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Ven
Ven
12:00
no.
don't use the stdlib, that's all
No break, no continue....
Lmao. They recommend I throw an exception to get outside the loop.
You have to be kidding me.
This is a functional language, not an imperative one!
Ven
Ven
(hopefully someone will start a discussion about my non-including of the dot in that link text)
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD pshh who needs loops
Guess I need some creative functional bullshit to do string_split "value" big_string
... Without the ability to map or fold_left or any of those. But I do have iteri...?
Ven
Ven
12:05
Ugh, I havn't codegolfed for several months and it's starting to get hard to read again.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD do you have cons for character s in the string?
cons ...?
I mean, it doens't exist on String, so the answer is no.
If cons is supposed to be a function.
Ell
Ell
A constructor
In Haskell a string is just a list of characters
I do not know what that means in functional land.
A string is a separate datatype in OCaml.
It is not an Array.
And the List type in OCaml is a singly-linked forward list.
Ven
Ven
List.of_string
Oh wait stdlib :>
12:08
I did write string_to_list already.
@Ven IOW, awesome!? :)
Ven
Ven
no surprise
12:31
@ThePhD can you deconstruct it on head:tail?
@BartekBanachewicz Unfortunately, no. head::tail deconstruction only works with List type.
@ThePhD oh but you have get!
> String.get s n returns the character at index n in string s. You can also write s.[n] instead of String.get s n.
I do, so I'm using that.
Ven
Ven
newb
Imperative code LUL
12:33
@ThePhD then fold on the index list?
come on dude
@BartekBanachewicz No fold_left/right on String
@ThePhD fold on the index list
I could convert to a list first, but that's wasteful.
Ven
Ven
33 secs ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@ThePhD fold on the index list
foldl1 fn [0.. (length str)]
   where
      fn acc i = actual_fn acc (str.[i])
12:34
I don't even know if that syntax works on OCaml.
Let's find out...
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
> String.get s n returns the character at index n in string s. You can also write s.[n] instead of String.get s n.
Put the LDFLAGS at the end of the command line stackoverflow.com/questions/45135/…sehe 1 min ago
Another one of those "rites of passage".
@ThePhD if where doesn't work, just rewrite using let, duh
@BartekBanachewicz I meant the [0 .. (length str)] part.
Seems like I'd have to generate that part manually too.
Ven
Ven
12:36
you just said you have a "for-up" loop.
16
Q: What is the OCaml idiom equivalent to Python's range function?

PramodI want to create a list of integers from 1 to n. I can do this in Python using range(1, n+1), and in Haskell using: take n (iterate (1+) 1). What is the right OCaml idiom for this?

@ThePhD terrible
Ven
Ven
again if you were using Core you could use List.range >.>.
Mmm.
generating a list [0..n] really isn't an advanced problem
12:37
I think I like my solution better, seeing as I don't make an extra list.
I also don't have to write a function to generate that list, so. :B
somebody hold me
pretty sure thephd is not asking for help
I'm pretty sure he's just pointlessly whining yes
5
12:38
so your participation is a waste of your nerves and energy
I won't even argue that
@ThePhD This is truly abhorrent, seriously.
Shrug.
It's the best code I could write. The List.fold_left on an index list wouldn't look that much different.
I can agree with "you can't write better code"
@ThePhD The most abhorrent part is :=.
12:40
Siiiiigh.
I'd fail someone turning in code looking like that. :P
You let me know when you write a better version in OCaml.
4
Q: Does OCaml have String.split function like Python?

computereasyOK, so basically I am using this way to split string: let split = Str.split (Str.regexp_string " ") in let tokens = split instr in .... But the problem is that for example here is a sentence I want to parse: pop esi and after the split it turns to be ( I use a helper function to pr...

1 hour ago, by ThePhD
Oh. It's implemented in like the latest version of OCaml.
As in, I am my teammates are not on the latest version.
Why can't you upgrade?
12:43
Mostly because the VM in which are code will be tested (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS used by the TAs) does not have the latest OCaml + OPAM.
