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user406009
20:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum While you are here, would you mind answering a question about Promises that has been bothering me lately?
user406009
Is it "legal" to have never resolved chains of promises?
@Morwenn Getting aroused. I heard of this woman, she's called Ronda Rousey, and she punches ppl for a living, so im not sure I wanna get aroused :(
user406009
I know bluebird implements it properly.
20:01
@Morwenn trans-seducers
@Lalaland I only know bluebird and angular don't leak.
Didn't look everywhere
user406009
@BenjaminGruenbaum So the lesson is to test before using.
user406009
Thank you.
Who knew
@Borgleader Haha :D
@milleniumbug As long as they're cute... :3
20:02
Oh, it's Borg with that shitty avatar!
Borgdealer
so they take all that extra time because they check / top up all fluids, grease joints and take the car for a spin to make sure its okey dokey
they also washed the car
lolscript
BUT
they changed the seat position and now the backrest squeaks when I sit in the car
im pretty mad rn
20:05
Car free zone
I need to change my tyres :S
whatever cat, your opinions are dead to me after insulting cheese
I like cheese
Fuck feta still
the weather got from "cold but ok" to "it's freezing shit and you're gonna kill yourself and others if you drive today"
@набиячлэвэлиь My avatar is not shitty. It's Garrus Vakarian you ignorant mongrel =/
20:06
Maybe we should get rid of context switches by hoisting everything into ring 0
also feta doesn't even qualify as cheese in my dictionary
TempleOS was right
Today is like the first chilly day of december here
And by chilly I mean still not even close to freezing
@Borgleader It's a classic nooblet avatar now
this day is not observably colder for me than several of it's nearby comrades.
20:07
It was like 10+ on monday
It was 7 degrees today
^don't even need a jacket for that
I knew I had to defrost my windshield for the last 3 days so that's enough
Weather thing says 10+ for the rest of the week
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz :O why?
20:07
With 7 at night
Global warming finally paying off
Fuck winter
I'm p sure cat's town is warmer because of his underground buttcoing mining facility
If I could never see snow again in my life
I'll be almost happy
what would make you happy?
It almost never snows in Seattle. It could make you almost happy.
20:09
@CatPlusPlus how much of it?
global warming's all sunshine and rainbows until the sea level rises and pulls california under the sea
@Nican high 5, Seattle's Gdynia's sister city
actually nvm, global warming sounds awesome
@Nican otoh it's in US
20:09
@Prismatic ahah
@Prismatic Sucks to be them
@CatPlusPlus it's the best part of the US AFAIR
if I were to move to the US Seattle would be my 1st choice
Best part of US is that it's not in Europe
Yes but what about Trump, @CatPlusPlus
If I were to move to the US
I'd move to Canada instead
20:11
Neither is Canada, it has all the advantages of the US and practically none of the disadvantages ;)
I'll be curious to see how many plonks i get for ^
None, nobody likes US
I want freedom of speech and shootybangs
@Prismatic If he becomes president then we might need to be looking at places WW3 is unlikely to reach
also more jobs and less cushy government just using tax money own themselves
@Elyse You mean with the keyword go?
20:13
ohai
user1804599
@AngryShoe In Go it is with the keyword go and with the operator <-, yes.
user406009
@Borgleader If Trump gets elected, I might have to flee to Canada.
Like what's the status on that Mars expedition
If Trump becomes president the US will revolt. Also supreme commander-in-chief or not, I doubt any sane US military leader will blindly follow his moronic orders
@Lalaland sorry the programming team is currently full
20:14
@Elyse operator<- and channels?
user1804599
func SyncToAsync(f func()) func() {
    return func() { go f() }
}

func AsyncToSync(f func(chan<- T)) func() T {
    return func() T {
        c := make(chan T)
        f(c)
        return <-c
    }
}
> US military
> sane
Trump is the stupidest sentient toupee I have ever seen in my life
user406009
@Prismatic You have to admit his trolling skills are top notch though.
user406009
Even better than Cicada.
20:15
I'm sure they're all just itching to follow orders of someone like Trump
@Elyse Is that a yes?
user1804599
Yes!
user1804599
@AngryShoe In JS you can write SyncToAsync, but not AsyncToSync.
