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12:02
count(["a","a","b","b","b","c","d","b"])
function count(arr,obj){
  return arr.reduce(function(e,e){
    this[e] = true+this[e]||1;
  }.bind(obj={}.__proto__)),++obj[arr[0]],obj;
}
mine is readablest
add pure in front of yours
will do one sec
count(["a","a","b","b","b","c","d","b"])
int: function count(arr,window){
  pure: return arr.reduce(function(e,e){
    set: this[e] = +true+this[e]||true;
  }.bind(window={}.__proto__)),++window[arr[0]],window;
}
who know the site, where I can draw diagram UML on-line and download image without download program?
@MirkoCianfarani gliffy
download image with snipping tool :D
Who posted here the Haskell tutorial yesterday?
12:05
@JanDvorak learn you a haskell?
I think I did, and I want to try it out more.
That's the name of the tutorial :D
@JanDvorak hehe
oh. I thought your grammar abilities went haywire :-)
Yep, this one.
Uao gliffy is fastest thank @BenjaminGruenbaum
12:07
count(["a","a","b","b","b","c","d","b"])
int: function count(arr,window){
  pure: return arr.reduce(function(e,e){
    set: eval("this."+e+"= +true+this[e]||true");
  }.bind(window=arr.__proto__.__proto__))||++window[arr[0]]&&window;
}
as a bonus, it'll set things that appear once to true so they'll seem like numbers but fail typeof and other checks :D
what I'm wondering - am I correct that the I/O monad is quite similar to the concept of promises in Javasccript?
@JanDvorak have you read me trying to explain promises to somekitten?
I think I haven't

Failing at explaining promises :D

yesterday, 31 minutes total – 118 messages, 11 users, 6 stars

Bookmarked yesterday by Benjamin Gruenbaum

Go through it :) It's pretty short
@JanDvorak yes and no
but more yes than no, I guess
12:10
@BartekBanachewicz can you (no google) explain to me what the differences are :D?
I finally found where I saw the function^ syntax in JS: github.com/lukehoban/ecmascript-asyncawait
Yes in the sense it delays the execution of the functions passed in, and each of them individually is executed synchronously (without intervening I/O operations)?
@JanDvorak the important thing here is the boxing.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'll go easy and state "usecase". IO Monad is used in pretty much everything that's impure. Promises are used to make async operations convenient. The lower-level concept is obviously very similar.
You have a value but you don't really have it yet.
That's the important and hard to understand part.
12:12
@BenjaminGruenbaum a Haskell I/O monad looks very much like a promise of a value to me.
@JanDvorak read that bookmarked conversation :)
@JanDvorak promises are monads~~~
@BartekBanachewicz close but not at the moment. They're just really close. You have to actively look for the non monadic parts.
@BartekBanachewicz hmm... do javascript promises support unboxed return values?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Care to elaborate?
12:14
Isnt it high time for Chrome to add a FF like feature - Set as Desktop Background ?
@JanDvorak You mean like done instead of then ?
It will prevent people from downloading wallpaper everytime.
@Zirak (cc @BartekBanachewicz ) promises perform recursive thenable resolution and the rejection and progression mechanisms are two important differences. If you say rejection is a composed maybe on a monad then that solves one of these three things.
That's why the current spec talks discusses .chain which is the monadic bind.
@JanDvorak yes, they do - the promise will box them for you.
standarize operator overloading and allow >>= :P
What I've noticed - the BB library supports arrays of promises. There doesn't seem to be an equivalent monad for that in Haskell
12:16
Promise.cast(0).then(function(){
    return 3;
}).then(function(three){
    console.log(three);
})
@JanDvorak look closer :)
@BartekBanachewicz spoiler >: (
@BartekBanachewicz not asynchronous
or is it?
@JanDvorak leave that aside just yet
BB can have various parts of a map chain in different stages in execution.
