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19:00
@Xeo aaaaand?
Xeo
Xeo
Haskell!
best language humanity has made so far
Isn't it F*?
F* is great, but hardly more than an experiment
Xeo
Xeo
Ugh. I feel like I severely overate, but I haven't even reached half my needed calories today.
19:03
Yeah, I like the goal of F* by I don't think I would ever use it.
@Morwenn Idris though
^ Idris
use Idris, be happy
except for, you know, proof obligations for everything
because Edwin is lazy
personally imma wait for dephaskell
@BartekBanachewicz Never used. Well, I actually didn't use many languages...
using Idris leads to dependence
19:04
Punny.
using Idris leads to proof obligations
@Morwenn it's a strict deptyped effectful haskell derivative
even ones you really shouldn't need to be writing
wow deptyped
just like derptyped
hihi
according to Scarlet, that would fit
19:05
it has to fit, the wedding was expensive
Also LastPass has new shiny ui
finally
I ordered a lump of uranium for $50. Can't wait to touch it.
Elim soon to be black-listed for US Visa
Ell
Ell
it's bartek do you know what call by push value is?
19:09
@ElimGarak Should be able to get one for half that. unitednuclear.com/…
@AngryLettuce thanks. How'd the final confrontation go? (w/ roommate)
@JerryCoffin Unfortunately, I've had to account for the "import to this backwater country tax" :D
@Ell parse error
19:11
also is she hot
^ this kinda looks like linear logic
It is
which is isomorphic to petri nets (or dishes, on Tuesdays)
@ElimGarak ...and it doubles the price? That sucks!
@JerryCoffin no, it usually triples the price :) - he got lucky there
19:13
Depending on the product, we pay a premium always. Sometimes even triple as Scarlet mentions.
it's really same for everything east / south-east of... let's say Austria
@Ell no idea wtf
I called my emulator LambdaNES
as all know, the name is the most important part of a project
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz yeah nor me
@ScarletAmaranth The fact that there are things that suck even worse doesn't mean this doesn't suck.
19:14
@BartekBanachewicz it's yet another calculus
Ell
Ell
maybe I should just forward @ScarletAmaranth functional programming related things :P
or maybe not
@JerryCoffin I won't argue with that
Ell
Ell
I should just learn to know what they're talking about :V
I just really like how logic always comes to play
ok i have the violin now what do I do
19:15
ooh look, PETRI NETS! (yeah logicians been there, done that, next concept please)
My MBP cost me $3500, wrt to the $2500 price tag in the US.
@BartekBanachewicz Presumably you also have a bow?
acoustic violoin?
@ScarletAmaranth yes, but logic doesn’t share its toys and hoards them instead
19:16
@BartekBanachewicz Part three: you find somebody to give you at least a few lessons.
@LucDanton true enough; but it (at least to me) always seems a bit... easier to understand??? (cleaner??)
@JerryCoffin in the age of the internet that sounds almost medieval
eh I was maeking joek, it was hard to make it work though
I'll start with tuning
The PS4 was around $620. But can't really bitch too much. A bit of a premium on cool stuff, but food and housing is really cheap.
19:17
@LucDanton how is that joke? the concepts are often first invented by logicians and then later independently discovered by a computer scientist
@ScarletAmaranth logic as a child
@BartekBanachewicz It may sound like it, but I don't think it really is. A decent teacher (in person) can get you holding the bow (at least reasonably) correctly in only a few minutes. I'm pretty sure it would take a lot longer (and add a lot more grief) if you tried to do it from written instructions or a video.
user1804599
holy fuck those tuners are a sad joke
what were those people thinking
@BartekBanachewicz is that an electric violin?
19:22
no, acoustic
did you consider picking up an electric one, considering you could probably use it with most of the gear you already have?
considering i already have an acoustic one?
@sehe, is there a sane way to implement operator precedence in boost spirit, with a precedence table? So far I could only get to this, with one rule per operator priority level.
I thought you have just bought a violin
Ell
Ell
@ScarletAmaranth how does a petri net differ from a petri dish?
19:24
@ElimGarak at least the hardware is worth it (re: mbp)
@Ell petri dish a thing in which you grow colonies and bacteries; petri net is a model of computation :P
I just spent 1800 us inc tax on a surface book and this isn't even the one with discrete graphics
Ell
Ell
@ScarletAmaranth mine was a joke also. But srs, could you explain a petri dish to someone who has done one semester of propositional logic, predicate logic & set theory? :P
@Ell The net has holes in it, of course.
8gb RAM like its fucking 2010
19:26
hey!!!
