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13:01
I wrote a math parser.
hi
no threading involved but, still.
13:19
oh so quiet
nwp
nwp
does anyone have clang -flto working on debian/ubuntu?
nope.
yay, you broke the silence!
literally not one single person.
nwp
nwp
because it just isn't supported or you are being a puppy?
13:23
@nwp what build options does -flto correspond to?
nwp
nwp
no idea
@nwp Unsupported.
nwp
nwp
it complains about not finding LLVMgold.so
and apt-file says there is no LLVMgold.so in any debian package
maybe they just renamed it
@nwp You freeloader, you only have LLVMsilver.so buy the upgrade pack
pfft
hehe
nwp
nwp
13:25
on gcc it just works
@BartekBanachewicz sc2 in a bit?
Ell
Ell
13:55
I need java lenses
a cup of java
@Ell what for?
Ell
Ell
for updating nested members of immutable classes
immutability not really the Java way
but I might recommend a reflective clone and then lambda mutation
@Puppy sorry for my persistence but, what do you mean by 'lambda mutation'?
well typically, you would produce a fresh clone, then take a function which takes the new object as argument when it's mutable.
so it's kinda like x.cloneWithChanges(y => y.Property = 1) or someshit.
14:14
I can't believe how much C++ code is involved for JavaScript engines (the VM, parsers, type handlers, etc).
@Ell Why do the classes have to be immutable?
(just out of curiosity)
@Ell use f#
or maybe scala has something nice
Imagine the Lounge transcript being sung.
that's as harmonious as a fart concerto gets
user406009
@JohanLarsson Clojure actually does this best IMHO.
what does it look like in clojure?
f# is pretty nice but they say it gets nasty with nested properties
user406009
14:27
It's really simple. You have a set-in/update-in function.
user406009
So if you have the nested structure blah = {a: {b: {c: 3}}}, you can do set-in blah ["a", "b", "c"] 5 or something like that.
user406009
It's not type safe in any manner, but it is simple to use and understand.
well, good night all.
user406009
I guess some people might not like the lack of type safety though.
are the ~types immutable?
14:30
types aren't data
user406009
@JohanLarsson ? The data structures in clojure are immutable. The update functions return a new modified copy.
ok thanks
it doesn't make sense to talk about mutability of non-data
user1804599
@edition Because you want your code to be maintainable.
@Zoidberg nonsense
user1804599
14:31
@JohanLarsson (assoc-in {:p {:a {:t {:h :old-value}}}} [:p :a :t :h] :new-value)
> code
> maintainable
pick none
user406009
@Zoidberg Oh yeah, it was called assoc-in. Oops.
@Zoidberg I know what :p means :)
user406009
@DmitriBudnikov Immutability does allow you to do transaction like stuff though which is nice.
14:34
Interfaces come to mind for some reason
I give up on you
user406009
Like you want to update a variable which is shared across threads. With immutable data structures, you can update it in one "transaction" like thing by performing your action and then compare and swapping.
@LucDanton see how painful it is
and it's like that everytime
what did I do to deserve this
@edition It's mostly because the simple way of doing things is slow as shit, especially on mobile devices, so there's a bunch of complicated about making it not too slow.
@Puppy oh, of course.
@Puppy what is the breed of your dog? :D
14:46
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
rightfold's app!
Ell
Ell
@Puppy ah this is much better, currently I just have setFoo().setBar() etc.
Thanks
couldn't be ... it's completed (even though showing error)
Ell
Ell
actually
creating a deep clone the whole way down doesn't seem like the right thing to do
14:55
serialization is nice for deep cloning
maybe not efficient but simple
user1804599
No, it's terrible.
user1804599
C++' value semantics are nice for deep cloning.
user1804599
This is because when it comes to copying a mutable value is equivalent to a mutable pointer to an immutable value.
Ell
Ell
I guess my current approach is COW
@Ell Why not? That's basically what you're specifying the end result should be.
user1804599
14:57
@Ell You only have to clone the things of which parts have changed.
it's a copy of the object but with some of the properties changed.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg that's what I'm doing now, but I'm not sure how I'd do the lambda thing without copying everything
user1804599
What are you implementing?