12:17
Haskell is in general rather good at parallelism and stuff
.map is very monadic, it would have been more monadic to have .then take arrays and apply the promise to each item but then you couldn't really use arrays as resolution values.
@JanDvorak in Haskell the elemenents are evaluated lazily by default
Or expose PromiseArray outside and then have a promise processing a PromiseArray do that, but .map is clearer in this context and more familiar.
.then is a form of map/flatMap anyway.
@JanDvorak I'm not sure
I thought it could, and that was what made cancelling more complicated?
Me and @Esailija talked a lot about being able to have .map(...).filter(...).reduce(..) and having a promise pass through the .map and the .filter without having to wait for all the other promises to finish the mapping or filtering operation first.
12:19
@BenjaminGruenbaum the problems with that are deeply connected with shitty call-by-value
@JanDvorak The synchronous analouge of a .cancel is a thread abort or a process.exit , it really shouldn't be used that often :)
@BartekBanachewicz no, it's very possible to do that with promises - it would be a lot less effective in terms of memory usage. Bluebird uses a bitwise flag field and reuses certain parts and its very few fields extensively and for different purposes at different times.
I even implemented a half working promise code .asParallel() that does this with web workers and it worked. The problem is that it costs a lot of memory and is a lot slower.
oh. In Haskell, I/O operations are always sequenced, while Javascript promises are much less deterministic. Is that the difference?
@BenjaminGruenbaum yeah well you can't escape the fact that you're writing JS after all
@JanDvorak what's non-deterministic about it?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Talking about analogies. We have Promise.prototype.then which is like .map, but we don't have even more basic function, forEach. (Promise.prototype.done). Do you thinks it's good? Why, why not?
12:22
@BartekBanachewicz I don't see how that is related?
@BenjaminGruenbaum OK.
@Miszy I avoid .done, good promise libraries like Bluebird can detect unhandled rejections (exceptions) even without it and that's the use case of .done. You use it to indicate the promise chain has ended and to throw any unhandled rejections.
@BenjaminGruenbaum if you map an array of promises, the callbacks are executed in arbitrary order. Haskell guarantees a certain order of I/O operations.
@BartekBanachewicz JS is very fast on v8, I'm not sure you know. It's not like 5 years ago
@BartekBanachewicz no seriously. Although if you figure a memory efficient way to do this please tell - when you open 20K promises at once GC can be a bitch and keeping the memory footprint low is essential.
@JanDvorak You're looking for Promise.reduce then, that does it one at a time.
12:23
@BenjaminGruenbaum "Good promise libraries". What about the native one, Promise ?
@FlorianMargaine It's fast for some tasks. And fast is not the only thing really connected with the performance
@Miszy they're a WIP, I would not use them in production or rely on them yet.
@BartekBanachewicz I didn't think you were talking about speed at all?
ok then, good to know I wasn't misunderstanding.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I know, it's just that they completely rejected the idea of .done not giving any alternative for taking care of unhandled exceptions :)
12:25
@BenjaminGruenbaum Anyway typical solution used by most interpreted languages is to use native libraries
@Miszy native Promises are going to miss a lot of methods libraries provide
@Miszy one of the main benefits of promises is throw safety, if you want to handle uncaught rejections use .catch
@BenjaminGruenbaum good point, even if it feels a bit like a misuse
@BenjaminGruenbaum nobody reasonably is going to reengineer low-level high-perf code in Lua or Python, they just use C libraries. And JS community is apparently thinking they can do it in pure JS.
@BartekBanachewicz Bluebird promises are currently between a magnitude or 3 times faster than native v8 promises. With a JIT that's not a good idea to implement natively.
12:26
@FlorianMargaine @BenjaminGruenbaum I see. Yet most of the libraries provide this .done method which makes me confused.
but you still can't have unsequenced I/O in Haskell (over one handle/direction), can you?
BB doesn't
@BenjaminGruenbaum JIT is not equal to native code
@BartekBanachewicz only we have the benchmarks to show for it. (lua does too though so I don't get that)
right, it can give you some speedups
12:27
@BartekBanachewicz fun fact v8 doesn't generate bytecode.