Bitchslap your teacher for using an ancient system.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD last time you said that I wrote a version that took 1/3rd the size of yours and actually worked :c
@ThePhD Then copy this into your project and call it a polyfill
let split expr text = bounded_split expr text 0
Ven
Ven
bounded_split might not be av. either
@Ven it's in the module I linked
it's the new Str he says he's missing
Ven
Ven
12:45
kitchen sink copy-paste
> Warning: You should NOT be using any of the features described in this recitation for your implementation of PS3. Any implementation of PS3 using imperative features of OCaml such as refs or arrays will get a zero.
:D
user1804599
@sehe I'm at NOI 😜
@rightfold Uitstappen?
Ik ben er in 4 minuten if you want
user1804599
Nee
12:50
Ok :(
user1804599
Going to Schiphol
Ven
Ven
haha
user1804599
:P
Well. I waved
Ven
Ven
sorry @sehe, no @rightfold for you this time.
user1804599
12:50
XD
@rightfold Did you see the TracksInspector? It was inspecting your tracks
That is on display on the 6th floor of our building, facing the station/railway
user1804599
Naan van LOI
Ven
Ven
@sehe ik niet ben jou :)
or ik ben jou niet.
i dunno
@rightfold nom nom
Ven
Ven
mom mom
12:52
@Ven what
user1804599
Mijn oma heet Naan.
user1804599
But she didn't work at LOI.
Ven
Ven
that's what she said
Yeah. Some women call it "hobby" or "side-income"
12:59
what is that about naan
I could so go for some indian but none to be found here
:((
I still have some pics
LOL
OCaml is so terrible.
	try
		let ( i, o, a ) = ( Driver.read_options ocontext ) in
		input := i;
		output := o;
		action := a
	with
I've heard enough
So I write that.
And then I have some 300+ lines of code after it.
that let statement does NOT destructure a tuple. It declares a function.
And because of the way OCaml is, the ENTIRE rest of my program is now defined in that function.
Which means my program compiles, runs, and does NOTHING.
13:02
mmm madras chicken with lots of naan
gonna be anywhere between 1 month and 6 until I can eat again :(
That looks good.
yes it's so good
Mmmn.
@ThePhD Not sure it's OCaml's fault (tip: I'm looking at you like I'm judging you).
And a hefty helping of rice.
@ThePhD I heard good things about it. But never really tried it.
@Griwes Sure, it's my fault for making the mistake. But the fact that one single let statement can change the entire semantic meaning of my program and still compile without a hitch, even with tries and catch and other things makes me heavily doubt whether expression-only, well-chained let ... in syntax is really a good syntax for a language.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD what no
When I walk around the office, I get this feeling that my desk is perhaps one of the most childish desks :D
Ven
Ven
I'm fairly sure this does not declare a function.
13:16
@ThePhD just used a named type
@Ven It does.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD no
that let definitely destructures a tuple
Mmn. Guess I need to check why nothing's printing then.
Ven
Ven
complaining without even trying to understand again. zzz
That's the american phd way
13:20
Later, when I remember that I'm calling movers, I frantically scribble over the labels and write 'NORMAL HOUSE STUFF' on all of them, which actually makes things worse.
3
13:38
@fredoverflow that one on expressive kotlin is annoying... the one guy is really loud compared to the other
14:19
This syntax is weird.
try
   <expression>
with
     | Exception_Match -> <expression>
     | Exception_Match -> <expression> ...
I want to exit() after I hit the with block.
But it seems to just... not quite want to do that? I guess.
I can't just put an expression after the match expressions...
Buh.
no catchAll pattern?
THere is.
But that would not preclude all the otehr catcha WAIT
try
     <expression>
with
     | err -> let _ = match err with
          | Exception_Match -> <expression>
          | Exception_Match -> <expression> ...
     in
     ignore( exit 2 )
Pattern matching in pattern matching.
How functional.~~
Ven
Ven
why let _ = ?
I don't what you're doing @ThePhD but it looks bad
@Ven Because let expressions are the only thing which have a definitive ending chain in.
If I just match err with then what happens is that each | stuff -> makes its own expression and I can't have a "final" thing to execute at the end of all my exception matches.
Ven
Ven
14:34
ಠ_ಠ
:<
It's right this time, I promise.
Oooooh. TIL about C++17's variadic std::lock_guard.
The one whose name changed for ABI reasons?
14:55
@Morwenn ...link? :P
cppreference has it under lock_guard
user1804599
@sehe misschien kom ik er zo weer langs
user1804599
Maar misschien ook niet.
