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16:00
d2h5IGRvIEkgdGhpbmsgSSB3aWxsIHJlZ3JldCB0aGlzPw==
@BadgerCat butt secks
Teehee
5 mins ago, by iam tery
thanks love:)
bullllshiit
16:27
Morning
I made a mistake last night - I thought I'd read the first chapter of The Martian before bed.
NOPE. I'm now 1/3 of the way through and tired. (cc @SomeGuy )
so... you didn't sleep?
I planned to be asleep by 11:30, didn't stop reading until ~1
oh, it's fine
I used to be like "ok I'll read harry potter till 11pm" and ended up reading all of it till 5am
(these books were damn fast to read.)
yeah, I've done that before.
16:55
evening
@catgocat That vim book is great :o
@MadaraUchiha yes
"vim" and "great" don't go together in one sentence
it made me switch from sublime to vim
I made a thing
17:06
sntimernt=red line? what product is therE?
@MadaraUchiha but VimL (the vim scripting language) is a pain in the ass
@CSᵠ Blue is sentiment, red is BTC price
Sadly, I may have found a use case for MongoDB
LOL
@SomeKittens in that case ditch it and use CoutchDB instead
sentiment is mostly the same, can you apply a smothing filter over it?
17:07
MongoDB adds a "PLEASE" keyword for inserts, boosting chance that data is stored to above 75%.
that HAS to be a joke
Hint: HackerNewsOnion
Onion
oh, right
17:09
@Callum get ready for "PRETTY PLEASE"
hehe
@MadaraUchiha tmux + vim = awesomeness
I don't even use the mouse anymore
Or the arrow keys
"The one who reports the bug should send the pull request."
- George R.R. Martin, OSS visionary
[a man is choking] waiter: quick is anyone a doctor? vim user: i’m a vim user
@catgocat how do you select the wlan manager without mouse in ubuntu?
17:11
Ah, finally got my Emacs setup just how I like it. http://t.co/f0B10cZybh
@AwalGarg I was talking about in programming
In sublime text you have to constantly use the mouse
Because it is not shortcut based
17:15
@Callum I don't get it
lolwut
@AwalGarg You don't have the power you have in vim with just the keyboard
oh. where have I heard that lately? ... hmm, oh right. everywhere!
@catgocat you just don't know how to use sublime
Can any CSS wizards review this? github.com/angular-ui/ui-layout/pull/113
17:17
@FlorianMargaine Why do you think that?
Because you said "Sublime text is not shortcut based"
@catgocat because you can do a lot with just the keyboard in sublime. There's also a vintage package to have vim-based motions.
How gay is he on a scale of bear hunting to hunting bears?
Sublime shortcuts
17:19
30 Rock is amazing
@Callum that's about 20% of the road
@FlorianMargaine I haven't tested those plugins, but Sublime Text (along with its shortcuts) is still pretty slow.
ST offers much much more
Slow?
what are you doing?
@catgocat I need to learn tmux
17:20
Are you typing with a literal keyboard?
Right now I'm barely using screen
I find myself in sublime text moving my hands away from the home row, to the arrow keys, to the mouse or constantly to the ctrl keys.
Which slows me down.
oh, that's why you swap ctl & alt (like on a MacBook)
so you barely move your thumb
@AwalGarg there's no question here. For editing of most kinds, vim is faster.
i.e. a vim expert vs a ST expert, vim expert types a lot faster.
PSA: When defending your XYZ editor and flaming PQR editor, please try to give logical and factually valid arguments even if your editor is better than mine.
17:22
@AwalGarg I don't think that editor matters that much, really.
Use whatever you're most comfortable and productive at.
18 mins ago, by Awal Garg
"vim" and "great" don't go together in one sentence
Typing isn't really the bottleneck of my time anyway
editor matters only when the majority of what you're doing is typing
Where are the logical arguments in that sentence ^ ? @AwalGarg
It's thinking that takes up most of the time
17:22
Personally, I regularly use 3-4 editors.
@SomeKittens Precisely.
@MadaraUchiha Precisely.
@copy @catgocat c'mon we all can understand what is serious and what not :-P
Not really, if I the most time I spend is thinking I want to type as fast as I can so I can go back to thinking.
17:23
vim is good. ST is also good, but vim is also good
@AwalGarg Yeah, and what you said was the gospel truth. Hail Awal.
The argument that speed doesn't matter because 70% of the time you spend is thinking is absolutely invalid.
Coding is 4% typing, 11% thinking, 8% debugging and 77% hanging around in chat rooms.
10
Anyway. real programmers use butterflies.
@AwalGarg Vim's ability to create repetitive sequences and repeat them with very few keystrokes takes most features ST has, including multiple cursors.
@SomeKittens making sure the numbers add up...
17:24
<C-v>jjj there you have it 4 equivalent ST cursors
or even <C-v>3j
@MadaraUchiha eh, QA will catch it
@catgocat To be fair, there's more to it than that
@MadaraUchiha I do know that vim is technically much better than Sublime Text. Not sure about emacs. But as you said yourself, it is not the top priority for me now.
@MadaraUchiha just an example
17:25
In sublime text, you can select the current word and add cursors for each instance of that word in the document with one keystroke
my priority right now is to get a stable platform to freelance :-P and vim won't get me there.
That's helpful, and I'm not sure how (if at all) vim does it.
@MadaraUchiha HUGE feature for me
@SomeKittens Which intellij/webstorm adopted and I've been thanking the gods ever since
ALT+J for windows/linux, dk;dc; about Mac
Magnetized needle and a steady hand :))
17:27
Madara, is refactorisation not good enough?
@Callum Good luck doing that in JavaScript
Without screwing shit over.
Never used JetBrains for JavaScript, really.
@MadaraUchiha you can do that with vim
there is a plugin for everything in vim
Have to half-way agree with @catgocat that the "thinking mostly" argument is kinda invalid. when you are refactoring or cleaning up code, which is a lot, your typing speed and the speed of your editor matters a lot.
17:28
!!s/vim/ST/
@SomeKittens there is a plugin for everything in ST (source)
@BadgerCat Haha, I love how it took the exact same examples from the sublime text example page.
@AwalGarg this is the first time we agree on something
well "half-way agree"
!!s/ST/everything/
@MadaraUchiha @SomeKittens there is a plugin for everything in everything (source) (source)
17:29
12 mins ago, by SomeKittens
Can any CSS wizards review this? https://github.com/angular-ui/ui-layout/pull/113
@catgocat nah, first time you have said anything remotely meaning full. well, have way.
Hey guys, I have got an interesting question for you:
0
Q: Is there a correct way of composing moore machines?

