fibs :: [Int]
fibs = 0 : 1 : [ a + b | (a, b) <- zip fibs (tail fibs)]
This generates the Fibonacci sequence.
I understand the behaviour of the guards, of :, zip and tail, but I don't understand <-. What is it doing here?
In this answer http://stackoverflow.com/a/11006842/1065190 an "owl operator" is mentioned:
absoluteError = ((.) . (.)) abs (-)
to express the absolute error function in point-free notation.
Anyway, how does this notation actually work?
Could you, please, explain it to a non-functional C++ pr...
UPDATE: This question was the subject of an immensely long blog series, which you can read at Monads -- thanks for the great question!
In terms that an OOP programmer would understand (without any functional programming background), what is a monad?
A monad is an "amplifier" of types that...
I hate it so much when a developer is kind of capable but only thinks of the happy path... the amount of crashes because the context is not available or ready anymore when a callback appears is too damn high... especially when you consider yourself a proficient rx developer
what I fear the most is when you start refactoring and then the team changes and someone else refactors again and back to step 1... that results in pure mess
so I am not blaming someone special, I just find it pretty bad that it reached this state
yeah, I do that as well but I plan to go a bit more direct
for example the fragment handles a lot of customview internals so I will move that directly to the according customview and reduce the fragment code for that
worst part is that there is no clean interface. There are classes working directly on the map by bypassing the mapfragment