Ok, but how are those different than say promises/futures?
user1804599
There is no way to block for a promise result.
20:16
incredible
You still have something going on concurrently, and still have something (channels or promises) to read data from those
you guys that octopus is blowing my mind rn
@Elyse Can't you call future.get()?
my keyboard driver crashed
user406009
20:17
@AngryShoe Did you read that article Elyse linked for you?
user1804599
@AngryShoe Doesn't exist in JS.
@Lalaland Yes
user406009
@AngryShoe The main difference is that with green threads you don't care if your child functions block at all.
user406009
Let's say you want to add some IO to something deep down in the hierarchy of functions.
user406009
With promises, you are sorta screwed.
20:18
From what I understand it green threads are an implementation detail
user406009
With green threads, it's easy.
user1804599
@AngryShoe Whether threads are green or not is, but if you want to spawn many threads, they better be green.
The difference between green and non-green threads is mainly that one is handled by the OS and the other by the VM
user1804599
And you want to spawn many threads.
user1804599
In a web app, you want to spawn a thread for every connection.
20:18
And promises are not threads at all
user1804599
That's much easier to program for.
@Elyse Because they are cheaper?
user406009
@AngryShoe Yes. Much cheaper.
user1804599
@AngryShoe Yes. OS threads are extremely expensive.
user1804599
They are well-suited for parallelism.
user1804599
20:19
Not so much for I/O-bound operations.
Use coroutines.
elephants have built in selfie sticks
Why can't you use simple task-based programming then?
user1804599
@Morwenn Stackful coroutines are an ingredient in green thread implementations.
user1804599
20:20
@AngryShoe "Task" is an incredibly overloaded term. Be more specific.
You just call like future = async(operation)
@Elyse I'm not surprised.
user406009
@Morwenn Thus enter the debates about "stackless" vs "stackfull" coroutines. Or as Luc would say, "crippled" vs "normal" coroutines.
No but really did you read that article
Yes, I found the article extremely confusing
user1804599
20:20
@AngryShoe Like C# Task?
@Lalaland The standard C++ committee defined the terms again to clarify what they meant :p
user1804599
You are still distinguishing between functions that are async and functions that aren't that way, and are therefore still screwed.
+ fibers too
user1804599
fiber = green thread = stackful coroutine
20:21
@Elyse A task is just an operation/function that can be executed in parallel from some parent function and the result is given in the form of a future.
@Prismatic mind=blown
@Elyse How so?
user1804599
@AngryShoe return Task<T> vs return T.
Yawn
It's less flat
@Elyse The function returns T, but the async calls returns a promise which represents a T
user1804599
20:22
@AngryShoe well, if you are particularly interested in parallelism, green threads aren't going to help you much.
You never put the Future<T> in the function itself
Like:
@Prismatic Hahaha that is so cool
Elephants <3
user406009
@AngryShoe Yep, note that the promises need special syntax for async calls.
so, instead of types you have magic hoobla-boobla
types types types
user406009
20:23
@AngryShoe Like I said, imagine the scenario where you have one deeply nested hepler function that you want to add an async functionality to.
The problem is never offloading one function
user406009
You have to change all the callers up the line.
auto func = []() { ... return 123; };
future<int> future = async(func);
Or something like this
user1804599
What does async do?
user406009
@AngryShoe And promises are transitive. Any function that calls something returning a promise must also return a promise.
20:23
@AngryShoe callees are irrelevant in this discussion
And never yielding from a task ties up whole thread and fucks up your throughput
@Elyse It returns a future which represents a running task which has finished or has yet to finish and returns a value.
you still have unwrap the future in the caller
user1804599
@AngryShoe It does more than that. You don't pass a task to it.
user1804599
You pass a function.
20:24
@milleniumbug Automagic in 2017.
3 mins ago, by Angry Shoe
@Elyse A task is just an operation/function that can be executed in parallel from some parent function and the result is given in the form of a future.
They are the same thing
user406009
@Morwenn Not really possible. You also have to have the caller return a promise. And changing return types is a somewhat big change.
