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23:00
@Zoidberg'-- Think it looks like a readme, wall of textish, probably better with syntax highlighting though
@JohanLarsson I'd agree
user142019
Yea GitHub has no syntax highlighting for a language that doesn't yet exist. xD
@Zoidberg'-- choosing python should go a longish way.
user142019
Hmm maybe CoffeeScript. It's most similar.
@Zoidberg'-- I'm not sure about multiline string literals. (a) what would be the encoding especially of line-ends? (b) how can one easily spot a runaway string? This seems to be one hell of a waiting bug-source
user142019
23:04
Hmm.
user142019
The runaway string is easy; use syntax highlighting.
user142019
Oh no wait. xD
@Zoidberg'-- that's a crutch
Also, the issue is about choice, anyway. It's just tradition that strings aren't multiline. I'm sure this has to do with whitespace and context-less lexing...
(I'm sure you want incremental re-parse for you language, as well?)
user142019
As for the string lexer, I just read until I find another " character.
user142019
if (c == '"') {
    std::string literal;
    while ((c = get_char()) != '"') {
        if (c == '\\') {
            switch (get_char()) {
                case '"': literal.push_back('"'); break;
                case 'n': literal.push_back('\n'); break;
                case 'r': literal.push_back('\r'); break;
                case 't': literal.push_back('\t'); break;
                default: literal.push_back(c); break;
            }
        } else {
            literal.push_back(c);
        }
    }
23:08
@Zoidberg'-- That's the thing. It's easy on the grammar spec but not very much on the user/tooling
Imagine writing the ctags extension for this. You'll have to constantly be checking whether you're inside a string literal or not. Strings are defacto comments.
user142019
Why? Is it line-based?
sbi
sbi
@Chimera Very weak x86 machines.
@Zoidberg'-- It isn't anything. It has ad-hoc braindead parsers for each syntax, IIRC
@sbi Ah, ok.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Why do you think apes are counted among primates?
23:11
@sbi See. Apes are definitely more dense
user142019
Then why do you have to check whether your inside a string literal? It's just if (char == '"') { string str; while ((char = get_char()) != '"') { str += char; } return str; } .
user142019
When you encouter ", you know: here follows a string literal until the next ". Then just while-loop.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Keep trying.
@Zoidberg'-- You haven't written enough adhoc tooling yet. This is not regex friendly, as you will be aware. Anyways, @C# has it too, and probably more languages. Heck, VB.Net has XML literals, even
user142019
A string literal is just one token.
user142019
23:13
lol XML literals
@Zoidberg'-- in your grammar, that is
Ell
Ell
Hmm zoid, I don't like = ->
@Zoidberg'-- Which is actually kinda neat.
@Ell scared by the harpoon?
user142019
@Ell it assigns to main a function taking no arguments. xd
user142019
You could also do main = () ->.
Ell
Ell
23:14
Oh right
I guess that's okay
user142019
I might do main -> if that looks better. I'll see.
Ell
Ell
but it is true, I dislike harpoons
there should be a real arrow character
alt + 26? (no numpad can not try)
Ell
Ell
That
user142019
23:17
@sehe but why the hell would anyone ever want multi-token string literals? XD
Ell
Ell
@zoid ruby?
user142019
@Ell could you give an example?
@Zoidberg'-- it's not about wanting them to be multi-token. It's about not expecting them to be multiline by default
user142019
Ah okay.
Ell
Ell
"ABC #{class something; end;}"
user142019
23:20
String interpolation. Is that lexed as separate tokens?
user142019
Or does the parser see #{ in a string literal and then create a new lexer?
Ell
Ell
I assumed multiple tokens
well even if it created a new lexer it has to put those tokens somewhere
@StackedCrooked Are you finished? I have spent an unhealthy amount of time failing at optimizing mine.
Lol, I can't figure it out.
Ell
Ell
23:26
@stacked note: coliru doesn't work well on tablets (from Google nexus 7 here, on chrome). No scrolling down code :(
That might be a bug in the ACE editor.
Ell
Ell
I can bodgedly scroll down the output box, but it thinks its a large text input
Or related to the fact that I am using frames.
Can you scroll in ideone (editor view, not the result view)? (It also uses ace.)
Ell
Ell
I'll check
I can scroll down the page in ideone
@Zoidberg'-- I wager languages use a new lexer, because there could be rough spots when the embedded code contains string literals? Unless, of course, you want them properly escaped. I'm not sure what Ruby does, though
