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user1596138
22:00
Thank you btw.
I think the point is that you are trying to convince us JavaScript is bad.. If you want to point out that other languages do things better, that might be a better approach (and maybe just end it there and let us formulate our own opinions).
To outright enter a room full of evangelists / heavy users of the language and to claim that it is a outright bad language is seen as a aggressive non-constructive argument and is sure to ruffle feathers. It ends up causing argument and debate which is not constructive, and it doesn't help your original focus which (i imagine) was to get people to broad
umm
@Jhawins nope, still not making sense.
"Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy."
user1596138
^ There are other ways too :P
@rlemon There might be a tiny part of me that likes the "discussion" part just for the fun of it, otherwise I agree.
22:03
which is why I've urged you to find those users who are just like you (@BenjaminGruenbaum loves a debate) and start a room with them.
hell even dump the link in here when it gets juicy
i'm sure people will join if they feel like reading it all
meh, there are other people here who like to discuss interesting stuff
like monadic aspects of promises, for example
I was using him as a example for the JS vs Other debate
@rlemon Thanks for the ping. I fell asleep in my chair and forgot to take a pill.
@BenjaminGruenbaum just saving your life bro
!!afk home time
22:06
The fun part about monads is explaining them.
... over and over, until you actually understand them :D
No, that's not the fun in it.
This monad.
The fun part is that people make it into something smart or special.
well the mathematical part is kinda... "smart"
22:07
Like, monads are for smart people, or complicated or whatever and are not just a useful mathematical construct for something.
Why are these rectangles not moving? jsfiddle.net/tmyie/R5wx8
@BenjaminGruenbaum eh, that's silly
@BartekBanachewicz It's not any more complicated to use than let's say a matrix or a vector.
to blindly use, maybe not
However, most places on the internet just confuse you.
@BartekBanachewicz there is no such thing as 'blindly' using a field, or a function, or a matrix or a group, or whatever.
22:09
@BenjaminGruenbaum Not really. People use the language primitives and like don't realize they have connections between them
That's the thing, people are shocked when you show them the mathematical definition and think it's complicated - if I became shocked whenever I saw a construct I didn't understand in a course I'd probably be dead by now.
When you learn about fields for the first time in the first lesson of the first semester they started with a long list of like 10 properties.
And then they started axiomatically proving stuff like 1*1 = 1
thing is programmers are not interested in maths
Someone, people were 'shocked' at how complicated those fields were, then they just had to use them for like a few weeks and they got how fields, and vector spaces and all that other stuff works.
user1596138
22:11
Which programmers aren't interested in math?
They didn't 'get' it because they were great at math, they just used it enough.
39 mins ago, by Retsam
@BartekBanachewicz Ah, yes, because it's impossible to program anything good without strong opinions on a minutia of language design
@BenjaminGruenbaum well that might be the problem with all monads courses; they try to teach you in like 15 minutes
@nderscore How did this go unstarred :O
user1596138
@BartekBanachewicz That has absolutely nothing to do with math. That's a broad statement.
@Jhawins language design has everything to do with math.
22:12
@BartekBanachewicz there is no such thing as a 'monad course' just like there is no thing such as a 'field course'. It'd be dumb to have.
@BenjaminGruenbaum oh sorry I meant internet courses that you've mentioned
(sorry for the pings)
You don't learn in Math classes by watching the lecture, you learn by doing the exercises.
@BenjaminGruenbaum got lost in the sea of witty responses I'm afraid
user1596138
@BartekBanachewicz He didn't reference math, and math is not all that language design entails.
@Jhawins why don't you tell us more about what in your opinion is more important in language design?
user1596138
22:14
Quit acting like things have such finite definitions and they are all in your favor. If something means/contains more than one thing, you don't get to simply choose which one it means for the sake of your argument.
user1596138
Did either of us mention importance? You're fucking delirious.
user1596138
You're just saying stuff now. Saying whatever you'd like to be truth or relevant even though it's not.
