would have liked Inglorious Basterds more than Django Unchained if the ending wasn't so weird
tarantino's thing is tension
I like Inside Out
I love the scenes in all his films where there's really tense stuff going on
10:10
@Prismatic So not Kill Bill.
but the uberviolence doesn't necessarily appeal to me... ie I dont usually find it stylistic
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah wasn't a huge fan of Kill Bill though I'll admit I don't remember too much of it
Kill Bill fell extremely flat.
The only other "classic" I can remember that was more boring than Kill Bill is 2001.
I havent seen Reservoir Dogs
I should watch it
10:13
@ScottW Dunno, I find both have terrible pacing, uninteresting characters, few to no memorable scenes, and long sequences of oh-my-god-what-is-happening-can-we-go-back-to-the-movie-I-was-enj-no-nevermind-I‌​-wasn't-enjoying-it-anyway.
@ScottW Well, since we found some common ground there, I can say that I find that 2001 suffers a lot on the same points.
@ScottW Usually, not much.
The only thing 2001 has there is memorable scenes.
@Borgleader <3 <3
@jaggedSpire its cold wear a hat
ok im off to work now
user1804599
> Sorry, server is full - try later
user1804599
10:18
wtf freenode
user1804599
DoS maybe.
user1804599
@fredoverflow Is that not UB?
user1804599
15
Q: Is it undefined behaviour to memcpy from an uninitialized variable?

Tor KlingbergIs using an uninitialized variable as the src for memcpy undefined behaviour in C? void foo(int *to) { int from; memcpy(to, &from, sizeof(from)); }

How are a and b not initialized?
You know that the target comes first in memcpy, right?
user1804599
10:20
x and y are not.
@Elyse It's memcpying into x and y.
user1804599
Oh wait, you're copying into x and y.
void * memcpy ( void * destination, const void * source, size_t num );
C lib functions follow the same visual order as in assignments.
@ScottW It's kinda funny because I enjoyed Clarke's book very much, but think the audiovisual rendition just didn't work well. And it's not even a matter of "sticking to the original"; since the screenplay and the book were developed together they are very similar (for the movie they picked Jupiter over Saturn for SFX reasons). It's really that I found the "boring sequences" work much better in the book.
@ScottW My favourite movie is Donnie Darko.
10:22
@fredoverflow Doesn't account for NaNs, sadly.
You want different kinds of NaNs to be neighbours? I don't care!
donnie darko was alright
@fredoverflow No, your function makes them so.
my fav movie in highschool was fight club
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Never realised that. I did always realise it was the same order as x86-64 instructions, though!
10:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes So you don't want NaNs to be neighbours?
The last 'mind fuck' movie I saw I liked was Triangle... anyone else seen it?
Any comparison involving NaNs should yield false.
I can see your point, but personally, I don't give a rat's ass about NaNs.
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is isnan(x) considered a comparison?
10:25
What's it compared with?
user1804599
NaN :')
yeah I didn't like it
@ScottW Hard to explain... group of friends set out on a boat. There's a storm, and they get shipwrecked but get picked up by an ocean liner. The liner is empty and spooky shenanigans follow
return x - y + 1 <= 2;   // best line of code I've written this week :)
@fredoverflow FWIW, it's easy to do it: find the smaller one, add 1 to it, and compare them for equality back as floats. Float comparison already does the right thing with NaNs :P
10:26
If you like time loop movies that make you think its pretty good imo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Still won't work for +0.0 and -0.0 though ;)
Its not really a scary movie but its a good mix of creepy and bizarre: imdb.com/title/tt1187064/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
I have TV to catch up with: Jessica Jones.
just watch Pixar stuff and live a happy life
Pixar movies are all the same. Incredibly good animation, solid laughs throughout, at least one deeply sad / emotional moment. They all have the same formula
10:30
I cannot understand Loungers watching animated movies with happy endings.
@ScottW I saw the first one at the cinema and liked it. But I wouldn't watch it again.
You know you're not going to be disappointed... but you know you're nto going to be amazed
I was pretty amazed watching Inside Out vOv
@ScottW yeah he was great in john wick
10:32
> Cfront, based on CPre, had a complete parser, symbol tables, and built a tree for each class, function, etc. Many of the obscure corner cases in C++ are related to the Cfront implementation limitations. The reason is that Cfront performed translation from C++ to C.
wat
I watched parts of this one incredibly fucked up movie with him in it though and I can't really shake him being the dude in that movie
I forgot what it was called
@fredoverflow lol, yeah, no?
no, antichrist
Hm, not even a handful of obvious bugs in a 100 KLOC project? Not bad, Bjarne, not bad at all!
i stopped watching it part way through
10:38
@fredoverflow that their tool can catch :P
user1804599
@fredoverflow is purely functional programming difficult in Kotlin?
@R.MartinhoFernandes So what corner cases would that be, for example?
user1804599
Does Kotlin have do-notation?
Kotlin has no support for PFP at all. It doesn't even come with a persistent collections library.
user1804599
:(
user1804599
10:40
Scala and Frege suck.
What's wrong with Frege?
user1804599
Laziness on the JVM is lol.
user1804599
Immutable collections are easy to implement though.
user1804599
> If you are happy with Scala, you probably don't need Kotlin.
user1804599
lol
user1804599
10:41
From the official website.
@fredoverflow Yeah, I don't know. I can't think of single one that could be caused by implementation limitations that wasn't already inherited from C.
Right, because many people seem to have this misconception that Kotlin is a moder Scala or something. If anything, it's a "Scala--".
user1804599
If Scala is Java++, and Kotlin is Scala--, what is C++--?
10:43
D?
that's D
yeah
user1804599
How about Rust?
Haskell--
mmm; pred . succ /= id
user1804599
@ScarletAmaranth Why not?
10:44
@Elyse C++-- == D
Because Kotlin /= Java
user1804599
It depends on the type class instance.
user1804599
oh :(
@Rapptz @Elyse I now correctly lex/parse my programming language and can generate an AST
how do I do semantical analysis from here?
user1804599
@orlp depends on the language.
10:45
do I decorate the AST with typing, etc, etc, or do I generate a second AST, building from the first, that has all that information
or some other approach
@Elyse target language or compiler language?
7
Q: How do purely functional compilers annotate the AST with type info?

