@VermillionAzure But how can "someone" really "sound" "lame"? Can we abstract add an "extra abstraction-layer" on "lame" and make it "sound" like "someone"?
@user3886129 You posted your friend's name and most of your group's first name and your teacher's name.
user406009
> Yo mr. Zara is great. I really did enjoy his classes. But, he's really attractive so sometimes I'd get distracted from his lesson because of him teaching the lesson
The best solution is to not write anything on here you wouldn't want published in your local newspaper or anything that would give your mother a heart attack.
I gave someone my phone number yesterday - the anticipation ☺️ ... What I really meant was that I emailed someone my phone number that was needed for FedEx delivery of my t-shirt ... & yes, it's from SE. I have also sent them my real name, address & body measurement :x
user406009
Not to mention the fact that people demand high amounts of speed and optimization.
@sehe Also this bamboo flooring is more tender than my flesh. I am replacing the plank with the two major scratches, but I need to fix some minor scratches with vanish
Instead, Haskell writes the binding as a chain: d >>= c >>= b >>= a
But that >>= step can be inserted with additional "glue" logic because that's the monad.
user406009
@user3886129 In particular, there are 3 operations a monad needs. First it needs a map function. So Foo<A> can be converted to Foo<B> with an A -> B function. Second, it needs a flatten function. So Foo<Foo<A>> can be converted to Foo<A>. Third, it needs a way to wrap things. To turn an A into a Foo<A>.