A function running in parallel is a task
How about
user1804599
20:25
@milleniumbug The point is: you cannot unwrap futures. There is no function that takes a future and returns its value. It doesn't exist and you can't implement it.
Write some code using that
@Elyse How so? You can implement it by blocking until the value is provided in which case you return.
user1804599
@AngryShoe Do you know the difference between parallelism and concurrency?
user406009
@AngryShoe That ruins the point. Don't do that.
user1804599
@AngryShoe YOU CANNOT. YOU CANNOT. YOU CANNOT.
20:25
lol
user1804599
There is no way in which you can block in JavaScript.
user1804599
It is impossible.
@Lalaland Let's admire the fact that I'm throwing pseudo-random sentences into a debate I know almost nothing about :D
I have a task system that uses event loops. You can post tasks to it and also wait on the tasks if they have to be synchronous. You can even wait on a task from within the same thread and it will just invoke it immediately instead of deadlocking. So clever :]
@Elyse So we are only talking about Javascript?
20:26
You don't want to block anything either way, blocking is wasting time
user1804599
Well, I am.
You want to do other things
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus That's why you have threads. Other threads can run while your thread blocks.
user406009
20:27
@AngryShoe Yes, but blocking on promises ruins any performance benefits from using them.
Again we're not talking about offloading single tasks onto some background pool
@Lalaland Well, if you want a value from something that is running, there's clearly no other way
user406009
In order to get "green thread level" performance, you can never block.
user406009
@AngryShoe You have promises all the way up the chain.
20:27
What chain?
user406009
And onResult callbacks.
lol
2 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Jeffscusions always end well
rip
user1804599
@AngryShoe We're mainly discussing very long running tasks, potentially running forever, and potentially communicating with one another.
Can't take my own advice
user406009
@AngryShoe If you have a function that calls an async function, then that caller should return a promise as well.
user1804599
20:28
future.get is mostly useful for a simple linear fork-join model used to parallelise operations.
user1804599
Parallelism is boring. Concurrency is where all the fun is.
Also if you consider futures like a monad, you can probably compose them and map them to create more futures while keeping functions themselves away from defining whether they work with futures or not
user406009
@AngryShoe Every async function and every function which calls an async function should return a promise.
Which seems to be the culprit of the blog post
types types monads types types
user406009
20:29
@AngryShoe That's not the only argument against promises.
user1804599
auto future = async([] { f(); });
future.get();
user406009
The other argument is that they aren't as flexible as green threads.
user1804599
This is just equivalent to f();.
user406009
If you want to add async functionality to a deeply nested function call, that's much easier with green threads than with promises.
@Lalaland To me it seems like green threads and these problems are completely ortoghonal
user1804599
20:30
vector<future> futures;
for (auto i : range(10)) {
    futures.push_back(async([] { ... }));
}
for (auto& f : futures) { f.get(); }
Here's an exercise: write a HTTP server that streams random amount of bytes to at least 10000 concurrent connections
user1804599
This is not interesting in any way.
I agree
user1804599
It's so simple you could write it without futures easily and it'd work as fine.
user1804599
There aren't many other use-cases for future.get() than these.
20:31
I know
@Elyse For when your code actually needs the value you have been waiting for until now.
Like:
std::when_all
user406009
@AngryShoe The thing is that green threads allow easier mixing of async and non-async functionality.
There are no values forget about values
auto future = async([] { f(); });
// do stuff that don't need the value yet
future.get();
There is code that does I/O
user1804599
20:32
@AngryShoe let's consider something more advanced.
Nobody cares about returning any values
It's all void/unit/whatever the fuck you want that's nothing
@Lalaland Weren't green threads just an implementation detail? Why are they now semantically different?
user406009
@AngryShoe Green threads require capturing the entire stack.
user406009
Promises don't need that because they are explicit.
user1804599
Write a chat server using only a single thread, async I/O, and event loop, and promises/futures.
Write a chat server with at least one thread for each connection, sync I/O, and queues.
user1804599
20:32
Which one do you think will be easier to maintain?
The flat one
user406009
@CatPlusPlus What do you mean by "flat"?
