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14:00
Architecture bugs are the bane of my existence
Most of my pure programming errors are in logic of what my code does.
@ssube There is some sense in which you can say that even IO in Haskell is pure, even though it is how side effects are built.
1. ...
2. Evaluation of the result does not cause any semantically observable side effect or output, ...
It's not architecture, I mean stuff like sorting an array by something and not calculating that something correctly, traversing a graph and not accounting for an edge case if the graph isn't a tree, that sort of stuff.
@ssube So then of course you get the question of what the "result" of an IO is
14:01
@BenjaminGruenbaum I was taught to avoid that by programming on paper
programming on paper? wtf
@KendallFrey depends on what you call I/O, what distance from the CPU it has to be
@RonaldMunodawafa wat.
@RonaldMunodawafa that's a terrible idea
@ssube I'm speaking of the IO monad in Haskell
14:02
Programming what on paper? You can think of all the edge cases and scenarios by "programming on paper"?
I don't know Haskell
I swear every time I come in here towc has poured his heart out to the room again
Do we really need to fucking know?
He's just living up to the stereotype that we've so unfairly created for him.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes
you know, the one based on the shit he does
14:03
@BenjaminGruenbaum If you treat a lot of problems as mathematical problems, you will not leave out any cases
@RonaldMunodawafa wow, you must be worth millions of dollars, you should offer that "write code without bug" service to big companies. I'm sure with your help Google wouldn't have any security issues anymore, and everyone else can benefit too.
@ssube IO is analogous to Promise. The main function returns an IO that is "executed" to run the program
@BenjaminGruenbaum There are people who can go without bugs at all
@RonaldMunodawafa ha ha
@KendallFrey like an async main?
14:04
@RonaldMunodawafa what? Do you have any actual mathematical background? Have you ever written F# or Haskell?
why is that called/part of IO?
@BenjaminGruenbaum F# mostly
Haskell is great as an example, people consider it safe are people who never wrote Haskell :D
Haskell hardly
Haskell I'm told is safe
And everyone who wrote Haskell sounds completely differently
14:04
@ssube exactly. But IO isn't specifically async, it just happens to be the same monad that's used in JS for async.
makes sense, I pass promises from sync functions all the time to keep APIs consistent
To get a whole program, you basically have to set up IO monads as continuations of each other
@KendallFrey IO isn't specifically anything, it's different from a promise in that it's passed on to the platform which executes it - that's the cute part in IO monad vs a promise like continuation monad.
it's way better than guessing which are sync and which aren't
A promise is the result, where an IO is a request for the platform which the platform takes and executes.
That's the clever part and why we don't write Haskell programs as input -> output anymore
14:06
take a cat program, for example. You have two IOs, one to read and one to write. The write has to be a continuation of the read, for obvious reasons.
@RonaldMunodawafa you have no idea how bad that sounds by the way.
Claiming you don't have bugs in the code is... considered naive.
@BenjaminGruenbaum they can't be bugs if they're features
I didn't claim to not have bugs. I claimed that:
1. I don't need the .NET debugger for F# because we are encouraged to debug on paper
the fuck
14:08
@BenjaminGruenbaum You could pretty trivially make something similar for JS, no? A framework that takes a function main(): Promise and "executes" it.
@RonaldMunodawafa you can't debug on paper.
@RonaldMunodawafa you can't debug on paper
@KendallFrey it wouldn't be : Promise since promises are eager and show the result. It can be : Task where a Task is a promise returning function of some sort.
But yes, you're right in general.
How do you then expect people to write exams and tutorials on paper without access to any compiler?
you... don't
14:09
Yeah the eagerness of it does kinda throw a wrench in it
@RonaldMunodawafa what exams? What tutorials?
Well, a lot of schools do
How do you expect people to pass a car driving test without a car?
you don't do code on paper, it doesn't work
@BenjaminGruenbaum well....
14:10
@BenjaminGruenbaum For our functional programming class, we used F# and most of it was done on paper until the later stages
@BenjaminGruenbaum I passed my first one without
First test is on paper
It was like writing equations
@KendallFrey oh?