Ell
Ell
a board game
but I can't show code
because uni & plagiarism :/
user1804599
What do you have to mutate?
14:59
@Ell You're not supposed to. It's an immutable object- you can't mutate it without doing a copy.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy right, but I don't want to copy the things I don't mutate
you don't need to and you won't with the lambda thing.
Ell
Ell
How do I not? the way I'm imagining implementing is:
it only needs be a shallow clone.
Ell
Ell
15:01
I suppose if the updater also calls update inside then it would be fine
user1804599
If you have a fully immutable Tuple<List<int>, string>, and you want to change the string, you don't have to copy all the list elements.
well, for nested, you would do.
Ell
Ell
yeah it is nested
hmm
okay coolio
you would say x.cloneWithUpdate(y => y.prop = y.prop.cloneWithUpdate(z => z.blah = 1));
you can do this much more nicely in languages that are actually designed for it or aren't shite ;p
Ell
Ell
yeah I know :V
15:02
what would it look like in wide?
user1804599
x & prop . blah .~ 1 :p
not wholly sure but I have a sneaking suspicion that I'd probably use compile-time reflection to do something a bit nicer.
c#7 will steal the f# way
user1804599
@Puppy Generate lenses.
like I dunno, cloneWithUpdate(x, { y: { blah: 1 } }) maybe.
well, in fact, I totally have the power to do that already in the current Wide implementation mostly, I simply haven't decided for sure that that's what I'd want to do.
15:05
what does a wide record/class look like?
currently pretty similar to a class you might find in C# or C++ in principle
I tweaked the syntax a bit, e.g. type instead of class.
is there a way to say that the type is immutable?
You ain't got no class!
no.
user1804599
Immutability isn't so interesting if you have value semantics like C++. const is enough. You can choose whether you want it mutable at usage time instead of design time.
15:07
if you want the class to be immutable, don't offer mutating functions ;p
still feel it could be nice to bake it in in the type
it is baked into the type, since it does not offer any mutating functions.
yes but you know what i mean
well I don't really.
currently I don't really see any need for language support for immutability really.
nwp
nwp
15:09
adding const makes it a new type, at least for things like vector<T>
fuck const.
nwp
nwp
const mutable :D
that is an animation
I think that simply not offering mutating functions in your interfaces is plenty to support immutability.
I don't know enough to discuss just miss it sometimes in c#.
records will solve it I guess.
user1804599
15:14
Why can't you have namespace definitions inside function bodies in TypeScript
user1804599
Lol it does actually compile, you just get a type error.
user1804599
function f() {
    var N;
    (function (N) {
        function g() { }
    })(N || (N = {}));
}
what's the type error there? seems like that should be valid JS
oh, but N is local to f().
user1804599
That's the output d;
user1804599
function f() {
	namespace N {
		function g() { }
	}
}
user1804599
15:15
This gives an error that you can't have a namespace definition there.
@Zoidberg lol pleb not using --noEmitOnError
nwp
nwp
how does one do a switch on strings without writing a DFA?
if
or a match if you're using a better language
user1804599
@nwp std::unordered_map<std::string, std::function<void()>>.
nwp
nwp
I'm using a bunch of if/else if at the moment, it just seems bad
especially since the strings are known at compile time
15:18
is std::function<void()> c#'s Action?
no, it's std::function<void()>
It's the equivalent, yes
with no arguments
user1804599
@JohanLarsson Yeah.
is std::function<void(std::string)> Action<string>?
15:22
I'm using chat as a compiler, problem?
nwp
nwp
@JohanLarsson the error message will be even worse
@JohanLarsson I think so, yes
15:54
I made a chocolate fondant today, then I ended up using half the dough to make a chocolate mousse.
And bon appétit ^_^
Ell
Ell
yummy
16:27
That game is cool.
what game is that
reminds me of World of Goo
It's Badland. A game for mobile phone.
Just look at the fucking URL
Ell
Ell
16:47
nab you are such an angsty teen
I concur :o
thirded
16:59
Deleting code like there's no tomorrow.
