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user406009
21:00
@KhaledAKhunaifer More like for the entire room.
@KhaledAKhunaifer excellent, we're all friends here
if someone says something bad you can ask them to stop if you don't want to hide it yourself
@AlexM. okay I'll just close my eyes and imagine myself as a cat scratching them with my paws
w/e works
Wait a minute
Vector spaces are monoids?
Damn
user1804599
Unlikely.
user1804599
21:06
There is a monoid of vector spaces.
user1804599
Vector spaces aren't monoids themselves.
@VermillionAzure you outcinched yourself
> In abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics, a monoid is an algebraic structure with a single associative binary operation and an identity element.
user1804599
Just like integers aren't monoids. There are several monoids of integers (e.g. (+, 0) and (*, 1)).
21:07
@MadameElyse oh
Ohhhhhh I get it
Because a vector space needs (set, *, +, zero_vector), not just one and 0.
user1804599
template<typename T>
struct monoid {
    T identity;
    std::function<T(T, T)> operation;
};

monoid<int> intAdd{0, std::plus<>()};
monoid<int> intMultiply{1, std::multiplies<>()};
user1804599
Not class int : public monoid<int> (which would be "is-a").
yeah, I know
But monoids work on categories?
Ohhh
monoid<int>
user1804599
monoid<std::string> stringCat{"", std::plus<>()};
21:11
So... functors are non-invasive to the relationships and objects within the categories
Endofunctors map to themselves...
Xeo
Xeo
there's also monoids of functions. a simple one is (compose, id)
May even be the only one, not sure
user1804599
monoid<std::function<int(int)>> functionCompose{[] (int a) { return a; }, [] (auto f1, auto f2) { return [] (int a) { return f1(f2(a)); }; }};
Monoids are sets that are closed over themselves with an associative operation and a zero element???
Efforts paying off.
Xeo
Xeo
@MadameElyse should return a new function
21:12
Look at how close all of those are in speed and execution now.
user1804599
danke schön
Ell
Ell
what are you doing @ThePhD?
Xeo
Xeo
[](auto f1, auto f2){ return [](int i){ return f1(f2(i)); }; }
@ThePhD Why does it fluctuate
@Ell Optimizing the fuck out of sol.
21:13
Oh!
@VermillionAzure Memory access patterns and other bullshit beyond my control.
Ell
Ell
what was "The Problem With sol::function_result"?
@ThePhD And yet C is so stable...
So monads are sets that close over themselves with an associative operation and a zero vector and also mapped to by functors that map into the same category
Wish I could copy a message's raw formatting.
@ThePhD Why can't you?
Also, can you link to the source code?
user1804599
21:16
@Ell You cannot implement such a thing.
user1804599
Ask @Xeo about search the transcript for "function_traits".
@ThePhD \o/
Xeo
Xeo
What's the derpstorm trying to do with that function_result thingy?
user1804599
derpstorming
Xeo
Xeo
figure out the result type of a function without having access to the argument types?
21:17
@ThePhD With the kind of work you guys do, might as well create your own language already
user1804599
YES!!111
Xeo
Xeo
hahahahaha
user1804599
It's special-cased to function pointers and some other things.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD you suck.
2
user1804599
Just like all the other special cases in Sol.
user1804599
21:17
Sol sucks.
What...
Are you even talking about...
@VermillionAzure Doing some basic benchmarking here.
Ell
Ell
Why can't you implement function_traits? :V
I know I was laughed at by Luc some time ago when using it to implement multimethods
user1804599
struct f {
    void operator()(int a) { }
    double operator()() { }
};
user1804599
good luck
user1804599
struct f {
    template<typename T>
    T operator()() { }
};
user1804599
21:20
good luck
user1804599
it's impossible
user1804599
A callable's return type can only be decided when its argument types are known.
user1804599
function_traits tries to do it without knowing the argument types.
Which is perfectly doable in the case of non-overloaded functions and non-templated functions.
user1804599
eww special cases
21:22
Eww, convenient user code.
It's too bad C++ makes dynamic programming so hard
user1804599
The time won due to convenience is compensated by the time spent debugging due to special cases.
user1804599
It's not convenient. It's surprising and inflexible and makes refactoring extremely difficult.
@MadameElyse I wonder... can you make a Type monad?
user1804599
What is Type?
21:23
an object with type metadata
used for dynamic programming based on type
user1804599
Please be more specific.
user1804599
Dynamic programming and types are orthogonal.
user1804599
Dynamic programming is about caching.