Flat
Flat is better
Oh look CVE in GRUB
This is normal
@Elyse promises/futures don't work well for chat
@Elyse I don't know
20:34
@CatPlusPlus It is a very very fun one
user1804599
Obviously, the second one will be much easier to maintain. Connections are more isolated, and you don't have to worry about blocking.
Because they don't abstract multiple values over time.
user406009
@MadaraUchiha In what way?
21 hours ago, by sehe
Oh man! That's not an easter egg. It's a CVE!
user1804599
You have to worry about blocking a lot in the first one, because there's only one thread.
20:35
@MadaraUchiha What
You want an Observable (which is an abstraction for a collection over time)
Well, I would imagine there are libraries for that
@CatPlusPlus A Promise is an abstraction of a single value + the time it takes for it to "arrive"
For simulating parallelism, I mean
Oatmeal - How to fix any computer theoatmeal.com/blog/fix_computer
20:35
It doesn't work well for chat where a single connection can spew multiple messages over time.
That's what Observables are for.
user406009
@MadaraUchiha Well, you can always have a linked list of promises.
user1804599
@AngryShoe You don't need parallelism for chat programs.
You're talking about not-very-relevant higher-level abstractions
user406009
20:36
Promise<(A, NextPromise)>
@Lalaland That... sounds horrible.
@Elyse You don't have to worry about blocking if you don't use blocking APIs
@CatPlusPlus Promise is a relatively high level abstraction, isn't it?
Unless it has some different meaning in the context of C++?
the opposite
user1804599
@sehe Indeed! But non-blocking APIs are more painful to use. So what do you do? Make blocking be not a problem anymore.
20:37
Promise here is a message from the network, nothing more
user406009
@MadaraUchiha Well, give a man a hammer ...
@Elyse co routines
user406009
Just kidding of course.
user1804599
@sehe Coroutines indeed make blocking not a problem anymore. Problem solved!
@Elyse Apparently you don't.
20:37
@Elyse I'd go with an event loop
Still you don't have to manage blocking yourself
user1804599
@MadaraUchiha Event loops are not a way to make blocking not be a problem.
There are probably libraries for that
user1804599
If you block, you block the entire loop.
user1804599
20:38
I.e. blocking is a problem now.
@Elyse yeah, pretty broken logic there. I meant, don't do thread per connection. Well. I'm a bit tired
@Elyse Right, so don't block :D
user1804599
@sehe Coroutines are threads.
user406009
@sehe But you can do a thread per connection with green threads.
user1804599
@MadaraUchiha I want to block, because non-blocking is PITA to maintain
20:38
time for sleeps, gn all
@Elyse you can block threads instead of the loop in the process
Use flat things
or good ... afternoon. whatever! later
@Elyse I wouldn't know. JS is event-loop non-blocking by default.
user1804599
Yes, and that's why it's a PITA.
20:39
JS is definitely not PITA.
@Elyse async I/O with interrupts?
user406009
@CatPlusPlus So, how do I make my code flat? Do I just stick my hard drive through a flattener?
@Lalaland I pretty much just said that. But blocking APIs are still a ... blocker there
I don't understand how that's relevant here
20:39
@sehe CVE?
If you use callbacks for everything and stuff, then sure. But meh.
heh google lightsaber experience is pretty fun
@Borgleader Just follow that link
@Lalaland He is mocking me for that old "flat is better" argument by putting it in every context possible, because it's funny or something
20:40
I really have no other words at this point
Keep going in circles
Ell
Ell
this seems p cool btw matrix.org (chat protocol)
user1804599
@sehe Look, with "blocking API", I mean T f(); instead of future<T> f();.
user1804599
Whether it blocks the OS thread is a different story. That doesn't matter to the API (because of coroutines).
make every function return futures :D
Depends. If f() is always immediate, that's not blocking
user1804599
20:40
Say f() does a socket write.
user1804599
And waits until the write is done.
@Ell It's always encouraging when there's more CSS animations on the wubsite than actual technical information
user406009
@milleniumbug Clearly the solution we need!
user1804599
or, even a more interesting example: sleep
@Elyse Oh, then in your "special" meaning of blocking API, my remark was accidentally less broken :) Because if the OS implicitly "yields" in your T f() then it's not a blocking API by definition
user1804599
20:42
void A() { sleepSync(10); }
future<void> B() { return sleepAsync(10); }
user1804599
Consider these functions.