@BenjaminGruenbaum borrowing a car is like pair programming
14:10
Although technically it was a road rules test
I meant the actual driver's test, not the theory
But you are marked as if you wrote with a compiler
I know :P
@RonaldMunodawafa right, because your teacher is incompetent
Our learners permit is a paper road rules and signs test
14:10
Most of my courses were like this when I was a student, it was stupid.
What is it actually testing? A skill that's not really useful in the real world (debugging manually and on paper).
Perhaps it's useful as a didactic tool - so you understand how a compiler works
Learning out of a book/on paper without a PC sounds ridiculous
@BenjaminGruenbaum No. He's a wonderful lecturer
I did it once with Pascal, that was 20 years ago lol, also I was am fairly awful as a programmer.
@RonaldMunodawafa He doesn't sound like one
It taught me to work out everything before I jump in and type
And then you can print your listings
If you want
14:12
Is that because teacher is afraid of students playing instead of learning script with computer,so he gives you paper instead of learning with computer?
@sbk201 He wants to train your mind to think in a certain way
inefficiently?
He wants you to think like the compiler as close as possible
I actually moved to jumping and typing after several years. I still do all the thinking, but I just end up writing more code. It's often simple to implement 3 versions of the same thing and throw the bad two rather than debate which one to do for days.
For our web dev class we had to use Notepad
7
14:13
@RonaldMunodawafa do you know how an optimizing compiler works? You're not really thinking like a compiler anyway.
I write down program structure rather often, but never code
@RonaldMunodawafa For our Java Class the instructor suggested Notepad, nobody bought it
@RonaldMunodawafa lmao, I thought people stopped doing that like 20 years ago. When I learned web dev initially I used notepad too :D
notepad >>> dreamweaver
14:14
It's common to suggest notepad for the first two weeks so you learn how to do things without an IDE and don't consider what it does "magic"
Self taught, I used sublime
@BenjaminGruenbaum Let me say a non-optimising compiler
@RonaldMunodawafa then it doesn't actually work anything like what you're simulating it (on paper) as.
@BenFortune self taught I use butterflies
@ShrekOverflow Our compilers class was done entirely in Notepad++ with C#
14:15
!!s/butterflies/emacs/
@ssube @BenFortune self taught I use emacs (source)
It gives you a false sense of knowing how performance works. A language should be abstract, you should (as long as possible) debug its semantics and not the implemetnation.
@RonaldMunodawafa Not notepad++
Windows Notepad.exe
@ShrekOverflow Notepad for the webdev class. Notepad++ for the compilers class
but than again in my college teaching was typing whatever is written on the greenboard
as is
14:15
I agree learning with basic like syntax,beginning at paper,but it needs someone to tell you if the code is right or wrong
@ssube You do primarily devops right?
he primarily poops on mongodb
@BenFortune that is my title
One of the most important things when coding is iteration speed and velocity.
11 hours ago, by Ben Fortune
Hmm, there's a jr devops role near me for the same salary i'm on now
14:16
The longer your iterations are, the slower you code.
I'm thinking about it
If it takes you 1s to find an error in a real editor and 20s with notepad, notepad is a bad tool.
I hate my job and need an out asap
If it takes you 1s to find a bug with a debugger and 1m on paper, then paper is a bad debugging method
@BenFortune do you like writing code in some weird language and rebooting servers 2 dozen times? :P
14:16
@BenjaminGruenbaum What if you coud code on paper and give a typist to type for you
@BenFortune wanna come to Israel?
@ssube It's what I live for
@RonaldMunodawafa jesus h christ
@BenjaminGruenbaum Remember this is in a learning environment not a professional one
@RonaldMunodawafa I type way faster than I write with a pen, like 4x and I'm not a particularly fast typer.
14:17
I enjoy it tremendously and specialize in the build stuff, which is now running on k8s
@BenFortune if you want to try Auth and are happy with remote please consider Auth0 we are bulk-hiring :P (the stack is full js)
Been writing a lot of bash for the last couple month to automate some things
@KendallFrey Okay that was just a troll about the typist
oh sure pull a towc
@RonaldMunodawafa I do, I'm complaining about the bad habits you're being taught, doing 1-2 lessons with notepad is fine but more is problematic.