@Abyx No. char has to be able to hold values from either 0...255 or else -127...127. Either way, it needs a minimum of 8 bits.
user1804599
Types is about analysing programs for bugs.
21:25
e.g. Type<T> { T data; type_info get_type_info(data); }
and then do stuff like:
switch(type_info)
user1804599
Oh you mean dynamic typing.
yeah, that
You see, in R, they have class(obj) which will return a string
and I can compare based on that
It's a differential of 100 nanoseconds
But if I can make a monad to instead wrap types, I can turn that part on and off
What am I doing wrong here...
user1804599
21:26
What is get_type_info?
yeah you're cinching
actually
facing off elyse and cinch
an epic battle of who makes the least sense
@MadameElyse Something like an enum struct that grows with the number of types
which would then make it not enum :)
user1804599
Well, to make it a monad, you first have to make it a functor, and that's easy. Type<U> map(Type<T> t, Function<T, U> f) { return Type<U>{f(t.data)}; }.
nobody has anything to say yet words are being posted
user1804599
Seems to be identity monad so far.
21:27
@MadameElyse Right? And I'd also like to unapply the monad
user1804599
Type is just a single field value.
Which would be easy too
@VermillionAzure that's specific to a particular type, not the monad instance
user1804599
Of course. T runType(Type<T> t) { return t.data; }.
Ell
Ell
@MadameElyse oh
21:28
@MadameElyse Right.
Ell
Ell
I always knew my argument types
The point is to be able to create stages of the program where I can do dynamic typing and verify when I do it statically, and then gain the speed of static types when I unapply it.
@Ell my type of the argument is when I insult others
shouting is also ok
The problem is how to implement the type data and how it should be managed, especially with libraries
user1804599
Please stop confusing dynamic programming with things that aren't dynamic programming.
21:29
hey @VermillionAzure can I ask you another question
@BartekBanachewicz yes?
user1804599
In mathematics, management science, economics, computer science, and bioinformatics, dynamic programming is a method for solving a complex problem by breaking it down into a collection of simpler subproblems, solving each of those subproblems just once, and storing their solutions - ideally, using a memory-based data structure. The next time the same subproblem occurs, instead of recomputing its solution, one simply looks up the previously computed solution, thereby saving computation time at the expense of a (hopefully) modest expenditure in storage space. (Each of the subproblem solutions is...
@VermillionAzure do you really believe that things you say make sense or do you just like to listen to yourself talk
@BartekBanachewicz I really do believe
user1804599
21:30
"Dynamic programming" is a horrible term for "memoising recursive functions".
@MadameElyse Oh. Well whatever switching on type at runtime and class(obj) ends up being
@VermillionAzure and numerous hints from me and others that you might be often on a totally wrong track don't change that at all?
user1804599
It has nothing to do with dynamicity and it has nothing to do with programming.
I mean I'm drunk so I'm sincere now 100%
user1804599
@VermillionAzure Types don't exist at runtime.
21:31
@BartekBanachewicz No, because most of my life, I've been insightful for doing this
you can take it as rude but I'm often very straightforward when expressing my thoughts
@MadameElyse But they would if there is data to represent it at runtime
user1804599
Types are a property of expressions, not of values.
@VermillionAzure you mean you've learned something out of it?
@BartekBanachewicz Well, for being technical, I end up knowing more about things than others that just take things at face value and don't care how it works
I look like an idiot asking but if I learn something I don't care. I end up being more understanding.
21:32
@VermillionAzure you don't assume we just take things at face value just because we often omit some details, right?
user1804599
@VermillionAzure Please read cs.cmu.edu/~rwh/plbook/book.pdf chapters 17 and 18.
@VermillionAzure have you ever considered you might learn more if you had better foundations before venturing into subjects where you only have bits and pieces?
@BartekBanachewicz Mmmm, it appears that way for the people I met before college. College people, not so much.
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, but it's hard to find my own clear path for foundations if I learn on my own. I'm not gonna get Haskell in my program so eh.
I mean does the phrase "solid knowledge" mean anything to you
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah
21:34
would you agree it's knowing something on all levels, without gaps in between?
and as a follow up, do you consider it valuable to have solid knowledge about things?
It's just frustrating when I need to look something up on Wikipedia, want to understand it, try to read each page that I need to, and end up never learning much because it's just an endless stream of pages that'll never explain things in an efficient manner
@BartekBanachewicz well, yes
user1804599
Don't read Wikipedia about monads. It's awful.