I use 8gb
@Ell yes; it's a dish, made of glass, that can be covered to create inert environment ^^
ugh it's impossible to tune this thing @Jerry
stfu scrub
32 GB or go home, bby.
I'll upgrade later the problem is my architecture is pretty much rekt
Ell
Ell
19:26
@ScarletAmaranth man I actually did mean to say petri net that time -.-
@Ell I figured :P
not enough slots on the mobo for a serious ram upgrade so I need to change that too
including the cpu
so upgrading ram really means getting a newer intel arch with it
Skylake is probably worth it
@BartekBanachewicz Wouldn't be my first concern. Keep in mind that it doesn't have frets or anything, so most of the time playing in tune is a matter of being sure you place your fingers exactly correctly. That's not to say that tuning of the open string doesn't matter at all, but it's not quite as big of a deal is it is with guitar.
it's quite simple really; it's a bipartite graph that has tokens travelling in nodes - you can express "resource consumption" with tokens that do not copy themselves, but instead simply "travel" between nodes
so you can imagine any form of resource managing computations, distributed networks, etc.
19:28
the thing I got has skylake but theres two huge drawbacks: its the low voltage model and it only has two cores
@JerryCoffin I'm trying to get the open string sound first
@ScarletAmaranth is that really the extent of the connection to linear logic?
I want one of those fancy 6 core i7s no idea if skylake has them
two cores in 2016 u high bruh
@LucDanton no, that's a simple explanation of what a petri net is :-\
19:29
I saw 6 core i7s on haswell-e
yeah hexacore is pretty standard on skylake afaik
ye that's sorta my dream upgrade
6 core i7 + 32GB
@ScarletAmaranth the no duplication thing
well, standard for the higher end models
@AlexM. 32 gb ddr4 :)
user406009
Quick question, I know that you are allowed to violate strict aliasing with char*, unsigned char* and signed char*, but does that also apply to uint8_t? Do any of the pedants here know the quick answer?
19:30
Yes
@nick is that the newest stuff
Ddr4 is latest consumer grade RAM afaik
ideally I'd get a mobo that would let me upgrade to 64GB if I wanna
@Lalaland Pretty sure if it exists, uint8_t has to be a typedef for char or unsigned char.
@Lalaland it’s not guaranteed, it can only happen on accident (i.e. if it turns out to be an alias to one of the allowed types)
19:31
@LucDanton linear logic is I think completely isomorphic with petri nets, with different patterns of connecting vertices and transitions corresponding to lin-logic operators (both ands and ors) with linear-implication representing a non-duplicating transition
@JerryCoffin can it be short in Hell++?
@Lalaland I don't think that char can be smaller than uint8_t
I don’t recall the requirements for short
@LucDanton No. short requires at least 16 bits, and uint8_t must always be exactly 8.
Xeo
Xeo
IIRC smallest integer was 2^16-1
19:32
because char has to have at least 7 bits
@ScarletAmaranth where’s the bi-partition though?
years ago I got a tiny mATX mobo because it was the cheapest I could find with usb3 and sata 3
and it's been quite... limiting
lololo
I can play sounds
things
@JerryCoffin that seems pretty conclusive then
@JerryCoffin nope, char can have 7 bits, and uint8_t can be short with 14 bits.
19:34
one thing that makes it cool is the beauty of this instrument
Apparently my implementation of that algorithm works (I have yet to find a failing case), but it's soooooo slow. Also I'm pretty sure I missed something somewhere and it could perform less comparisons.
user406009
I was just reading the "How to C" guide and it was recommending to use uint8_t to alias other junk.
uh the weirdest thing is that the bow movement has to change with the sound played
user406009
Which immediately set off my strict aliasing pedantry alarms.
why would it behave like that
Ell
Ell
19:36
has anyone used eff-lang before? I have a question about the last two paragraphs of the "printing to stdout" example: eff-lang.org/try
@Morwenn Maybe the algo just sucks?
Xeo
Xeo
jefff-lang
@Borgleader It is known to be impractical. I'm already surprised that I actually managed to implement it.
but well, if char has 7 bits - then you have more important problems than strict aliasing
> The typedef name intN_t designates a signed integer type with width N, no padding bits, and a two’s complement representation. Thus, int8_t denotes such a signed integer type with a width of exactly 8 bits.
it doesn’t say standard integer type :/
19:39
@LucDanton that's weird. It just won't work on platforms with e.g. 12-bit char
Yeah, IIRC these types are allowed to be extended integer types.
user406009
Wait, isn't is possible that char has non-twos complement?
user406009
So uint8_t* would be different from char*?
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland uint8_t is likely to be different from char* unless you're using a PIC or something, right?
user1804599
public final class VolatileStatusRecorder implements StatusRecorder
Ell
Ell
19:40
uh oh
user406009
Sorry, uint8_t* vs char*.