14:18
@BenFortune make sure you're up to date on python, you probably want to know enough ruby to use chef or puppet, terraform is super relevant for cloud work, idk what else
@BenFortune what about remote? We might be able to work something out
knowing Go might also be a big plus, depending on where you look
I wouldn't like remote, sorry. I'm weird
hey
@BenjaminGruenbaum We did our exam in Notepad so that we could entirely master the syntax and we would be confident we know exactly what we are doing. The webdev lecturer said if we didn't know a given function we needed to use and needed to check what its type signature was, we could always implement it ourselves
14:18
@BenFortune I don't like remote either, and I probably wouldn't move
every new devops tool is in go, I'm learning it in a week or so to do a k8s-to-slack event push
@ssube I know some go
I don't know the context, but I guess it's not a good thing
The only things I'm proficient in are PHP and JS I'd say, but I know enough Java, Go, Python, Bash to get around
@RonaldMunodawafa encouraging people to re-implement parts of the standard library is incredibly irresponsible
14:19
@RonaldMunodawafa that's silly of them and measures entirely the wrong thing (that you know the standard library rather than the concept). It's like they never read any of the research on how people learn programming.
Although the most important thing is that you're actually writing code.
@BenjaminGruenbaum They taught programming in First Year
The later classes are for teaching concepts
@RonaldMunodawafa in general, people learn better when they have fast feedback for errors and suggestions for fixing them.
@ssube It's super vague the job description, they just want basic bash and python, and obviously linux experience
And like I said it's a jr role
If I get ".sice is not a function, did you mean .slice which makes a copy of a sub-part of an array or the whole array?" It's a lot better than "cannot read property of undefined object" or ".sice is not a function".
Sounds like a very small team too, since they report straight to the director
14:21
@BenFortune that might be good, it might not be. Plenty of companies call their sysadmin team devops but don't really run them like devs (or have folks with dev experience), and that sucks.
@ssube well, this one wasn't about my actions
can you remove the stars from the message?
thanks
Wish granted
and the "fucked up" one too?
I think we should consider towc's whining spam and bin it rather than starring it
8
I think the first priority is,don't write bug,second is relying on the debugger
14:23
^
I don't want it to sound like a personal attack dude, but it's getting old and annoying
yes, I know
cool, even he's on board
We still love you for you
just calm the fuck down
14:24
Listen to your parents, they give sound advice
18 is a rough time
fs, anyone know how to get hw video decoding working on linux with an intel gpu?
which gen?
@BenFortune what do you mean?
ivy
I've installed chromium vaapi and the libva driver
14:26
if the CPU came out before your dist, it should be built in
@BenjaminGruenbaum in chrome sorry
I had to tweak some grub flags to get Coffee Lake working, but Skylake was fine
@BenFortune how can you tell if that's enabled or not?
chrome://gpu
@BenFortune chrome://flags/
Simpler: chrome://flags/#disable-accelerated-video-decode
huh, mine is on software as well
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's not even in there :/
Chromium 63
Not available on your platform.
@BenFortune Oh, nope
Chromium doesn't contain the code that does the GPU video decoding, soz.
Chrome (proper rainbow) 63
Not even on Windows
14:29
Maybe this is it
the MP4 codec is under a paid license fee. Which means it isn't distributed with Chromium but only within Google Chrome.
Ah, makes sense
chrome://flags
Override software rendering list (Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS, Android)
Overrides the built-in software rendering list and enables GPU-acceleration on unsupported system configurations. #ignore-gpu-blacklist
Restart Chrome
Other codecs are typically converted to mp4 stuff before being played anyway (like HLS .ts via hls.js)
@ssube See image :P, didn't work
I wanted it for moonlight-stream, which has a chrome extension but only works with software decoding which is quite laggy on my laptop, so wanted hardware decoding
14:30
@BenFortune what's moonlight stream?
works for me
@BenjaminGruenbaum An open source implementation of the nvidia gamestream protocol
Basically lets you stream games across the network to supported devices from your PC
can you switch to chrome vs chromium?
What is the streaming format?
Uh, h264/265
14:32
That's the encoding, what is the streaming protocol?
@ssube Yeah, but I think I need vaapi patched in
h265 isn't implemented in Chrome btw (its also paid), so if you're using that switch to h264
The chromium team are trying to get it upstream
It's low latency, so I'm not sure how it'd work with web, maybe webrtc hmm
What about moonlight-pc?