@Lalaland well, you can consider functions returning non-futures as returning futures with a delay equal to 0
user406009
> Who needs green threads when everything returns a future?
Seriously
Go write this shit and then come back
20:43
I can promise everyone green threads
user1804599
@sehe look at the two functions above. Now realise that sleepSync could be implemented as follows:
I prefer red threads
user1804599
void sleepSync(int n) {
    auto& self = coroutine::current();
    sleepAsync(n).then([] { self.resume(); });
    coroutine::yield();
}
Because this is steadily devolving into infinite nonsense
Par for the course but still
Try
ahah
this is pretty fun
commentary in polish but still
user406009
20:44
@milleniumbug The main problem with red threads is that once you add some green threads you just end up with brown shit.
> Eventually-consistent cryptographically secure synchronisation of room state across a global open network of federated servers and services
lol
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus :V the api looks easier to use than xmpp at least
but yeah it's less "mature" and other things
user1804599
@AngryShoe you may also like this youtube.com/watch?v=cN_DpYBzKso
> Trusted federation of Identity servers for:
> Publishing user public keys for PKI
wot
user1804599
20:45
Because I saw you talking about parallelism a lot, but that isn't really interesting when talking about green threads.
user406009
(Assuming an subtractive color model of course. Performance may differ on the "cloud").
user1804599
because OS threads handle parallelism just fine
I understand that concurrency is the idea that two things can run at the same time, while parallelism is the actual action of those things running at the same time.
I don't see how that helps though.
Also the interface of async and futures can be implemented in both green threads and regular threads.
So I don't see how green threads are non-ortoghonal to the problems highlighted in the blog post
user1804599
20:46
@AngryShoe Concurrency is about coordinating simultaneously executing tasks, where "simultaneous" is quite loosely defined. The actual CPU instructions might not be executed at the exact same time.
user1804599
Parallelism is really about doing two things at the same instant in time.
Not to mention that I don't see problems with the futures architecture.
Cinching it up
Stop talking about programming, I don't understand a thing :v
user1804599
@AngryShoe Because thread spawning and future.get() doesn't exist in JS.
user1804599
20:47
That's the sole reason.
JS doesn't have regular threads AFAIK, right?
@Morwenn Wrong diagnosis
lol
So it clearly needs to use green threads.
Ell
Ell
@AngryShoe it has WebWorkers
which are something idk
help
im trapped in sea of cinch
user406009
20:48
@Ell Those are closer to processes. No shared memory.
user1804599
@AngryShoe there is only one thread. WebWorkers are for CPU-bound things and incredibly expensive
But that still doesn't answer the question of what are the issues with futures and how do you solve them with green threads.
Blocking isn't a problem as long as there's beer left.
user1804599
@AngryShoe ok, consider the map function.
@Elyse Right
user1804599
20:48
You know that function, right?
user1804599
Can you tell me what map does?
Reading skill average unchanged
map :: (a -> b) -> m a -> m b?
types tpyes types
user1804599
@AngryShoe Let's keep it specific to lists.
20:49
Hmm...
Why?
user1804599
So yes, map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b].
user1804599
@AngryShoe Easier to demonstrate, because concrete implementation.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus exit right
> map f xs is the list obtained by applying f to each element of xs
user1804599
Yes, so:
user1804599
20:50
function map(f, xs) {
    let result = [];
    for (let x of xs) {
        result.push(f(x));
    }
    return result;
}
> Room data is replicated across all of the homeservers whose users are participating in a given room.
ho ho ho
user1804599
This is a very nice reusable function, right?
I remember a great discussion the other day about how lists were a cool abstraction because they weren't that much dependent on a concrete implementation. But whatever .___.
user406009
@CatPlusPlus What about that?
@Elyse Well no
user1804599
20:51
Why not?
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus yeah this seems bad
In Haskell that's not how it's implemented
Xeo
Xeo
...
@Lalaland I'm looking forward to seeing the consensus algorithm
@AngryShoe whatever
user1804599
20:51
@AngryShoe That's not relevant???????