@BartekBanachewicz but it converges to the same value pretty fast
@JanDvorak using a lot more memory, though
@BartekBanachewicz v8 works directly with x86 assembly. It transpiles to and bails out on assembly utilizing processor optimizations to figure out bailout ahead of time.
There are tons of performance killers but if you avoid them you're golden.
I know how JIT works, TYVM
The only 'problem' is GC, but that's not native vs. JS, that's managed code. It's also quite good.
@BartekBanachewicz v8 is different. Most VMs compile to bytecode and play with it.
12:28
I'm just saying that you can't do everything with JIT
@BartekBanachewicz right, but you can get algorithmic operations like sorting to run as fast as native.
@BenjaminGruenbaum LLVM compiles to LLVM IR, that doesn't change anything
@BenjaminGruenbaum you can make some operations run comparably fast, yes
@BartekBanachewicz not really. V8 is very good at compact representation of objects. It's just that not a lot of people know how to.
Lucky for us @Esailija is one of them
yup, notably the number of properties is important
still, JS has no type annotations and they are a huge help for the optimizer
12:29
OK, is the closest thing to promises Either Error (IO a) (neglecitng the fact that it's not what main is expected to return)?
@BartekBanachewicz There we go again...
@BartekBanachewicz asm.js can use them
Some things you need to do: 1) use proper collections and not arrays for queues, maps, etc 2)use bit flags, 3) generate code on the fly 4) using functions without deopts (arguments, forin, closures etc).
after 14 properties, v8 generates hash maps instead of mapping properties to a struct, so it gets a lot slower
Well, it goes on and on.
12:30
which is probably why Esailija reuses the same properties
@BartekBanachewicz I agree it's 'harder' but you can't argue you can't do it when it is being done.
@FlorianMargaine he also does it to get nice struct alignment.
@JanDvorak if you want Either Error you want to unpack manually and then do something with it, so type of main is irrelevant here
For example, .length of the promise handlers is almost always 1 so it's extracted with bit operations and a mask.
@BenjaminGruenbaum and so is research in native compilers done. They are also getting faster, you know.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Can you explain your 1) ?
12:31
@BartekBanachewicz which is awesome.
@BartekBanachewicz or rather, CPUs are more and more optimised for the code compilers generate
@JanDvorak no, not "or rather". I meant precisely what I said. CPU optimizations are a different thing.
Yeah, @BartekBanachewicz is right on that one.
clang is making amazing progress :) It's awesome to watch.
AOT compilation is doing some really interesting things too. It's just not as interesting IMO.
LuaJIT is a gold mine.
Then there's the fact that modern CPU cores can often do three things at once (and data moves are free).
12:33
Also, @BartekBanachewicz AOT is not always faster. I think AOT should have bailouts too
First language to do that gets a major win from me.
Probably gonna be php
@BenjaminGruenbaum EEEEK
yep, four e's.
@Stephan Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
Naa, php can't get their shit together because php code and libraries leak memory so they're stuck with horrible process-per-request .
@rlemon Do you want a CR on the stargate listener, or should I just commit?
12:36
Process per request -> no JIT or using an in memory store to keep the JIT brain -> no fun
@BenjaminGruenbaum Thanks. Might be useful...
Why so few stars ? Fast queues are a major need...
@dystroy are they?
@BartekBanachewicz you had this coming
1 message moved to PHP
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well, not for everybody but one programmer in ten at least did need one in the recent years, no ?
12:38
@BenjaminGruenbaum meh, I quoted the reply :P
in PHP, 24 secs ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
Please discuss your love of php here :D We had enough of your php <3 talk in JavaSscript.
@dystroy in JavaScript?
Hi guys...
They're almost worthless in frontend.