I haven't tried the Java implementation yet
Hasn't been updated for a long time so wasn't sure if it'd be any good
14:34
wow
a browser can render a 1billion pixel wide block
(single color)
Hey, ternary operators get confusing! Anyone able to help me debug this?
if((authors.length > 0 ? authors.some(text => tag.textContent.includes(text)) : '') && window[arrayname].some(text => tag.textContent.includes(text))) {
please don't abuse operators like that :(
although Chrome bugs out
@TheCodesee ouch
14:36
but i want simplification :(
Also, that code works if authors.length === 0
but you made it more complex
.some would just return false.
I would move that logic into its own method, outside of the if
What's window[arrayname]???
14:36
then you can branch and comment, make it nice and clear
its for a challenge me and a group of people are doing
so you recommend i write it out with all the if else statements then work backwards to ternarify it?
const authors = authors.length ? authors : window[arrayname];
if (authors.some(text => tag.textContent.includes(text)) {

}
Still ugly though
Is it just me or codepen.io/anon/pen/LeLEvp breaks Chrome ?
(about half-way horizontally chrome stops rendering orange)
@TheCodesee why replace it with a ternary? once they get compiled, they're the same, so keep it readable
@ShrekOverflow yeah, getting that too
14:40
@ssube hmm ur probably right
@BenjaminGruenbaum thanks ill give that a go
const authors = authors.length ? authors : window[arrayname];
const includedAuthor=authors.some(text => tag.textContent.includes(text)
if (includedAuthor) {

}
lol edge doesn't render it at all
Safari / FFox handle it well
Although Safari CPU usage
went through the roof for 1 second
fascinating that it even works in any browser though
even at 1bitperpixel that is a staggeringly large part to render :D
@BenjaminGruenbaum That is done in First Year. Past First Year, the assumption is you can learn any programming language required for you to use. I remember for our compilers class we switched from Pascal to Fortran to Parva while writing all of this in C# using Notepad++. The reason behind this is to get out of the way of the student and enable him to learn the hard way
@BenFortune wonder whats happening there though
my iPhone handled it :P
14:46
@ShrekOverflow Dunno, I'm intrigued, running it through the edge profiler
maybe they tried to render it as an image ?
Might be too big for edge
not even getting the scrollbars
Why don't people adopt free open source codecs?
They do
14:51
@BenFortune whoa!
Tweet worthy?
@RonaldMunodawafa there's nothing noble about learning things the hard way, programming is hard anyway.
Why make it harder.
My lecturers believe it is not making programming harder but setting standards
@RonaldMunodawafa they believe giving you subpar tools to learn with is setting standards?
I think colleges don't want to teach programming well, it loses their "competiveness"
oboecat's college for example hard forces Windows or Mac. You can't even use Linux at all
14:53
I suspect they are preparing us for environments where you have to use a given programming language but there is no tooling for it
Width works in edge but not height
@ShrekOverflow At my Uni, the lecturers are divided between using Windows and Linux. Some swear by C++ and others by C#
@ShrekOverflow at my university you only had linux.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Thats good :P, I wish I was at your UNI
You could use windows/mac, but then it'd be up to you to make sure whatever you're submitting passes CI
14:54
We had to use cmd.exe from Windows for our compilers course
I don't think it's a big deal and linux is the easiest so makes sense
@RonaldMunodawafa why?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Because it's stripped down and focus is on learning
@RonaldMunodawafa we seem to be using different terms, I want programs I use to be as helpful as possible and to contain a small'ish amount of features.
It's very quick and easy to download an archive, unpack it and get your tooling accessible from the command prompt
cmd.exe is just a shitty terminal.
Right, and it's even easier if you can use bash/zsh
14:55
As shitty as it is I learnt to appreciate Bash
We all do, bash is super effective lol, no one likes it but everyone learned it
Although I do my scripting in Node and Python mostly.
I hate Python 2
@BenjaminGruenbaum did your CI tools give error messages or play guessing games with y’all ?
And everyone who requires it
14:56
@ShrekOverflow failing tests, mostly.
@RonaldMunodawafa what's wrong with Python 2? It's not great - but it's not really hateworthy
@ShrekOverflow although the CI didn't show you all the tests, just some of them.