That's what happens when you finally realize that you don't actually use half of the code you've stolen.
yeah
I like deleting code
Me too. That's one of the best parts, especially when you managed to simplify it with something elegant.
Ell
Ell
yeah it's a great feeling
or used actual dependency management and removed ~5000 LOC of vendor code
Hmm, people want to convince me bitcoin is great
17:14
lol
bitcoin is out, zcash is in
@Borgleader How is it better?
Ell
Ell
@Shoe privacy
plus different hash which will hopefully not be able to have ASICs made for it so readily
@Shoe all bitcoin transactions are public so you have to do some trickery to remain anonymous, zcash is all private (something something zero knowledge proof or wtv) idk, i read a short article on it, and its main selling point is privacy
> 172 additions and 350 deletions
The commits I like.
I thought you abandoned GH in favour of BB
Apr 2 at 10:29, by Zoidberg
Yeah Bitbucket sucks.
Xeo
Xeo
@DmitriBudnikov Here's some inspiration for you: i.imgur.com/4RZGSOc.jpg
17:38
@Xeo Glorious.
user1804599
GHC rules are really cool.
@Xeo lol
user1804599
17:57
How do they get interpretation of 64-bit byte swap to take only a single clock cycle?
@Zoidberg Implementing TS or just general TS tooling?
@Zoidberg CPU intrinsic.
I mean really, you could be getting sub-clock-cycle timings on such a simple op in the right context.
user1804599
@Puppy generating TS code
from what source?
I have written some TS code generation at work
user1804599
I want more concise syntax, and boilerplate generation.
user1804599
The latter being immutable structures and lenses, as well as algebraic data types.
18:02
well TS does have intersection and union types but they're really not the same
user1804599
Yeah I don't want that. :p
user1804599
I want wrappers.
user1804599
There has to be an extra layer of indirection for them to work in generic code.
user1804599
Consider function f<T>(x: T | number) { ... }. f can't tell which one it is, since T can be number.
user1804599
Discriminated vs undiscriminated unions is the terminology I'm looking for.
18:07
Is there a reliable way to break out of a (practically infinite) loop via keyboard?
As in: keyboard butan pressed -> loop is broken.
(multithread fuckery works as well)
user1804599
I'll compile data A = X number | Y string into two classes, two factory functions, and a union type alias. Then discrimination uses instanceof. The classes are not part of the API.
why are the two sides named? I thought they would be unnamed in this case
user1804599
Because I want discriminated unions.
user1804599
Something like this: lpaste.net/8545399199934447616
Morrocon unions? (cit: Johan Derksen)
@Xeo uhoh
18:19
@Zoidberg boost::variant is discriminated but the two sides are still unnamed.
user1804599
Yeah, it discriminates by type.
user1804599
I want to discriminate by name.
ok
seems reasonable to me
user1804599
:P :P :P :P :P
user1804599
Lens generation already works.
didn't know Typescript had that typeof operator
user1804599
Yeah, it's limited.
user1804599
I believe you can only use it with name expressions and member expressions.
user1804599
But this use case works.
user1804599
It even fails when you write typeof (c).age.
user1804599
18:23
Can't be a parenthesised expression.
user1804599
I think I'll go with Person#age instead of #Person.age.
user1804599
More difficult to parse but whatever Parsec has infinite backtracking. :D :D :D
@Zoidberg Probably the same problem with those type guards
user1804599
What type guards?
user-defined functions that behave like instanceof.
user1804599
18:32
Why would they cause syntax errors?
I mean in terms of only accepting limited inputs.
user1804599
Oh I see.
like we had some problems with e.g. if (!typeguard(x)) and such things.
user1804599
Incrementing the age of the third person in a list of people people would look like: people |> ix(2) << Person#age +~ 1.
user1804599
Fucking titcakes I might need polymorphic lenses.
user1804599
18:38
TypeScript can't infer the type parameter to ix.
Dajum What's this "social coroner" thing? I don't understand the first thing about it. Such a lot of noise
Ell
Ell
I don't really know much
something about teaching people to dox
user1804599
\/ for type arguments.
user1804599
ix\number/(42).
user1804599
< and > totally don't work.