@VermillionAzure sometimes shortest paths aren't the most efficient
@BartekBanachewicz Yup. But that's not my fault, that's the fault of the people who write things and try to teach things. Just because the path isn't there doesn't mean that I'm stupid. I either need to work harder or find a better way
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure you have to go down the rabbit hole
and also not just use wikipedia
21:36
@Ell I do
Ell
Ell
use youtube, google for articles, use reddit etc. etc.
That's what I do. And I still have a hard time and just don't "get" it
I suppose I could dive into Haskell, but what's the point when I'm only going to get true knowledge from either a slow, 2 years of time of pure coding and trial and error, or perhaps working with the theory until I get it
And the theory is more general and also provides the foundation to incorporate new abstract concepts instead of having to relate it to how you learned it through implementation
Ell
Ell
practise makes theory easier sometimes
it's the same question: theory or practice, and how much of each is optimal for learning?
Ell
Ell
all the time easier
@VermillionAzure I don't know, but I'm sure some practical is better than none for everyone
21:43
@Ell For me, I like understanding the theory because the paradigm of thinking gets embedded into my mind and practice, meaning that the theory gets closely associated with my doing
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure right, knowing the theory is good
but I'm saying
So now whenever I use monads, I can "see" monads. I can understand how they conceptually work, instead of doing it by wrote
Ell
Ell
learning in practise will help you to learn the theory
user1804599
what is "learning in theory"?
user1804599
when you don't really learn, but you think you do?
21:45
@VermillionAzure and that gives you precisely nothing
@Ell it goes both ways, I guess
@MadameElyse I never said that though
@VermillionAzure because you don't use it in practice vOv
@BartekBanachewicz Yup
Alright I guess I should try to stop justifying it
I'm lazy and I have a hard time pushing myself through Haskell. So theory
I suck. So I want to get spoon-fed with theoretical concepts
And I got it. I think
Cool, will you use the same technique for sex
(you know what never mind)
21:52
sure, sure
MUMBLEDAY
@user3886129 nope
@VermillionAzure Come on Cinch.
Don't be a grinch.
I'm at wurk
no tulk at wurk
Too bad.
22:04
@user3886129 I speak too clearly to mumble.
user1804599
mechanical turk
hmm
gonna be tricky to rephrase my integration tests to actually integrate properly
@VermillionAzure good. Meeting lazy people motivates me
[...] motivates me.
Hmmm now that monads are my friend I can maybe think about playing around with Haskell
but first, work
WORK
22:11
@VermillionAzure yeah no
you start using monads after dunno
first two months maybe
unless you consider copying and pasting code you don't understand 'programming'
Ell
Ell
we did monads on week 10
@Ell what class
> The build tools for Visual Studio 2015 (v140) cannot be found. Install Visual Studio 2015 (v140) to build using the Visual Studio 2015 (v140) build tools.
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure programming & algorithms
Well, I'd like to, but I'm currently running Visual Studio 2015.
22:16
lol
@Ell What major?
I'm just about to do my data structures and algorithms course
@EtiennedeMartel Perhaps not with the C++ stuff installed?
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure Computer Science & Electronics
split 50/50
@Ell Ah, I'm computer engineering
I'd do ECE or CSE if they had it
But they don't
@Puppy My guess is that there's another error that gets swallowed somewhere internally.
And VS interprets that as "you don't have the tools"
22:17
or just E_FAIL
++Ɔ new programming language?
user1804599
No.
user1804599
It's just C++ rotated.
@Ell yeah so my estimate was somewhat correct. FWIW, I personally started really using them after about 5 months
{
;0 uɹnʇəɹ
;ๅpuə::pʇs >> ˌˌ¡pๅɹoʍ ʻoๅๅəHˌˌ >> ʇnoɔ::pʇs
} uıɐɯ ʇuı

<ɯɐəɹʇsoı> əpnๅɔuı#
22:24
@Ell what did you guys learn?
but I'd say even today I still miss a lot to be fully fluent
hint: I'm giving you an opportunity to laugh at me for being bad at my favorite language
Ell
Ell
I don't want to laugh :)
Also, I don't think not being fully fluent means you're bad
you oughta for how not nice I am to everyone
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure in haskell?
@Ell in general
22:26
frankly I'm somewhat very frustrated with the CircleCI issue for the last couple of days
Ell
Ell
We do computer architecture, c programming, haskell, java, javascript
linear circuits, engineering mathematics
discrete mathematics
complexity analysis
@SashaMN What a travesty (you should use \n, not endl).
well I haven't posted on reddit yet
sigh why I'm not a total beginner, my problems would be simple and easily solvable
but the only thing you get for learning is harder problems
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure this is my course: bristol.ac.uk/study/undergraduate/2015/…
@JerryCoffin I also forgot () in main...