Goddamnit.
@Griwes Last poll here.
Ugh.
Name mangling considered harmful.
> scoped_lock
-.-
15:08
Could be worse.
No.
No, it couldn't. :P
> locks_guard
@Morwenn Now we have a thing that's called _lock that's not a lock (since it doesn't fulfill any part of Lockable).
To be honest I'm not fluent with concurrency concepts.
unique_lock and shared_lock have .lock() and .unlock(), just like mutexes and the like. scoped_lock doesn't, despite being called a _lock.
15:27
@Griwes hey
I just met you
and this is crazy
but "avr" is not a valid LLVM triple
fixplzmaybe
15:39
Yay, news on the EM drive.
Preliminary evidence showing a tiny effect size and requiring new physics
A question title should be about the specific problem you are facing, not about your state of mind. — Borgleader 8 secs ago
/cc @Mysticial
@R.MartinhoFernandes Link?
15:44
@Borgleader Don't get too excited. This is going the way of FTL neutrinos.
@R.MartinhoFernandes #wave
user1804599
16:02
here are the good programming languages: haskell, c, lua, mathematica if your language is not on the list im sorry its bad
Ven
Ven
@rightfold stoopid
@rightfold <3
lol "good" and "C" in the same sentence
I love the dissonance
H and C are a minor second apart
How the hell is C considered a good language?
I'm tempted to flag that as offensive @rightfold
Ven
Ven
16:08
he's drunk
thats a lot of code
what does it do
Drivers the compiler.
Ven
Ven
> mutable parser_source_name : string;
mutable parser_line_number : int;
mutable parser_token : Parser.token;
mutable parser_token_count : int;
mutable parser_token_number : int;
mutable parser_token_range : int * int;
And it also parses options in a POSIX-compliant format.
So you can do...
Ven
Ven
16:13
tfw you've been programming for a decade yet you can't even indent.
I've plonked him and now you're reposting his code
@ven plz
Ven
Ven
:(
lepix -taso input.lepix
You can also do
chat config --global alias.ffs "@ven plz"
lepix --tokens,ast,llvm
Ven
Ven
16:14
@BartekBanachewicz ):
And it will understand that too
I'm really proud of making that in a functional language.
A full-blown arg parser.
Ven
Ven
Except you made that in the imperative part of a functional language...
3 hours ago, by Griwes
> Warning: You should NOT be using any of the features described in this recitation for your implementation of PS3. Any implementation of PS3 using imperative features of OCaml such as refs or arrays will get a zero.
@Ven It... looks pretty functional to me.
Ven
Ven
You spent dozens of hours on that project and not at any point did you think "Maybe I should learn something about the language I'm using, instead of forcing C++ down its throat"
16:15
Yeeah.... no.
Not at all.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD count the number of mutables you have. It's utterly dysfunctional.
The mutables are there for exception safety.
9
Ven
Ven
exceptions are dysfunctional
"Random magic booleans"
@BartekBanachewicz echo "alias ffs="@BartekBanachewicz plz" >> ~/.chat_rc
@Ven Excessive use of and is discouraged.
Or, so I was told.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD Oh so you're the one who gets to decide what's discouraged in Ocaml or not? :)
Because only one use of many things you did is discouraged as well
16:18
@Ven No, my Professor and an SO answer said that.
if it didn't come from the lounge it's not Certified Programming Advice <tm>
Ven
Ven
but they said magic bools, mutable, 5 levels of let/conditional nesting and exceptions were encouraged?
giggle
I'll get another coffee, keep talking
I don't understand how you think the booleans are magic. They're pretty clearly matched and they have explanatory comments right there above them.
Ven
Ven
Oh yes, comments are very functional, because the compiler can ensure they're Correct™.
whatever. you don't want to learn. you did do that in a "functional language", but your code isn't "functional".
16:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes The intro music is scary
@Ven @ThePhD wtf is that even trying to do?
So I'm supposed to add a type option_type = SingleDash | DoubleDash | Neither, check two booleans and then convert that into one of the three options anways??
that's better than comments at least
fuck comments for describing magic value semantics
Ven
Ven
No. You're supposed to use SingleDash of char | DoubleDash of string | Argument of string. Just i.e.
then you can use actual Pattern Matching on relevant values
Ell
Ell
How about Maybe Dash where data Dash = SingleDash | DoubleDash
:D
16:22
@Ell NoDash could be semantically more correct than Nothing
could
Ven
Ven
@Ell you lose the "basic" argument
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz Maybe
is there such an argument now
Ell
Ell
Badum tsss
Sigh.