@sehe I couldn't find out either- their website was down.
I waded through ~10-20 pages of twitter and found nothing than "omg" reactionism #yawn #blergh
@Ell Ah. So it's about getting public details from the internet?
Ell
Ell
I think so.
19:00
Fun class.
@Morwenn love psy trance
nwp
nwp
@sehe that is what twitter always does
You read the wrong stuff, babe
nwp
nwp
I think there is some value in twitter, I just cannot find it
Maybe you should start creating it :)
I find a lot of value in twitter actually. I've basically stopped tracking my RSS feeds and only kept twitter. It's supplying me the same aggregate, with more surprises
nwp
nwp
I have not once seen a relevant tweet
19:07
Either you didn't look or lack the capacity for discrimination
2 mins ago, by sehe
You read the wrong stuff, babe
What about abbreviating windows to !win?
short & accurate?
Abbreviate it to WinDOS
Mass downvotes of Netflix kids' shows == helicopter parents helicopter parenting helicopter parents' helicopter parenting.
user1804599
Yay parser works.
19:20
BLAKE2 now in Crypto++ https://github.com/weidai11/cryptopp/commit/30c1af2858da32e82ea22f58d14d9c4857ea0df0 (BLAKE2b and BLAKE2s, hash and MAC/PRF for both)
Time to remove the separate external dependency from the code base of my former employer. Oh wait. That never exited beta :(
isn't that the kind of thing that should be handled by people who are still employed by your former employer
It was a painful note remembering the project that was killed
Of course no one will be maintaining it. It's just a reflex I have when I read news like this.
@StackedCrooked wat is dis anime
@ScarletAmaranth My Hero Academia
user1804599
@FDW_VB you are absouletly son of Adolf HİTLER or Lenin because you are so rude to the other cultures,religions and ideas.
user1804599
19:29
Hitlerally Lenin
@StackedCrooked oh there are only 3 epis of this thing? (I assume so far)
yep
it is starting to get fun though
Wish I grew up in the 80s. Oh wait, I did.
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg not "yet". a lot of people want to
user1804599
Ok.
Ven
Ven
19:40
also get an avatar
user1804599
Then I'm not doing this for nothing. :P
@StackedCrooked there was one particular image with leg warmers that certainly does warm some things
@Ven get some irony
Ven
Ven
You're doing it for "nothing" because you'll push it to "production quality" and thus no one will ever use it.
@sehe get some humor sense.
> FTS: Fuck TypeScript
user1804599
@Ven I will use it.
19:43
@Ven ... whoosh
Ven
Ven
@sehe sigh
:D
Ven
Ven
go away and pester some other kids, please :).
Maaaan. Why is it that you get your own joke, but slam my head in when I make a similar one back
Are you thecosh?
Ven
Ven
because you tried to crush my joke to make yours. That's not nice.
19:46
Hmm.
I'm trying to "see" it crushing your joke. But I can't make it work. Sorry. I think it's your problem.
Ven
Ven
Your joke tries to invalidate my joke.
Also, are we really discussing this?
But I do appreciate you trying to explain. I like it when people say what felt wrong ("That's not nice"). I'll try to keep an eye on it
@Ven It doesn't. It acknowledges it by mimicking it. Otherwise, you'd think... you made the joke "for nothing"
@Ven Yes we're pushing it to production quality!
Ven
Ven
Give some time for rightfold to leave, if we're to finish something!
He's the master of finish evasion, you underestimate his skill
maybe that is why he likes finland?
blend in and disappear
19:55
@Mysticial wow. good find (also: you can enable gdb's recording and just trace back from the deadlock situation)
20:12
> Oh god, the NTFS code is a purple opium-fueled Victorian horror novel that uses global recursive locks and SEH for flow control
why am I not surprised
The article is much more insightful than I remember reading previously
> We just can't be fucked to implement C11 support, and variadic templates were just too hard to implement in a year. (But ohmygosh we turned "^" into a reference-counted pointer operator. Oh, and what's a reference cycle?)