Ell
Ell
xorg-server is updating
user406009
Typo.
Ell
Ell
why am I doing this before exams
better finish this lab report before I reboot
user406009
I guess I should tweet this problem at the author.
19:41
@Ell it could be unsigned char :)
user406009
He's already gotten a couple of tweets about other issues.
FTR for wire/protocol stuff I use std::uint8_t for intent and alias recklessly
@LucDanton I have no clue - linlogic might be more general
yeah, looks like there can be extended integer types with the same width as standard integer types @Xeo @JerryCoffin
> — The rank of any standard integer type shall be greater than the rank of any extended integer type with the same width.
user406009
@LucDanton But UB!
user406009
19:43
Think of the children!
@Lalaland I suppose I’ll add a static_assert somewhere
ueh i think i need a different chin rest
this thing isn't comfortable at all
then again, I was reading the C standard—aw, can’t be bothered to check for C++
user406009
@LucDanton Next thing I know, you are going to be telling me that you rely on chars having 8 bits, void* being able to hold a function pointer and that signed integers are twos complement.
19:46
@BartekBanachewicz are flattening and non-flattening monads different and what difference does it make to be one or the other
@Lalaland yeah I do stuff an fptr in a void*, but I do assert on that one on both size and alignment so as you can see it’s srs bsns
@LucDanton ???
I thought you can't do that because of strict aliasing?
hence 'recklessly'
Why do they do that again?
19:48
@KhaledAKhunaifer DO you know monads?
@Lalaland And the endianness
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure your cinch is showing :3
@Ell But are they?
@VermillionAzure an indivisible unit?
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure probably
well they must be different
@Lalaland on the other hand, my using std::uint8_t is precisely because I use specific-width types when a width comes into play
Ell
Ell
19:49
why would the same thing go by two names?
can't wait to go home and play CS GO again
I can already hear the sound of the guns
@Ell An infinity of reasons.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy list them all and I'll believe you
the silence before entering a bombsite
the joy of winning
Having no flatten means that once I induct my types into the "monad universe," I instantly lose all compatibility with non-monadic functions unless I apply the monad to each functions that outputs a non-monadic type
19:50
team mates buying weapons and then, out of nowhere...
RASH BEE NO STOP SUKA
@AlexM. and the awkward announcer voice "terrorists win" .. lol
And what about the cases with layered monads like List List a? Does that mean that all functions with type (a -> M b) can't be used with (M M b) at all?
@VermillionAzure did you just invent the term "flattening monads"?
I don't know why Atom defaults to my onedrive folder when the prev project path isn't available anymore
@VermillionAzure yes, by design
19:51
I don't even use onedrive
@BartekBanachewicz Monads that don't have flatten implemented
@VermillionAzure join
@BartekBanachewicz Without flatten/join
I wouldn't even know I had onedrive installed were it not for it choosing the folder
user406009
@VermillionAzure All monads have flatten.
19:52
@VermillionAzure all monads have join.
@Lalaland It's not required of bind
@BartekBanachewicz What about the definition of return + bind? Where's the join/flatten?
join              :: (Monad m) => m (m a) -> m a
join x            =  x >>= id
user406009
@VermillionAzure You can write flatten using return and bind.
@VermillionAzure it's implemented strictly in terms of >>=
see above
@Lalaland But it's not required, right?
user406009
19:53
Nvm, Bartek is correct here.
user406009
You can write map using return and bind.
What's that second line, btw? I'm not too good at haskell syntax
@VermillionAzure it's the implementation of a function?
user1804599
x >>= f = join (fmap f x)
how can you not know that
ffs
Xeo
Xeo
19:55
@VermillionAzure It exists. There's no "required or not". It just... is, as a consequence of monad laws.
why do you ask questions before learning even the basics
@Xeo But... how?
@VermillionAzure at which chapter of your haskell book are you at
(a -> M a) and (M a -> (a -> M b) -> M b) are the only two right?
@VermillionAzure those aren't laws
STOP RIGHT THERE
go back to the fucking book
19:55
@VermillionAzure only two operations
it takes more to be a monad
you're wasting our time by having to explain absolute basics to you which you could've learned yourself
get a solid foundation and then start to read about monads
@LucDanton What do you mean?
I keep reading the same thing and I still don't get it
you won't be able to understand monads without applicatives, applicatives without functors, and functors without simple function syntax
(0, +) doesn’t give you a group either
@VermillionAzure because you've skipped the necessary basics?
19:57
there is a foreword and, crucially, the group laws
so it goes for monads

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