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user406009
19:00
And dead animals are much more disgusting than any mold.
Xeo
Xeo
Sure.
But they're also much much more tasty
I drank like 4 coffees in 12hrs
user406009
@Prismatic Do you feel addicted yet?
Who will carry on my work iif I die of coffee overdose
user406009
It's actually reasonably hard to die of coffee OD.
user406009
The effective-dose to overdose ratio is really low.
I've been an addict for almost a decade... But only have a couple coffees a day
Food with mold belongs in garbage
Coincidentally also does feta
user406009
Have you tried switching to decaff?
Does cat have the worst culinary opinions of all time?
19:03
Seems fitting
user406009
@Prismatic Didn't you know that cat's are obligate carnivores? Non-meat probably doesn't suit him well.
@Prismatic I'm sure there's worse, but he's at the bottom of the leaderboard, that's for sure.
Look at these nerds worshipping white turds
Errbody is ganging up on poor cat and all he wanted is a little bit of meat, instead he got onions.
Beh everything I do is boring me
user406009
19:04
@ElimGarak That's racist to onions.
user406009
Do you have onionophobia? Do you hate onions?
Could use like a year-long break from everything
I slice the onions and fry them good.
That's awful
Cat wants to break out of the inner 365 day loop.
19:10
I want to break... free.
I want to break free from your lies
I've got to break free
user1804599
type MonitorLister struct {
	Root func() *config.Group
}

func (a *MonitorLister) ServeHTTP(res http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
	root := a.Root()
	_ = writeJSONResponse(res, http.StatusOK, root)
}
user406009
@AngryShoe Yeah! Screw free(). All cool kids use delete anyways.
user1804599
This code is nice.
You are nice
user1804599
:3
user406009
19:14
@Elyse Aren't you ignoring the possible error return in writeJSONResponse though?
user1804599
Yes. I don't care if writing the response fails.
user1804599
There's nothing I can do with such an error.
user1804599
I could log it, perhaps. Whatever.
user406009
If only there was a programming language feature to centralize all that error handling logic ...
If only he could give a fuck
19:16
@Lalaland But, alas, that is a feature that could only exist in the mind of a madman.
user1804599
I could panic, and panics from HTTP handlers are logged.
user406009
I have to admit it's somewhat creepy when you google "flights" and see your flight details from a random email that google picked up.
user406009
Useful, but creepy.
user1804599
err := writeJSONResponse(res, http.StatusOK, root)
logutil.Error("error writing response: %s", err)
user1804599
very nice
19:23
What if there's no error?
error writing response: ok
user1804599
logutil.Error does nothing when the given error is nil.
user1804599
I too once thought exceptions were a great idea. Then I had to write code involving them.
user406009
@Elyse Yeah, exceptions have a lot of documentation type issues.
user1804599
Fuck them.
user406009
However, the monad error types are a quite nice alternative.
user406009
19:27
Either in Haskell, Result in Rust, whatever.
user1804599
Yes, those are fine.
Needs shitload of boilerplate to reconcile mixed types
user406009
@CatPlusPlus You could just use an enum?
user1804599
Also Java checked exceptions if they worked well with generics and could be abstracted over.
And in the end most of the errors will just go into the log anyway
@Lalaland For what
user406009
19:29
Sorry, Rust enum, C++ std::variant. That would allow you to hold a lot of error types without a lot of conversion junk.
That's the boilerplate
user406009
Yeah, defining the error types is sorta a pain.
user406009
Using them is fine though.
user1804599
19:32
Go just has one error type, and errors are discriminated by equality.
Don't worry, you'll feel better when it comes time to refactor!
Go error handling is horrible garbag
user1804599
Sometimes by functions that return Booleans.
It's about as good as C
You just defer shit instead of doing goto to a common cleanup block
i m p r o v e m e n t s
@Lalaland I find that people either get it or not
user406009
19:34
@CatPlusPlus Well, at least they have a GC.
I don't think I've seen anyone to get convinced from magical exceptions to explicit monadic error handling based on ADTs and vice versa
user406009
And the concurrency stuff is rather good.
the fact that one is pretty much a superset of the other doesn't seem to fly
idk, I don't see any advantages of Go over C++
Mostly because it's completely irrelevant red herring
user406009
19:34
@BartekBanachewicz Well, maybe they just haven't had to track down exceptions yet?
because grasping the fact of implicit "any" context is just too much for some people
user406009
@Mikhail Simpler language. Easier to learn. Better compile times.
Yeah, but you can write Go in C++... or almost
Actual networking support
@Mikhail you just lost all credibility by saying that
19:35
Modules
user406009
@Mikhail ? What do you mean by that?
that he's bad qed
user406009
@CatPlusPlus Yes, but once you pull in boost::asio, you probably aren't going to see that much of a difference.
@Lalaland when I pull in boost.Asio the first thing I want to do is pull out
user1804599
19:37
@Mikhail The fact that after five years of Go's existence, Go tools are far superior over equivalent C++ tools after 32 years of C++.
@Elyse that's hilarious, and true not only for Go
partially it showcases that C++ is such a clusterfuck that there's pretty much no way of getting it usable tooling
not that people haven't tried
@Elyse Like Networking? From my end I'm interested in CUDA/OpenGL/Qt support...
also OpenCV
Have fun
> Qt support
@Mikhail Does C++ support jQuery already
@BartekBanachewicz BUT MODULES WILL COME!