I cannot believe someone wrote this recruiting presentation with a straight face. http://www.alexstjohn.com/WP/download/Recruiting%20Giants.pdf
ISTR Joel Spolsky mentioning that the biggest enemy of Microsoft is not Google or Apple or any other company, but Microsoft themselves
I think I know now what he meant by this
What is your interpretation?
20:19
> I also want to apologize for what I said about devdiv. Look: I might disagree with the priorities of our compiler team, and I might be mystified by why certain C++ features took longer to implement for us than for the competition, but seriously good people work on the compiler. Of course they know what reference cycles are. We're one of the only organizations on earth that's built an impressive optimizing compiler from scratch, for crap's sake.
also topkek that bg
user1804599
@sehe C11 is a myth.
user1804599
C89 is where it's at.
user1804599
C89 is the bomb.
user1804599
Everybody only uses C89.
user1804599
20:23
@sehe let's meet some day.
@набиячлэвэлиь I actually like that presentation. It's a little bit un-PC but in the end it nails a good few items I think are true
@JohanLarsson management, infighting, bureaucracy
@Zoidberg October 11th suits me
user1804599
> Ik stem Partij tegen de Burger omdat ik niet wil dat de volgende generatie het beter krijgt dan mijn generatie.
@sehe the latter part makes it sound as if he was caught
20:26
Yup. I agree
@milleniumbug Sad when a company is that big and it is not because they have awesome products that the consumers choose to buy. As it is now a decent chunk of the sales is due to consumers not being able to avoid !win :D
user1804599
> We kunnen u alleen bestrijden als we het samen doen. Samen tegen u.
Also they compete with themselves in that they have old products. Have not been a big reason to upgrade Office since 97 imo.
97 is perhaps harsh
nwp
nwp
@JohanLarsson I think windows 10 is meant as a fix for that problem for another product
how do you mean?
nwp
nwp
20:30
windows 10 is supposed to be the final version of windows
no windows 11, just constant updates
nwp
nwp
so no competing of windows with itself anymore
nwp
nwp
but I do wonder about the downsides
Mac OS updates are free right?
user1804599
20:31
Mac OS isn't being updated anymore.
nwp
nwp
people who try a product and dislike it somewhat may give it a try again on a new version
on a new update not so much
user1804599
They stopped around the end of the 20th century.
@JohanLarsson ha ha ha ha great jok
@nwp This will make breaking changes a bit problematic. Before they would happen between versions, now two people with "windows 10" could have problems running different programs.
> (That's literally the explanation for PowerShell. Many of us wanted to improve cmd.exe, but couldn't.)
lol
20:32
was not a joke I've never owned an apple product
@JohanLarsson it's easy. Think of a hurtful thing to say, and then repeat, skipping the "thinking" part.
@JohanLarsson I'd say 97 is about right, but that's because of 80/20 rule. Most of the features were there, and users don't notice incremental improvements.
@JohanLarsson Me neither. We're the last of the Mohikans
@sehe tricky one, gonna read it ten times then ask what you mean :D
oh, got it now, pun ew
:)
Not bad at all
20:34
@JohanLarsson Most people upgrade because of compatibility (.docx, anyone?), or it's just what they use at work
@sehe You owe me some bikeshedding quota now right? :D
@sehe My only apple product was one of them old iPods. The thing itself was great, having to deal with iTunes sucked though.
@JohanLarsson I'm sorry I will probably not be able to oblige
At least for now, I must yield the keyboard
@Borgleader Having to deal with iTunes is a good reason to stay away even from iPods
Ok maybe I'll go home now then.
o.O Isn't it Sunday where you live?
20:36
yes
@milleniumbug true, perhaps not the awesomest reason to pay a lot of money as a customer.
user1804599
@slaphappy y u no messenger
user1804599
wtf
user1804599
user1804599
two avatars
user1804599
Oh, there are two users with the same name.
20:38
confirmed
@Zoidberg try @slap
he is merging
user1804599
Do you guys like endif/end if instead of end/}?
user1804599
Why not?
universal end for universal begin
if stuff { /* { is universal begin */ } /* } is universal end */
@Zoidberg Because if I don't know what's being ended, you've got bigger problems.
user1804599
It makes refactoring easier.
user1804599
Amazing.

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