@Jhawins you, on the other hand, are proactively trying to discredit everything I'm saying. If you want to call me out on bullshit, why don't you tell us your opinion on the matter instead?
@tmyie Because every time you call that move function you're reseting your x and y variables
tried this in the HTML/CSS room but I don't think anyone is online there:
user1596138
22:16
Because you don't call someone out or disprove/discredit someone with an opinion. My opinion is useable for furthering this argument, and that is why you want it.
if I have a class applied to a parent element, how can I selectively apply a class only if that class is being inherited using CSS?

i.e.
mySubClass should only affect the span when myClass is applied at a parent level
<div id="parent" class="myClass">
<span id="child" class="mySubClass"></span>
</div>
@Jhawins Then facts? Some actual knowledge about the topic, perhaps?
What monads are really useful/required for in FP is expressing an abstraction on a value. "wrapping" it, whether it's because you only sometimes have it (like Maybe) or because you'll get it from the user (like I/O) or whatever...
all my google results talk about CSS inheritance from a high standpoint...I can't seem to narrow my search results to what I need >.<
@RobertPetz .myClass .mySubClass {...} ?
user1596138
22:17
@BartekBanachewicz Now you're off on a tangent. I said "Which programmers aren't interested in math?" and you're telling me to provide my opinion/knowledge/facts on language design? That doesn't add up at all.
@BenjaminGruenbaum but all the stuff like compositions and monads as functors is important too!
Their use is really simple, you don't need to grasp the mathy parts in order to benefit from the usefulness.
see that's what I thought as well, it doesn't seem to be working in my logic
@copy I think that the advantages far outweigh the quirks (most of which don't happen in a production environment where people don't know what they're doing.)
maybe I need to pull it out into a simple test....
brb
user1596138
22:18
I used to argue like that guy. Then I grew up a little.
@RobertPetz Make a fiddle and share
@Jhawins 'a little' // I keed, I keed!
@SomeKittensUx2666 Sorry, people are already annoyed enough by this
@BartekBanachewicz sure, that's important, but that's not the ""point"". The point is that functional languages need to deal with passing state around (where the state might not be there yet)
Has anyone used Namecheap web hosting?
22:19
@copy Fair enough. Let's think about unicorns.
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute only for domains.
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute Yes, haven't had any issues.
user1596138
@SomeKittensUx2666 fair enough ;)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I might get a domain. Thinking of pairing with a web hosting account. But reviews don't seem good.
user1596138
22:20
!!urban unicorn horn
@Jhawins unicorn tears Framboise Lambic. As described by the ever-lovely Joanna Newsom.
@SomeKittensUx2666 glorious
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute digitalocean has vps for like 5$ a month
@SomeKittensUx2666 Review websites say it can get slow and all.
user1596138
Ha! Knew that'd be in there.
22:20
Is it true?
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute For hosting? No experience. Only used them for domains.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Never used a VPS before, have no experience, don't know how to run it.
@Jhawins No definition found for unicorn balls
@Jhawins unicorn horn A heavily gelled hairstyle characterized by a pointy spike, resembling a unicorn horn, sported by many metro-sexual men, including: Ryan Seacreast, Adam Levine, and my father.
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute Just get one, put Arch on it (if you've never done so before there are excellent tutorials and set it up with whatever). It's not hard and it's worth learning anyway.
user1596138
Some of the grossest things I've learned are from guessing phrases to /urban...
22:21
Or, you know, I'm just used to Arch for that - put whatever you use for hosting your serverside.
user1596138
Like the choco fountain or whatever it was.
@SomeKittensUx2666 Yeah, I was talking about hosting.
The second 'test' span should appear yellow
Plus, right now, at this moment, I am looking for general hosting, not VPS (at least not right now).
22:22
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute what for?
@Jhawins Because you apparently chose to ignore everything I've said in between. That was a parallel, or, in simple english, I was trying to show you that programmers tend to skip the mathematical background of the concepts they are learning about in their programming languages. To show that, in turn, I wanted you yourself to introspect if you're indeed paying enough attention to that aspect.