Ven
Ven
16:22
and with that ADT, you could write
Well, thanks for the tips.
I'll add some TODOs and fix upt he code tonight.
and rightfold will finish a project
Ven
Ven
let option_for = function
| ('-'::'-'::name) -> DoubleDash name
| ('-'::name) -> SingleDash name
| name -> Argument name
Looks much better, doesn't it?
@Ven +1 would pass my code review
Strings aren't lists, you can't match them like that.
16:24
lolcaml
@Ven is that all he was trying to do :O
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD doesn't matter. you can use pattern guards or whatnot (String.start_with or such)
@fredoverflow yeah... not the greatest of talks. Gave up on the last one
Ven
Ven
I agree ocaml is retarded, but you're not trying that hard either.
oh sweet, newest ubuntu has llvm 3.9
Ven
Ven
16:25
Your "setting options" loop is just a fold-wannabe.
@Ven it has expression patterns?
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz it has guards, but no view patterns
so you can't define your own patterns like in Haskell.
oh right guards
Ven
Ven
lol this guy is called "Martin Ham"
Even if I did that, I'd end up just writing String.index '-' and then String.index '-' 1 to try and figure out where the dashes are (there is no starts_with) and I have to also put guards around those calls because they throw exceptions on bad access.
Ven
Ven
16:28
Functional programming is about reuse. Write those functions now. Reuse them later.
That's the thing you fail the most at. Your code doesn't use abstractions.
You're coding with sheer bruteforce.
lack of good habits and experience showing
I mean that's fixable of course. Stubborn attitude is much worse.
I honestly don't think it's that bad, given I'm new to this. It's not the best functional code but I don't have half of the facilities you're talking about and I'm really not interested in writing Array.fold_left, String.fold_left, String.starts_with and other basic things.
I needed this project done for today and that code got it done, fairly decently.
"fairly decently" is a bit of a stretch
so how do I make clang-3.9 my main cc
just CC=clang-3.9?
The biggest thing I could fix is type option = Single | Double | Argument, which will simplify things a lot but after that I think the rest is decent.
oh it's building
16:34
well yes, get it working, then get it working well
Even then, I don't think that approach works well due to single string elements in the array needing to be smashed into smaller pieces (-abcd and --apple,banana,cat,dog).
so what, you want to do one of three things, depending on if the first two characters a "--", the first one is "-" or any thing else?
Even if I could fold over the original, I'd end up with an array that still has those bits mashed together in it, since even List.fold_left doesn't take the original array and let me specify an accumulator.
@thecoshman That, and some options consume the next specified argument, which is hard to communicate to something like foldl and say "hey, glue this and the next thing together".
Oh, whatever. I'll go have another crack at it later...
well that's two things... you first want to look at the start of the string to determine what operation you want to do. Then you want to do something.
That's two very distinct conerns
if only we had something like Parsec
if only
I love those uni exercises that are made deliberately pointless
mkay, I was missing libclang-dev
let's see
16:39
I wander where I did put my electronics stuff...
I know it's mostly in a stylish tin :D
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD It's not that bad. But you're acting very stubborn, never listening to what we recommend...
3
probably under the stairs... which means it's a full on Arctic expedition to get it back
> clang: error: unable to execute command: Killed
clang: error: clang frontend command failed due to signal (use -v to see invocation)
I uh
♪ I never meant to hurt you ♪
I think I ran out of ram lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes did we not tell @BartekBanachewicz "never enough ram"?
it was a vagrant machine
I had 1GB of RAM
let's try with 4
16:46
ah
well, same story :D
went through :D
oh fuck
that's a lot of undefined errors
apparently nothing from llvm linked
I hate using SVN
just makes simple things tricky
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz not all unis!
all I wanted to do was shelve some changes
Ell
Ell
We did megaparsec
and now writing a combinator library
16:53
and I've now somehow got a merge conflict
@Ell good for you, I guess
ah fuck
I was supposed to link LLVM before
I have to rebuild everything
oh well
there goes the afternoon

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