Aadit M ShahA mealy machine is just a stateful function. Hence, two mealy machines can be composed using simple function composition. A moore machine is a restricted mealy machine with an initial output value. Is there a way to compose two moore machines? This is what I tried in Haskell: type Mealy a b = a ->...

@AaditMShah cs.se
@AaditMShah What does this have to do with JavaScript?
Haskell ?
17:34
@MadaraUchiha language agnostic question
@AwalGarg Hence the retag
Ah you meant the tags on the question.
@AaditMShah what does "composing machines" even mean? That's ambiguous
Machines that of which compose?
@AaditMShah do you mean composing as taking the output of one machine as the input of another?
17:44
@amin thanks :)
@AaditMShah lol, of course you're not succeeding, you're representing the maching as a stateful function. Represent it as a 6 tuple like the definition and it all falls into place.
so, I'm shopping for servers so I have something to play around with. I'm looking for an older machine that's actually a server (as opposed to just throwing together some parts). Recommendations?
Raspberry
@SomeKittens what would it serve?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Our evil overlords.
17:50
Likely throw together old parts, or an old laptop, most home servers or small office servers serve < 100 people.
@SomeKittens VPS won't do?
@BenjaminGruenbaum The extraordinary purpose of "I want a server"
my "old parts" situation is my college netbook and that won't do
unixsurplus.com/product/… <- looks nice for everything but a processor from 2008
It's quiet, small, not hot and energy-efficient (enough for your purposes)
17:54
@SomeKittens Why would you buy that?
If it's just for messing around with then sure, but remember, you don't actually need it to scale
right. Like I said, I want a server
There are also similar boards (for instance alix boards) that run x86
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, that's exactly what I mean.
@AaditMShah composing them is a new 6 tuple, defining it shouldn't be too hard.
Yeah, I'd prefer x86, I've had enough fun with other architectures.
For instance, did you know that MongoDB doesn't run on processors pre-2000?
18:00
@AaditMShah the input alphabet is the input alphabet of the first machine, the output alphabet is the output alphabet of the second machine, the state space is 2 - tuples of states from the first and states from the second machine (the cartesian product representing one state from each machine), the transition function does the transition on the first machine state using the first, then the output function composed with the transition function of the second m on the second machine state.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The 6-tuple definition of a moore machine has three data types (the type of the state, the type of the input and the type of the output), some initial state, a transition function and an output function. The initial value of the moore machine is taken from the initial state and the output function. The transition function, the output function and the state is combined into the stateful function that I mentioned in my answer.
The output is the output of the second machine with those states.
That definition sounds quite simple, it sounds quite easy to prove inductively over a run over the composed function that the machine produces the input iff it is the composition of the two functions.
So you get an entirely definable machine using that composition.
A moore machine isn't a monad, it's defined on several type variables not two. Your definition of Moore a b does not encapsulate the required information.
looks like its timing out now for some reason but pacificgeek has quite a few servers generally for reasonable prices @SomeKittens
its where I've gotten my last 2
Also, your definition of associativity in the questions holds here (although it is pretty useless on its own, we can just define a mealy machine to always evaluate to Unit, and compose them any way we'd like, you should actually demand function composition).
data Moore a b = forall s. Moore (s -> b) (s -> a -> s) s