@RobertPetz I'm not sure what you're trying to do there.
@BenjaminGruenbaum well, purely functional languages. Hybrids like Scala or OCaml just deal with it the regular way
... on hold with hostgator :(
@monners for simplicity sake, I'm switching on color...in reality, I need the span to only appear when the parent div is flagged with 'has-error'
22:23
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, I'm half asleep and drugged now :P
@BartekBanachewicz I spent far too much time in math classes and not nearly enough coding.
That includes the classes I skipped to code.
that way an error message in the span can be displayed when the parent is invalid
@RobertPetz Sorry, I missed your second message. One minute
@SomeKittensUx2666 It's funny, I'd say the exact opposite about myself
@monners no worries
22:24
I wish I've paid more attention to category theory and the like we studied. Now I have to fill in those gaps :/
@RobertPetz jsfiddle.net/VM4t5/2 You had your selection chain in the wrong order :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum I have created a sports website for my town's recreation basketball league.
@BartekBanachewicz Ah, probably because I like getting things done.
@monners damnit >.<
@BartekBanachewicz I'm with you there. I'm terrible at math so i used my math classes to code
22:25
@monners so stupidly simple lol
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute ask in the php room, php hosting is usually cheap and your site is probably static anyway so it wouldn't matter.
@RobertPetz Happens to the best of us.
@monners haha, thanks man
No worries :)
Considering it could have 50-100 people at a time (due to promotion and in general, I just know it), I need a decent web host that won't go down crashing and can handle that load, be reliable, safe and obviously cheap.
22:26
I spent most of high school math programming my graphing calculator...
@SomeKittensUx2666 oh I had the very same attitude. And then, after countless hours of "getting things done", I've realized that maybe grinding coding is not the smartest way to go
Most cheap hosting can handle 50 people
I spent most of high school math coloring in grid squares
Get unlimited bandwidth
did miszy come on today?
@BartekBanachewicz right, but the challenges are not in Math. At least the challenges when writing code.
I use them
Cheap and effective
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well, unless you call frequent mysql connections and data updates static, then sure.
@RUJordan Are they really? I have been considering them.
I pay $7 a month
If you pay upfront, it costs $3 a month
@Retsam I know quite a few who got started that way.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm still not following your point - You don't want to get things done?
22:28
You'll have to verify your payment information, so if you account is suspended out of the blue, that's why. It's a security thing you have to do once. Annoying, but not a huge hassle.
@SomeKittensUx2666 To illustrate that (sorry for personal example again) when I wanted to learn haskell, I've spent a month before I wrote a single line of code. That's payed me amazingly, because I was instinctively able to see that my code isn't as "functional" as it should, i.e. I've managed to change the mindset w/o getting all the bad habits people coming from imperative world do.
I suppose that's a neat strategy for Dilbert corp.
@BartekBanachewicz how much Haskell code do you have in production now :D?
@BartekBanachewicz You're making the big assumption that most people learn in a similar way to you. That's just not the case.
@BenjaminGruenbaum but math gives you so much better solutions to those challenges
22:29
@BartekBanachewicz That's a different learning style than most here. I don't have an issue with different styles, just your insistence on us bending to yours.
@monners I didn't! that's why I've explicitely stated it's just my personal example.
@BartekBanachewicz most of my time is spent doing three things - algorithms, research and architecture. Math is important for algorithms, but that's very specific math. Research is mainly reading papers and answers on So, and architecture I think is very very important and neglected.
@RUJordan What do you mean upfront?
I mean, how much $?
@SomeKittensUx2666 What? Why should I insist you bend to my way of doing things?
@BartekBanachewicz Boy it's hard to keep you on topic.
22:30
@monners Yeah, all you have to do is refute something.
@monners ... which doesn't necessarily mean you couldn't benefit from trying doing it that way.