Ell
Ell
23:29
the page expands to fit the source code box
Can't really reproduce any problems with my iPhone.
user142019
user142019
No need to escape " within #{}.
hi zoidberg thanks for your help yesterday
user142019
No ploblemo.
Ell
Ell
23:37
Zoid, can I see the SRC to your lexer?
whats anyones opinion of ASP.net vs Rails, if anyone has used both?
user142019
@user1014888 I like ASP.NET with Nancy more than Ruby on Rails.
user142019
Nancy is somewhat similar to Sinatra, Flask and Express.
user142019
(I have used Nancy with F#.)
23:39
do you find VB better then ruby?
user142019
No.
user142019
Visual Basic is terrible.
user142019
C# is way better than VB IMO.
what in your opinion is the language with syntax that reads mostly like english?
user142019
Objective-C.
23:42
so you would recommend that to a beginner?
user142019
No.
user142019
I'd recommend a simple language with a nice and simple syntax and a simple object model, such as Python.
user142019
C# is also worth a try, it's like Java only way better and way easier. But you need some understanding of OOP to use it correctly.
c# is more difficult because of assigning memory to variables though?
user142019
Huh?
Ell
Ell
23:43
@zoid you probably know better than me, but I would do find() instead of at() and catch for line 62
user142019
In C# you can just say var foo = "Hello, world!"; and you have a variable.
@Zoidberg'-- this requires separate tokens, IYAM (in a sane implementation). Of course, you can 'eat' all of the string first and then spawn a subsidiary lexer, but that won't scale well (imagine the runaway string again)
user142019
@Ell I find at shorter and easier. xD
ok my bad
Ell
Ell
@zoid but its not right :P
23:45
zoid im not sure if u could see where my error was in my app i sent u, im still having difficulties with it, its frustrating me alot to the extent i nearly feel like restarting the app in a different framework
user142019
@user1014888 If you are talking about manually allocating bytes, I think you're confusing C# with C.
yh i think so zoid i havnt done any c programming or c# so dont really know the differences
user142019
In C you may do struct foo *bar = malloc(sizeof(struct foo));.
user142019
In C# that would just be var bar = new foo();.
user142019
(Roughly.)
23:47
i see, is c similar in ways to vb?
Ell
Ell
I might try my hand at a leader, again
i mean c#
user142019
I haven't used VB much so I cannot really tell.
user142019
C# and Visual Basic .NET are the two primary languages used to program on the .NET Framework. Language history C# and VB.NET are syntactically very different languages with very different history. As the name suggests, the C# syntax is based on the core C language originally developed by Dennis Ritchie at Bell Labs (AT&T) in the 1970s and eventually evolved into the fully object oriented C++ language still in use today. Much of the Java syntax is also based on this same C++ language, which is one of the reasons the two share a common look and feel. See Comparison of Java and C Sharp ...
nice explanation thanks
user142019
23:49
I think C# is much more concise and readable than VB.NET.
Ell
Ell
VB.net is noob friendly
posted on January 02, 2013 by Eric Battalio

Let's kick off 2013 with a survey J We have been researching roaming Visual Studio settings and have a few questions that will help gain insights into what the best experience would be. We have created a survey (http://aka.ms/vsroaming) aimed at understanding Visual Studio settings usage patterns and gathering feedback. The survey should take less than 10 minutes, maybe more if you want to pro

Ell
Ell
no need for semicolon and as syntax
any tips for someone who struggles with programming but isnt bad with the theory side of computers?
user142019
If you want a simple language to start, try Python.
user142019
23:51
It focuses on being easy and readable and has a nice simple syntax.
ok thanks
user142019
In a few years I'll be advocating Zoidlang instead of Python and C#. :3
i know java kind of and a small part of ruby, but when i go to try creating a web app in an mvc framework, i get lost i find
solving small problems i find ok
but when stuff has to work i get stuck with errors everywhere
makes me think programming isnt for me, but i would like to make a career in it at the same time
@Zoidberg'-- interestingly some other regulars would be tauting there non-existent language years before the fact ...
HOLY FUCKING SHIT I AM SO SICK

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