composeMoore :: Moore b c -> Moore a b -> Moore a c
composeMoore (Moore g2 t2 s2) (Moore g1 t1 s1) = Moore (g2 . snd) (\(s1, s2) x -> (t1 s1 x, t2 s2 (g1 s1))) (s1, s2)
Is this what you mean?
18:05
are you going to colocate it or keep it in your house @SomeKittens?
Because servers are loud
@AaditMShah my Haskell is rusty ( haven't used it in about 3 months), but no.
and they are actually a pita to keep somewhere if you don't have a rack since they take up a lot of surface area
@AaditMShah A Moore is a parameter of 6 things, why represent it with functions at all?
Keep it in the apartment, I've got space for it
I did represent it as 6 things.
18:07
So a is the type of the input alphabet and b is the type of the output alphabet? The first function is the output alphabet thing, and the second one is the transition?
s is a type of state, where is that encapsulated? Where is the state space?
data Moore a b = forall s. Moore (s -> b) (s -> a -> s) s
           | |          |        |______| |___________| |
           | |          |           |           |       +-> initial state
           | |          |           |           +-> transition function
           | |          |           +-> output function
           | |          +-> state space
           | +-> output alphabet
           +-> input alphabet
Why is s not a parameter?
I'm sorry, I just never saw forall
You could make s a parameter but then you wouldn't be able to compose two moore machines with different types of states.
@AaditMShah You would, their composition's space would be a tuple of states
@SomeKittens you putting esxi on there or some other virtual platform? If so before you fully commit check out compatibility lists. I made that mistake and had to purchase a separate hardware raid card. But yeah its nice to have a server or two that you can just do whatever the hell you want with. I mean VPS's are alright but its more rewarding to own the entire thing imo.
18:11
composeMoore :: Moore t b c -> Moore s a b -> Moore (s, t) a c
also if you really get into it I'm sure you guys have tons of colocation centers around where you can host it for like $50-$100 monthly
How do you "type" such a function?
I'm language agnostic, I'm not interested in how you'd do it in Haskell at this point.
@Loktar yeah, tons. This isn't for hosting so much as my playing with more data-intensive things that I'd need an always-on thing for.
This is how you'd logically compose them
18:12
The forall keyword hides the state information so that it's not visible to the outside world.
It's a perfectly fine type though.
ah yeah, well good luck, Ebay generally has a lot of servers listed as well
wish pacific geek wasn't timing out they have pretty good prices usually
Anyway, there's more than one way to compose moore machines. Even when using the 6-tuple definition.
@AaditMShah the problem here is that you need the type of the function to depend on the state space passed. If you pass {1, 2, 3, 4} inside as the state space you need the the transition function to be from that to that
I don't know which one is right. You described the one which was most obvious to you. There's at least one other way though.
18:14
@AaditMShah I described a construction for composition which I can prove is correct in terms of the output of the machine being the same as function composition.
It's type sound, any other way you'd have would be isomorphic at which point it wouldn't matter.
However, {1,2,3,4} is not a type. It is a value of the type [Int].
@AaditMShah it is also a type.
As in, belonging to the set is membership to the type.
Otherwise, the type information is incorrect, just look at the wikipedia definition.
It's a function whose domain is the state space. If that constraint is not represented you cannot accurately represent the computation. That's a type system problem not a composition problem. So to answer your question - yes there is a way to compose two such machines.
The way I've stated above is provably correct. It's a simple induction.
The Haskell type system does not have these higher order concepts as far as I know, maybe Idris? Who knows.
Hmm... I need some time to understand your argument.
@AaditMShah let me try something different. Forget functions and functional programming, we now just have an automaton which happens to be a Moore machine.
Alright.
18:22
@AaditMShah We have an automaton that takes every letter in the alphabet and output the following letter, how would you construct that as a Moore machine? (Our alphabet has 6 letters, for the 6th it would return the 1st, so a -> b, b -> c, c -> d and so on).
@Loktar Yeah, difficult to find the needle in the haystack there
So given "aaaa" we want a run to output "bbbb" (after we make a transition, we add the latter produced by calling the output function on that state to our output).
You need to have an initial output. What would that initial output be?
Given "abcdef" we want "bcdefa"
Given no input, a moore machine still needs to have an output. That's the problem.
18:24
@AaditMShah then the initial output is irrelevant, should output anything.
(There are two ways to define it, they are equivalent since you can always add a state and ignore the first output)
Alright. I follow you.
But I think it would be simpler if we just ignore the first output and assume it outputs after each transition and not before, and for the empty string it outputs the empty string (which is the common way to define it as far as I'm aware).
That means you have a mealy machine.
A mealy machine outputs on transition. A moore machine outputs in between transitions. Hence, a moore machine without an initial output is a mealy machine.
No, we're not using the letter to determine the output, only the state. We can't use "how we got to that state"
No, because in a mealy machine you can output based on a state and how you got to it, and not just on a state.
Yes, but the new output state is determined by the current input.
Therefore, by transitivity the new output is determined by the current input.
18:28
There are more possible transitions+states than states, it's not the same.
In a moore machine you decide what to output based only on the state and not on the state and how you got to it. That's a big difference.
According to Wikipedia:
If we disregard the first output symbol of a Moore machine, s_0, then it can be readily converted to an output-equivalent Mealy machine by setting the output function of every Mealy transition (i.e. labeling every edge) with the output symbol given of the destination Moore state.
So, for my question, I'd make a machine with 6 states named q_a to q_f (irrelevant start state), when I see a letter I map to the state representing the following letter. That way I can depend only on the state.
Alright.
morning
@AaditMShah That's the reverse transition, of course you can disregard where you came from.
@AaditMShah now, let's say I have two such machines (for "next letter"), how would I compose them and make a machine that does "next two letters"?
18:31
Connect the output of one to the input of the other?
@AaditMShah right, but they're machines, they're not functions - they don't have outputs and inputs they have output functions and input functions.
You need to define the state space, input and output alphabet, states and transitions.
Alright. I follow you.
So, how would the alphabets look?
of the new machine?
For the first one:

Input: a
Output: b
State: s

For the second one:

Input: b
Output: c
State: t

For the resulting machine:

Input: a
Output: c
State: s * t
Anyone hear of, or have tried Project Maelstrom? I just discovered it, and I guess it's a new web browser. Still not sure what to make of it, any thoughts?
18:34
:25260883 well, you can take the state as s * t, but I'd argue it also makes sense since you need all the options to make a transition (just like in the intersection of languages in DFAs). Now, how would the transition function look like?
I am not sure.
@AaditMShah right, but not its type, based on the transition functions of the two functions - how would it look like?
@AaditMShah well, you represented it as a couple, a state from the first machine and a state from the second machine.
The first machine just works on the input, so it makes sense that it'll simply be the first machine applied on the input based on where the first machine would be at at this point in the computation.
We need to keep track of that so we can "simulate" the first machine as it goes so we can pipe its output as input to the second machine.
@Shea Idk... I mean, I guess I don't understand how it works enough to form a relevant opinion, but it seems to me that P2P could have some major potential security flaws. If someone were to take enough time to figure out how to serve the wrong content.
@AaditMShah do you understand why it makes sense to keep the "first half" of the tuple a simulation of the first machine?
18:41
I do understand.
@AaditMShah awesome, want to take a stab on how the second part of the tuple would look like?
Let me write some code for it and show it to you?
No, no code :)
You can write it on a piece of paper if you'd like and scan that, but let's keep this language agnostic question language agnostic.
You can write it in mathematical notation if you'd like.
Okay, just give me a moment.
drat
I've coded myself into a corner.
18:45
Just think about what it's logical for it to do, if the first half keeps track of the simulation of the first machine to get the resulting state - we also have access to the letter it'd output when reading the letter in that turn.
@Mosho you in the office?
It's too late to still be in office
Unless you need to ship soon
@Shea windows only
how do i pass the below regex
/^\^\d+/
?
any scenario will do ! TY
anybody in here !
Heloooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
3
@iamtery I am not interested in your thing unless you have some concrete base for the project and some infrastructure, which I see is very much lacking right now. And maybe improve communication.
@AlexanderSolonik Yeah, that'll get you help.
18:59
@SomeKittens , my long lost friend , how have you been
@Gofilord 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.
@AlexanderSolonik Are you sure that's valid regex?
heres where i got it from
if (/^\^\d+/.test(substr)) {
it is valid regex
19:03
well my question really was , can somebody give me a scenario to pass the regex ?
^7 @AlexanderSolonik
that will pass
FYI , listening to "A Hard days night" , any beatles fans in here ! ?
Thanks !
basically a string starting with ^ followed by any number of digits
@copy no argument there
But what if your home computer broke?
@BenjaminGruenbaum ducktape can fix anything
Or Comcast is being evil and not installing internet
@AlexanderSolonik of course it does, regex101.com/r/xJ4gI3/1
yeeey ! great hurrrray !
bye guys !
hi all, just published my first yeoman generator, tons of well researched stuff there, very lean, check out?