@BartekBanachewicz Your stated purpose here is to convert us to Haskellism.
it's not
it's more to open your eyes.
@BartekBanachewicz You're assuming they're closed? That's pretty offensive.
I think your eyes are closed to the 'real world' where things are done start->finish in days, not months of research.
43 mins ago, by copy
@SomeKittensUx2666 The problems with Java and PHP are (mostly) accepted and understood in this room. The attitude on JavaScript, however, is more best language ever!!!1
22:31
Learning Haskell is fun, LYAH was really an amazing read no doubt and having mathematical background did help me go "Oh right!" when I read it where previous attempts to learn functional languages (like ML) did not go so well for me in my teens. I even used it for several things (simulations, and calculations mainly). It did not make me a more productive programmer one bit, and I would not choose it over JS or C# for what I use JS or C# for.
@SomeKittensUx2666 the fact you can solve your problems in days is precisely thanks to that research.
@BartekBanachewicz You're not doing your cause any favors right now. Urge to learn Haskell, fading...
@SomeKittensUx2666 Yeah; I had actually learned BASIC back like in 6th grade or so; it was great when I discovered my calculator could program it
@BartekBanachewicz you realize, that all the interesting research relating to that has been closed (done) for at least 10 years - and the only open parts are both hard and very uninteresting.
@BenjaminGruenbaum that's amazingly untrue.
22:33
@monners it's not his cause...
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute go to their website
its all there
@BartekBanachewicz wait, what research are you talking about?
@BartekBanachewicz What research, precisely?
@SomeKittensUx2666 optimizers, for one.
@BenjaminGruenbaum RFP, for example.
@RUJordan I see it. There's no contract or anything, right? I can cancel anytime?
22:36
@BartekBanachewicz How so?
@BartekBanachewicz that's not what I thought you said there at all, I thought you said type theory research not actual coding paradigms (nothing too Mathematical about FRP). (it's not very new either, but that's not the point).
@SomeKittensUx2666 For example, from my perspective, you seem to be forgetting that the fact that JS can be used to so many funky things is true only because of the amazing work of JS VM developers.
@BartekBanachewicz speaking of which, I've grown pretty fond of github.com/baconjs/bacon.js which plays really well with my promise API, you might want to check that out.
@BartekBanachewicz it's also a really flexible and expressive language.
@BartekBanachewicz You mean the ones at Google/Mozilla?
22:37
@BenjaminGruenbaum I think that stuff like "type theory applied in CS" is still math.
@SomeKittensUx2666 yep.
Y'know, the ones that got things done (where 'things' is 'a better interpreter for JS')
anyone care to give me a hint... i'm so close but it's too late to think properly
http://jsbin.com/EqicImO/3/edit
@BartekBanachewicz it's not type theory at all though, it's people finding clever ways to code. It has nothing to do with Math or academic research.
@SomeKittensUx2666 and you think they what, just sat on their asses and coded furiously?
@FernandoSilva use moment
22:38
@BenjaminGruenbaum Haskell and Lua are academic research creations for god's sake.
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute you'll have to ask im not sute
sure
@BenjaminGruenbaum my boss is oldschool... doesn't want libraries, so I gotta keep inventing the wheel :s
So, how bout sports and stuff?
@FernandoSilva that's....horrifying....
@BenjaminGruenbaum just like a zillion others. Languages got better since 70s, yes.
22:39
@phenomnomnominal YEAH GO SPORTS
@BartekBanachewicz uh, yes?
I mean, some of them probably had standing desks
@BartekBanachewicz not really. At least not like the direct competition at the time it was selected.
@SomeKittensUx2666 well it does give me a chance to learn more
@SomeKittensUx2666 have you ever tried to create an optimizer? or a compiler?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Lua was there.
Anyone wanna collab with me on a P2P vibration app for valentine's day?
@BartekBanachewicz creating a compiler is easy :D Creating a fast compiler is hard, none of which are very relevant.