19:38
@ScarletAmaranth when the hell freezes over
Any networking shit that's being created right now has like 90% chance of being written in Go
@BartekBanachewicz 2017
@BartekBanachewicz doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtscript-index.html And we used to call it Lua support..
and if you think a broken half-poc in VS means anything then I'll let Cat put the laughter here because he does it better
The rest 10% is probably Erlang
19:39
@CatPlusPlus there's nodejs as well
yeah people are dumb enough to do that
user1804599
nope.js
Node is not very relevant
I'd say you could be surprised
Last thing I've seen in Node was ugh I don't even remember
user406009
19:40
@BartekBanachewicz If your client is written in JS, I think there is some value to node.js
Jabbascript tooling aside
user1804599
hey wait
@Lalaland the value lies more or less between half of a stick and a rock
I'm waiting
user1804599
I'm writing networking shit right now
in Go.
user1804599
19:40
:D
well except a rock is actually a robust piece of technology
but hard to refactor
@Mikhail you make it sound like nodejs isn't
People kinda realised that just having everything done with callbacks is not enough for reliable and scaleable networking
Shock
took'em a while eh
user406009
19:41
@CatPlusPlus I think more and more people are switching over to Promises though.
Doesn't matter
user1804599
Promises are equivalent to callbacks.
user406009
And some popular promise libraries can automatically wrap node callback code as promises.
user1804599
You need green threads.
19:42
Where do you get scaling problems with callbacks?
Well, Java is still here and there in distsys
Mostly because of Hadoop
@Lalaland you should sit in my chair for a day and do my job, then you'd appreciate the hilarity of that statement
(doing this kind of stuff with node is what I do for a living these days)
user1804599
no green threads = no fun
Async is hard and writing more shit on top of broken fundamentals doesn't make it any better
user1804599
too much pain
19:43
I'm not saying that JS itself couldn't make for a proper networking platform
So what do you propose?
but node isn't that by far
user1804599
green threads
@AngryShoe I propose some beer and possibly cookies. No idea what we're proposing for or to or whatever but yeah.
How do green threads solve everything?
user1804599
The bit of Node.js I wrote mostly consisted in nested callbacks and « fuck, which brace did I forget to close? ».
Syntax, irrelevant
Get a better editor
user1804599
In short: they allow you to turn async functions into sync functions and vice versa with very little overhead, rendering them equivalent. This fuels code reuse.
Also makes it easier to write and read and harder to fuck up
I'll blame it on two-space indentation.
19:45
That's only your fault
user1804599
Don't have to write map twice, once for for sync and once for async functions.
@CatPlusPlus Not my codebase.
Still your fault
user406009
@Elyse Although, to be fair, you only need one map function with promises.
I'm gonna cry now.
user1804599
19:46
You also need one without promises.
asynchronicity should be an implementation detail not a design impacting feature
user406009
You simply have a separate function which turns [Promise<A>] -> Promise<[A]>
@Morwenn <3
user1804599
The only reason to ever use async I/O is because threads are too expensive.
@Lalaland that's sequence :)
user1804599
19:47
So just make threads not too expensive and you're done.
Which should be easy. Just cache them...
You only need transducers.
oh wait no actually sequence :: (Traversable t, Monad m) => t (m a) -> m (t a) which isn't constrained to promises and lists
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz Also called Promise.all in JS land. Many different names for a similar concept.
shocking eh
user1804599
19:47
Instead of changing the entire mindset and programming paradigm.
@Lalaland see above
You say "similar", I say "strictly inferior", but YMMV
@Morwenn I just realized that is one letter away from transeducers
Nobody cares about fucking supergeneric monad shit get over it
are you calling me nobody
I believe I did, Bob
user1804599
19:48
Transducers are the retarded little cousin of lenses.
@CatPlusPlus I'm wondering whether you prefer to pick your allies from the hordes shouting "promises" or whether you just prefer to be a lone warrior for reasonable code.
I like to think there's a minority of developers that kinda gets the bigger picture which I could communicate with somehow
The fact of the disagreement on multitude of other planes doesn't change the fact that some people want to see reasonable code being written and despise incompetence and ignorance.
I find it strangely... mmm
hopeful?
I definitely don't care about ultramegasupergeneric crap that covers ENTIRE UNIVERSE with one type signature and 25600-long typeclass hierarchy
It doesn't matter
@CatPlusPlus The fact that we search for better does, though.
It's not reasonable
It's mostly a waste of time looking at wrong problems
19:52
I don't think they're "wrong", if they're problems.
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz The thing is that most of the time you don't deal with many different monads that often.
@CatPlusPlus For one I think you get way too obsessed over automation and process but I do appreciate that you want to see improvements and that you care.
If only you weren't such a twat. <3
@Borgleader Be careful, you're getting aroused x)
@Lalaland Base ones, yes. But restricted monads are a thing, imho.
user1804599
My cousin once gave a lecture about dyslexia and he misspelled "dyslexia" (he was dyslexic).
19:54
It's the same with dependent types. They don't introduce anything new really. They build on the existing infrastructure of values and give you more precise tooling to work with them.
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz There is always a cost to additional generic stuff though.
Arguably, if you want to smash things, you're still looking for a hammer, not a microscopic screwdriver
@Lalaland Oh sure there is.
user406009
The question is whether the additional flexibility is worth it.
@Lalaland But OTOH restricted monads reduce genericity when you look at it
however, they do so by building from very basic blocks and narrowing them down
which I personally believe is a way to go.
Additional beer is almost aways worth it.
19:57
@Morwenn Oh god... That sounds awful :(
having more than one monad at once is terribly confusing to people ^^
@BenjaminGruenbaum it is. Hence pack them together into your custom one
This seems to be my go-to approach these days
@Borgleader What? Trans, transducers, seducers? ...
user406009
What do you mean by having more than one monad at once?
user406009
Promise<Optional<Foo>>?
19:58
My custom monad is Imperative
@Lalaland I believe he meant explicit stacks
@Lalaland PromiseT<Optional, Foo>

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