http://git.io/rise
So, who wants to laugh at me? I spent a good part of July building a real-time ETL system (neat!) and just spent an hour bemoaning the fact that there isn't a good ETL system for realtime data anymore.
19:13
if you can help me improve anything that'd be great
(mostly it was me not realizing what I was trying to do was an ETL task)
@FlorianMargaine I installed it, and as I suspected, it's powered by Chrome
it's built in torrent management is really cool though
Idk if I trust it quite enough yet to actually sync my Google account to it
It has a VPN ad on the new tab page. Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't a VPN be incompatible with P2P and/or defeat it's purpose?
19:46
So to sum up what I just read about torrents, a torrent served website is basically just a website with an added layer of protocols, which essentially serves it's purpose as buffer for a server's bandwidth. It's an interesting concept, but not very practical for non-static files.
@SomeKittens lol
@SomeKittens how's the new job btw
Very good
still pros/cons but a lot less stressful than my last one
How's the kid?
20:02
good :)
getting bigger and fatter
nice
@FlorianMargaine You want your kid to emulate Java?
@catgocat Why? It's not a great new idea or a revolutionary way of thought. I'll admit that it's a cool idea, but let's not pretend it's anything beyond that.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well if npm is so great, how come Obama uses it??
20:17
@Zirak solid point, but you have to remember obama is a nazi communist terrorist in disguise who actually hates america so it's probably part of an elaborate ruse.
accurate
The Neo Haskell Elmangelists are probably in on it, too...
the government is lizards
damnit dns propagation, y u so slow
trying out ircanywhere on my vps
(irccloud for poor people with a vps, basically)
poor people with a vps
20:27
Bah.
real data is so finicky.
yay
it's working
...I can't even tail a file?
wat
@SomeKittens ?
I'm using a tailing library (yeah, make fun of me later) that allows me to only get live data, or cat the whole thing and then pick up live data.
I had it set to live data only for now
then the live data stopped coming in (it's erratic at best)
so I switched to the whole file and still didn't get anything
20:46
@SomeKittens Isn't that just fs.watchFile?
@Zirak node is a terrible hack for systems programming
@BenjaminGruenbaum Your life is a banana
@Zirak the banana
@Zirak at the core, yes but the library also handles things like line parsing, etc
We're no strangers to love~
@copy What I've got so far
@Zirak your last two messages seem to have been the backups instead of the real thing
COOOOPA
COOOOPA CABAAAAANAAAAAA
AAAAAHHHHHHH
so...
that ircanywhere is pretty nice
I can add a couple of people if they want a cheap irccloud on my slow vps
20:54
I've already got a cheap IRCCloud
albeit the free version
well, it's free for me
(since I already use the vps for other things.)
unlimited networks etc
aaaand
a nice UI for mobiles!
although it's in angular, so the frontend is pretty slow
ohnoyoudidn't
@BenjaminGruenbaum Seriously though, do we have anything better than Rx? I can't find anything.
Rx isn't that great :D
What are you trying to do?
ohyesididandiddoitagain
Bacon is really meh, adt is weak, implementing my own will be weaker.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Exactly. I'm starting to lose my mind.
I'm this close to writing transducers for everything.
lol
Or, actually solve your problem with code
Just write it, srsly
You and your silly fantasies
You dress up as a Victorian princess this time, buddy.
Victorian princess? Pretty mild.
anyway
good night

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