22:41
@BenjaminGruenbaum it's not hard just because of coding it involves, that's my point.
@BartekBanachewicz the idea was that Brendan wanted Scheme and they wanted C, so he coded something as close to Self and Scheme with C syntax as possible ^^
it's hard because optimizing code is fucking hard
wow, how did I miss this?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah I know how JS was created. Still, since its creation, other languages have evolved much further, I guess we agree on that
So has JS :D
22:42
"much further"
So when is the next community coming out?
this is a little bit painful.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ?
@BenjaminGruenbaum tomorrow night brah!
@BartekBanachewicz that's a tv show :D
22:43
um. w/e.
WebFaction seems good.
@BenjaminGruenbaum compared to languages we have nowadays, JS is kinda behind. ES7 is coming nobody knows when, really. And it really only begins with ES7.
@BartekBanachewicz look, in all honesty the big things developers care about are productivity. I'm really productive in JS, and I'd like to think I do architecture very naturally, quickly and well with it. It's very flexible too and doesn't slow me down. It's really hard to argue about that or reason about that especially since you've never worked on a large scale JS project so you think the issues are still things like TypeErrors or ReferenceErrors early checking where they're not.
@BenjaminGruenbaum but have u got any ideas, cause I'm getting the value I need, but it's returning undefined at the end... I'm not sure where it "breaks", at first I thought the recursion was executing something it shouldn't on the second way around. But the last condition displays the value correctly to the console. It's just the final return that's breaking it and I can't see why
They're mostly bad stack traces and bad library interop.
22:45
@FernandoSilva Absolutely, it just is pretty painful to say 'no libraries'
JS isn't the universal best language in the world. But it's certainly very useful, surely we can all agree on that.
@BartekBanachewicz Interpreter, but that counts. Math needed: 0
@phenomnomnominal Because of the language itself or because of the environment it provides?
@BartekBanachewicz really, this is why your arguments annoy some room people here. You're always arguing against things that are non-issues.
22:46
Anybody can remind me the website where you can integrate a JS in a mobile app and view a log on the external site
JS is the best language for frontend dev.
@BartekBanachewicz utility doesn't need a justification.
@SomeKittensUx2666 did it build an AST?
@SomeKittensUx2666 well i did get him to let me use a couple, but I prefered keeping the validator and jquery and tossing moment, that I did have at some point
@phenomnomnominal could you answer regardless of that? genuinely curious.
22:46
for remote debugging
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, but I didn't have to.
@BartekBanachewicz do you disagree? You think it isn't useful?
Still this...
@rlemon right?
@phenomnomnominal No, I think it is very useful.
22:47
Exhausting.
@BartekBanachewicz then it doesn't matter why.
Fixing stack traces - awesome. More QA on idiomatic libraries? Awesome. Having undefined refereces? Who cares, who even has that problem, we have a huge code base with build scripts - if that's not a red line under the problematic line in my IDE (and it is) and it passes code review (and it won't) and the automatic tests (lol nope) and the static analyzer (not even close) and the CI (lol) and the QA (haha) that'd still fail in staging.
At what point does it become in bad taste. (The start?)
@BenjaminGruenbaum um, obviously the bug is going to appear sooner or later. I guess the fact that static analysis exists is to make that sooner.
@phenomnomnominal I was interested in your personal opinion.
@BartekBanachewicz right, but it's not really what's slowing me down in the process.
@BartekBanachewicz Studies have shown that even with said checking, programmers are more productive in a loosely-typed language. Though, I'm sure you've read all the studies about that.
22:50
@BenjaminGruenbaum if the bug gets out and it gets caught by CI, isn't that longer than breaking at compilation phase on your PC?
I also agree that a languages type system has much less to do with it being 'good', as me being productive with it does "
Unless, of course, you didn't do proper research.
If you give me better stack traces? You bought me, I watched over the migration of 100K LoC to Bluebird promises from callbacks mainly for that reason - that's the sort of thing that actually helps me.