[{"answer":"1","question":"17"},{"answer":"1","question":"20"},{‌​"answer":"1","question":"19"},{"answer":"1","question":"12"},{"a‌​nswer":"1","question":"10"},{"answer":"1","question":"8"},{"answe‌​r":"1","question":"11"},{"answer":"1","question":"6"},{"answer":‌​"1","question":"14"},{"answer":"1","question":"9"}]
@BenjaminGruenbaum I've posted your original statement too
12:39
my json out put is like this...
@BenjaminGruenbaum I mean programmers, not web site makers
@CJRamki Looks like you have some encoding issues.
how to remove ‌​ from this json?
@dystroy I don't see the difference.
@CJRamki You really need to clean the way you build your files...
12:40
@CJRamki with vigilance, and for great justice.
@Benjamin Everytime I come into PHP room I literally feel dumber
@CJRamki Find whoever wrote that reply, punch them in the ballsack.
@BartekBanachewicz you realize the php room probably has the most competent people around here right :D ?
wait... i will call that user into this room...
what is that ‌​
@BenjaminGruenbaum yeah, about 1%. The rest is the least competent.
12:42
@CJRamki That's not quite punching them in the ballsack, though.
whats wrong with this ‌​
any one can explain...
@CJRamki nothing, and don't let anyone ever tell you otherwise.
How do you build your JSON ?
i really don't know about this...
‌​ is beautiful just the way it is. Never change for anyone ‌​!
12:44
@Anjaneyulu Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
that json is @Anjaneyulu's code...
@Anjaneyulu stay strong! Don't change jason for anyone!
We believe in you @Anjaneyulu
In any case, I want Haskell's do in Javascript.
@Loktar someone's calling you ^*3
thanks @BenjaminGruenbaum
12:45
in PHP, 1 min ago, by mAsT3RpEE
@BartekBanachewicz u cant compare php to javascript. javascript was written by a programming god. originally almost single handedly. while php started as a bunch of cgi scripts. then was built on top of another framework. I think it's done as great as possible considering. stupid hater.
@JanDvorak there, do { /* ... */ } while ();
:P
@FlorianMargaine not the same kind of do, though.
@BartekBanachewicz LMFAO
yield seems quite like Haskell's <-, am I right?
12:47
@JanDvorak yes, and yield* (python yield* ) is kind of like do
@JanDvorak mhm
thanks
squeee more Haskell users
the only loop we ever need is while() {}
replace while with loop prolly and we're good
in Lounge<Serious>, 14 hours ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
infinite recursion is the way to do loops
12:48
@jAndy .forEach
@jAndy meh. for(;;)... is better. One character shorter if you can fill in both body slots.
.map is also acceptable as the only loop
I don't care about one character if readability is totally fucked up
Also, for should have been a function, also - all statements should have been expressions.
for.each(collection, i => {

})
@JanDvorak in haskell it's forever BTW :)
12:51
let's invent lisp all over again
why not
people who like lisp reinvent it on a daily basis
@BartekBanachewicz wait, Haskell can loop?
I don't think anything is as convenient and solid as while( thisConditionIsTruthy ) { /* do something */ }
as for a .. "default native" loop
@jAndy most often I want to exit in the middle
@JanDvorak with monadic actions and do notation it becomes an imperative language
12:52
anything else is specialized
@jAndy so while(1)
hi all
@FlorianMargaine as long as you're calling break at some point, yea
i have small doubt ..
I love functional stuff and functional loops just for expresivness and convinience, I was more arguing for only ONE low-level loop routine
gtfo for() and do-while and anything else
12:55
@jAndy function :)
Also, recursion :P
btw is there reduce1 in JS?
function for(value,predicate,increment){
    if(!predicate(value)) return;
    return for(increment(value),predicate,incremenet);
}
@BenjaminGruenbaum :p
Yeah, I don't like normal for loops
I use them, but don't like it.
its also still a performance question
12:58
@jAndy The Game
2
;D
rofl
Why are you guys needing loops ? You can just copy paste the code as much as desired.

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