22:28
@Ell Did you do laplace
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure a little bit
I'm not good at it yet, I need to revise that a lot for my exam :V
Then I'm probably going to get about 1/2 - 2/3 of everything you're getting
Nothing in that fourth year seems to be going on in my university
Not at the undergrad level, at the least
@SashaMN I don't need to point that out--the compiler will catch it just fine.
@Ell What did you guys do for computer architecture?
Did you guys go over floating point units?
@JerryCoffin ++ɓ compiler?)
Ell
Ell
22:31
@VermillionAzure we've done implementing logic gates with MOSFETS. Then we did latches/flip flops, n bit adders, etc. out of logic gates. Then we did FSM -> logic circuits
we also did karnaugh maps
@Ell Sounds like us
Ell
Ell
and a few other things I can't remember
You didn't do assembly?
Pipelining?
Caching?
@VermillionAzure do you know who actually invented laplace smoothing?
Ell
Ell
Nope
This is first semester still
22:32
@SashaMN uhhh wild guess Riemann?
@Ell Oh
What do I call a function which has an error-handling trampoline around it?
That fourth year stuff sounds quite advanced though
user1804599
public Optional<Event> serviceStatus(String host, String service) {
    return Optional.ofNullable(statuses.get(Pair.with(host, service)));
}
user1804599
so beautiful
@ThePhD throwing :3
Ell
Ell
22:32
yeah it does
@MadameElyse looks nice
ell what you up to today
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz went to lunch with a friend
wrote a little bit of a lab report
I wish I knew what else because I've wasted today :V
@Ell what year ar eyou?
Ell
Ell
22:34
@VermillionAzure 1st year
Welp
I guess I'm at a huge disadvantage
Ell
Ell
What are you?
I'm a junior
3rd year
he's a badlet
he's a super badlet.
do not engage
I am thinking about writing some code today
dunno what
I'd chain kick him but I think the other owners may disapprove
I could do some work on this ui thing
but this is hardz
user1804599
22:36
First time I'm eating jelly beans and omg they're fucking good.
user1804599
> 20 flavours
i wanted to add those threads with channels to hate
but ci ded
@SashaMN ƃuɐʃɔ
user1804599
They all taste different.
2
@JerryCoffin I hate clang
22:41
Clang is pretty great
far from perfect, but pretty great.
@MadameElyse yup
why the flying fuck am I taking a structured error representation and turning into a string.
and furthermore why the flying fuck am I dumping it to stdout randomly?
user1804599
lol dat star
fun? profit? lingering insanity?
@jaggedSpire hello blue white spire thing
22:48
@VermillionAzure hello red blue gradient thing
lol
you know you're doing internet anonymity right when you're greeted like that
@BartekBanachewicz Hello Bartek
The guy who sits (sort of) across from me at work just got a new monitor.
@JerryCoffin oh that one
@JerryCoffin Hot diggity, 700 smackers
22:53
...wait i'm not sure if it's the same one I saw
@ThePhD s/d/g
@JerryCoffin hey it's not even expensive
I was thinking about replacing my screens
thinking about 27" iMac
I'd like something with full sRGB and at least 4k
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, not bad. Undoubtedly cheaper overall than a couple of the other guys who've snagged extra monitors lying around so they're running quad-screen setups.
a lot of people at my job use 3 screens
I have two u2415 so I don't complain either
could have a third if I wanted to, but I'd have hard time fitting it on my desk
@BartekBanachewicz apple monitors are not the best now
@SashaMN who cares they are Apple
3
22:56
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, I don't have any major complaint with my dual-monitor setup either.
the one thing I need to change at work are headphones now
@SashaMN They never were (but presumably you mean that right now the suck even worse than usual).
k550 are really comfortable but I really think I want something less... pierce'y
less attention demanding
less analytic
I am tempted to give HD800 a try
@BartekBanachewicz I want Sennheiser HD800's, but they don't seem willing to pay for them.
@JerryCoffin maybe, but about 3-4 years ago there was no P-IPS monitors with good price except iMac
22:58
@JerryCoffin yeah I have to ask my friend to bring his to work so I could test them. But they're pretty damn expensive indeed
I think Focal is another brand worth looking at
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah--as a cheaper alternative, I'm tempted to get some decent IEMs (maybe Westones). Decent sound and very good isolation.

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