So it turns out my domain was flagged because it had 'script' in it. They thought I was going to post copyright movie scripts.. LOL
@SomeKittensUx2666 Of course I did. Maybe not all.
22:51
@BartekBanachewicz If you're going to complain about our lack of research, you might want to start quoting sources.
@BartekBanachewicz it would never get to CI in the first place, that's before the tests, the IDE and the build scripts. The static analyzer who'd remove relevant bits for production/staging, perform minification etc would likely refuse to process the code because of it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum you know, stack traces can be eliminated, again, by catching the error earlier. No need for stack traces is better than best stack traces on the planet.
Not to mention the cycles are so bloody fast with JS. I change the code and see the result, no compile step when developing.
@BenjaminGruenbaum fine. It's useful because it gives me a job. It's useful because it means I can make pretty much anything I want quickly, and throw it on a website where it is instantly visible to a lot of people. It means I can use a chat like this. It's practical, necessary, and I simply enjoy it. I like the quirks and the challenges it provides. It's not perfect, but it's flexible, and powerful, and that's pretty much all I ask for.
@BartekBanachewicz keeping traces across asynchronous execution contexts for example is very useful and we do that now thanks to Bluebird.
22:52
@BenjaminGruenbaum On modern machines compiling reasonable languages doesn't really take that long either.
@phenomnomnominal Did I read "I like the quirks" right?
@phenomnomnominal Testify!
@BartekBanachewicz you're saying that like neither of us have ever done C++.
@BartekBanachewicz yes, and then you commented on it condescendingly.
@BenjaminGruenbaum C++ is not reasonable
@phenomnomnominal gosh that might have been a typo :<
@BartekBanachewicz what is reasonable then? What languages do you deem reasonable?
22:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum Only the most High Haskell.
!!wiki fortran
@BenjaminGruenbaum Lua, C#, Python, ...
now there is a room for it.
!!summon 45756
@BartekBanachewicz lol, I can make a 3 pages long list of shit in C# I dislike, same for Python and I haven't built anything big enough in Lua to really know :D
22:55
also Scala lately
!!help summon
@RUJordan summon: Say boopidi bee and in the room I shall appear. /summon roomid
@BenjaminGruenbaum does you disliking the language make it unreasonable? That sounds more like me :)
I've programmed a little Lua for minecraft... felt like cleaner BASIC.
@BartekBanachewicz try it :D Scala has a lot of quirks. Functions in JS are oh so very elegant :)
22:56
I half expected that to rhyme
> Say boopidi bee and there I shall be!
@BartekBanachewicz That's the thing, there are very few languages I actually dislike, few I'm ok with and a lot I like. Also, I don't dislike any language I've never built anything big with.
@RUJordan ^^
@Retsam what did you find common in Lua and BASIC?
@rlemon I can sleep easy tonight now :)
22:57
boopidi bee -> summon roomid
@BenjaminGruenbaum I dislike all language I do not know out of principal. ;)
saves me the time from learning them
I think I'm closing with:
12 mins ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
@BartekBanachewicz look, in all honesty the big things developers care about are productivity. I'm really productive in JS, and I'd like to think I do architecture very naturally, quickly and well with it. It's very flexible too and doesn't slow me down. It's really hard to argue about that or reason about that especially since you've never worked on a large scale JS project so you think the issues are still things like TypeErrors or ReferenceErrors early checking where they're not.
And talking about community coming out tomorrow
The season so far is surprisingly fun to watch, I expected much worse.
how many eps are out now?
so far i've seen 1&2
22:58
@BartekBanachewicz It just felt minimal.
okay so only one behind
@Retsam well, it is very much so :)
Yeah, looking at their webpage, it looks like that's basically the point.
@BenjaminGruenbaum 4 eps so far
@phenomnomnominal sweet :D
22:59
Did you see the one with Pierce's will reading?
@Retsam mhm. Small core but extensible, mostly via the host APIs exposed to the embedded VM.

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