fredoverflowIn the syntax analysis phase, an imperative compiler can build an AST out of nodes that already contain a type field that is set to null during construction, and then later, in the semantic analysis phase, fill in the types by assigning the declared/inferred types into the type fields. How do pu...

user1804599
@fredoverflow I just add them as fields now:
user1804599
type 'a term =
    | Apply_term of 'a term * 'a term
    | Lambda_term of 'a * 'a term
    | Let_term of 'a * 'a term * 'a term
    | Variable_term of 'a

type 'a decl =
    | Let_decl of 'a * 'a term

type 'a modul = { name : string; decls : 'a decl list }
user1804599
10:47
val type_module : Name.t Ast.modul -> (Name.t * t) Ast.modul
Freds guide to semantic analysis:
1. Read all about attribute grammars
2. Realize that compiler theory stops being useful after the lexer/parser phase
3. Forget all about attribute grammars
4. Use ad hoc PROGRAMMING for semantic analysis
user1804599
@orlp the language in which programs are written that are being analysed.
yeah, I'm not necessarily asking about type systems and academic stuff
my compiler is being written in C++
Semantic analysis without type systems?
I'm not saying that
I'm just saying that that is not the scope of my question
user1804599
10:50
@fredoverflow Some untyped programming languages require semantic analysis.
can't you theoretically have an untyped programming language with const?
user1804599
For example, names must be in scope.
@orlp If all you're asking is whether you should add to the first tree or build a second tree, then the answer i yes.
and that I guess
user1804599
@orlp What is const?
10:51
const x y = x
@Elyse that a variable may not change value
I prefer functional languages for parsers, and there I'd just write an AST transform.
maybe I don't properly understand untyped languages
user1804599
JavaScript is untyped and has immutable variables.
but say I have JavaBript, in which variables are not immutable
can't that have a const to say that a variable may not be mutated?
or would that make it no longer untyped?
user1804599
10:52
That's an immutable variable.
@fredoverflow thanks mr. useful :P
Can you show us an example program that you would like to compile, so we can discuss your semantic analysis needs in a more concrete way?
@R.MartinhoFernandes What is "an AST transform" in detail?
@orlp In C++ I'd just attach the info onto the same AST.
@fredoverflow Just a Tree -> Tree function
Or tree parsers on ANTLR.
And where is the type information? Inside the Tree, or in an external map or something?
@fredoverflow I think I'd better show this
user1804599
10:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes That doesn't indicate what information the tree contains.
user1804599
Using Maybe Type in all stages is out of the question.
This is what the parser poops out atm
@fredoverflow Oh well, more like (Tree a, Tree b) => a -> b, or even Tree a -> Tree b, i.e. not necessarily the same tree type.
(I don't have any operators specified, it's incredibly simple atm)
user1804599
10:55
@orlp no boost::variant :(
@orlp Don't show us the compiler, show us an example program that you would like to feed to the compiler.
let's start really simple
{ 3 + 5 }
What is that, a database transaction?
one compound statement containing one statement containing one expression containing one addition of two numbers
@fredoverflow The second tree can even be type SecondTree = Tree (a, FirstTree) and share the first's nodes.
10:57
let's say I want to add a type to the expression and the numbers
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh nice
user1804599
Walk the tree, keeping a map of (name, type) pairs.
@Elyse Why name? You mean expression?
@Elyse yes, but would I modify the original AST?
user1804599
@fredoverflow No. If I meant expression, I'd say "expression".
10:58
as in, have some sort of optional type field in the Expr class?
@orlp That would certainly be simpler in C++. But there's no right answer to your question in general.
user1804599
@fredoverflow You need to keep track of types of variables.
@orlp That's certainly a feasible way. I would do it like that if I wrote my first compiler.
@Elyse I didn't know his language had variables.
@Elyse I think I'm going to implement some Scope class
user1804599
Well, if it doesn't have variables, you don't need to keep track of anything at all.

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