Every function application can be run in parallel
BUT IN HAKSEL
user1804599
I'm talking about this specific implementation.
user406009
@CatPlusPlus Well, yeah consensus is always hard.
Also it would be reusable only if it didn't force lists
20:51
@Ell I just feel it's completely broken :v
But yes, if you forget about that, it's reusable enough
user1804599
Not important. Again, we're only considering lists.
TYEPS TYEPS TYEPS
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I like the gradual descent into madness.
user406009
@CatPlusPlus But that's the definition of decentralized peer to peer.
20:52
Eventually consistent typos
> P0157R0 - Handling Disappointment in Lounge<C++>
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus it looked good to me at first glance, I haven't looked into it :P I only looked at client guy and heard this guy talking about it on IRC
Xeo
Xeo
Too bad my desert isn't ready yet
user406009
Decentralized peer to peer is all about distributing data across the multiple users.
@CatPlusPlus makes slightly more sense iff you read "user public keys" as "trusted certificate", assuming that "users" will be trusted for signing/encrypting things for third parties, who must trust the identity servers...
user1804599
20:52
@AngryShoe now say you have an list of user IDs, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. You want for each of these IDs fetch the user, and you only want to fetch one user at once (to reduce server load).
Define array there
user1804599
var users = map([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], function(userID) {
    return fetchUser(userID);
});
user1804599
This works right? fetchUser :: Int -> User.
@AngryShoe argh you're obnoxious get plonked
user1804599
Now users is a list of Users.
20:53
lol
user406009
@milleniumbug Who?
You keep jumping in and out of different syntaxes
@Elyse Make it more flat
Make the syntax flat too
@Elyse Yes, I guess
Too many commas
I don't understand nothin
user1804599
20:54
Problem is, fetchUser needs to do an AJAX request, and AJAX requests return Future<User>!
user1804599
But there is no blocking Future.get!
@Xeo It's just uggghghhgghhghghg
I like it when it's flat.
user1804599
In other words, what would be a perfectly fine use-case for map, you can't use map for, because you have to deal with these crippled futures.
I understand that there's no future.get in JS
But that's a limitation of JS, not the futures architecture
20:55
Seriously forget about returning values from anything anywhere
user406009
@CatPlusPlus But my Haskell purity!
Xeo
Xeo
Go CPS
Think purely in terms of I/O
user1804599
@AngryShoe Sure, but even then, if you could do future.get, this'd simply be:
user1804599
var users = map([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], function(userID) {
    return fetchUser(userID).get();
});
user1804599
20:56
So fetchUser could just as well not return a future in the first place.
As I said, if where you are trying to get the users you want the users right there and now, yes you have to block.
user1804599
Yes, I do, and I want to.
> Matrix optimises for the the Availability and Partitioned properties of CAP theorem at the expense of Consistency.
Maybe it's not broken at all!
So, what's the problem? You are getting what you want.
user1804599
But I can't, so I have to invent new APIs, and rewrite all my old generic APIs to accommodate those, because some fucktards can't be arsed to implement threads.
20:57
If you don't you can create a future that returns the list.
lol
Death by a thousand theories
auto work() { return home; }
Also wait, no. fetchUser should just perform it's operation synchronously.
user1804599
Yes.
Xeo
Xeo
I think I lost rightfold somewhere on the way.
20:58
And when you send it to be async it's returned in the form of a future, but the function itself is never changed.
@Xeo Maybe he went the same way my patience did
user1804599
You need to write a new map function that deals with futures, and returns a future
I'm talking about something like std::async
user406009
@Xeo We have moved on from simple right folds. We are now doing foldMs (hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.8.1.0/docs/…). In all seriousness.
Xeo
Xeo
@Lalaland actually mapMs.
:P
20:59
@Elyse That would just be map :: (a -> b) -> m a -> m b where m is the Future monad
You don't need to rewrite it for every single use case
types modans paweurpoa wfhasnd fashdfaweouswdfuasdf
user1804599
function mapFuture(xs, f) {
    if (xs.length === 0) {
        return Future.now([]);
    } else {
        return f(xs[0]).then(x => mapFuture(xs[1..], f).then(r => cons(x, r)));
    }
}
user1804599
something like that
user1804599
completely illegible

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