Powershell is nice, but it's no bash
Because Python 3 is what the developers want us to use
I wish I went to your college :-P
14:57
Powershell is overpowered and underfeatured
@BenFortune If you try to view the element,it's 21474800 width and height
@sbk201 It is, but the scroll is broken
And in the codepen version it doesn't even render
If any of you is curious
That’s earths crust at 8px per feet
@RonaldMunodawafa languages are only interesting at a theoretical point of view, if I have to use Python and I don't have to use async/await then Python 2 is just fine
Don't feel that strongly about it
At equator :-|
15:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum Python is often touted as a very powerful language. I don't see anything specially powerful about it.
If anything, not having static typing for me is a bug.
python is an extremely good glue language with good list processing
What does Python do to lists that Haskell, F# or Lisp can't
easily calls out to scientific/math libraries written in C
@RonaldMunodawafa Python has optional static typing for a while now. It's a very powerful language because the language features are pretty great and there are good libraries.
If you ever wrote machine learning code or image processing code it's nice for that.
Also, operating systems like OpenStack are written in Python.
I will give the community a thumbs up though
15:11
Oh, that's a really small university, nice :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum entirely in Python?
there are native drivers and such that it controls, but openstack is almost entirely python
@RonaldMunodawafa en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenStack pretty popular too, used by NASA and lots of companies.
Looks good. What did Python do to succeed that Lisp, Perl and Ruby didn't
python succeeded?
it's just more used by a certain group of people that are very public
mainly because it's very easy to learn the basics, as a first programming language, and that made it get its way into school syllabuses
15:22
that's not what made it popular, though
it's one of the most-used languages today because of how well it works for data science and machine learning
I see it used for Web programming and system administration as well
The only person who wanted us to use Python was a competition guy and we used C++ instead
I often make typos that are not caught by Python
uhm, languages don't "catch" typos
unless you're talking about compilation/runtime errors in some way
many do
I am referring to the translators
that's what compilers do
15:26
Compilation errors
neither will javascript
unless you use strict mod
But Python's interpreter will accept my typos and when I call the functions I would have written, I get runtime errors
like you should
it allows you to create the function while your program is executing
I hate exceptions and runtime errors. If everything can be detected at compile time let it be detected then
there's a tradeoff
15:29
@RonaldMunodawafa everything can't
you can be more flexible in less code if you use something like JS
Undefined symbols beino used in definitions should be detected as errors
which might hurt your brain later on, but in most cases, that's ok
you know yu can define the function
at runtime in python right?
I was not aware
15:30
(although you can kinda do that in C++ aswell but please don't)
And in Lisp?
dunno never deep dove in lisp dunno what it does
that btw is the reason why colleges should teach computer science
I keep reading Paul Graham talking about how Lisp is the source of most modern features
and not programming languages
Some languages are better as teaching tools than others
15:33
Ofcourse
But not one language can teach everything
but most colleges focus on "job readyness" and the courses are based around languages
@RonaldMunodawafa I am not qualified enough to comment on that
but anecdotally scratch.mit.edu and than JavaScript gave me a very strong base to visualize programs
@RonaldMunodawafa I raise you the Mozart Programming System.
Its great to learn 5 - 10 langauges but you should atleast know 1 language well
Depends on the domain
15:36
bah, I picked up python in 3 days at work (and about 3 weeks to write robust python)
except for the purely functional languages most scripting / imperative languages will feel the same
F# is an imperative language but it doesn't feel the same as C# or C++
F# is a mature, open source, cross-platform, functional-first programming language.
similarly Brainfuck doesn't feel like writing anything
You'll probably write a language yourself :D
I have thought about systems where you program by extending the language of the sysyem
that sounds fun
do you have an example?
I only program in Q#
15:44
@ndugger oh you!
Trying to differentiate such systems from compilers is conceptually hard
@ndugger We should make a language called Tank#
Happy new year Luggage!
Lisp macros are particularly interesting
Have you looked at Rust by chance ?
Nope. Only read around it...
My thought process is corrupted by C. I have been using functional programming to cleanse it
I will use functional features in imperative languages when I have completed tasks I consider difficult in Haskell
For example, writing a C++ compiler
In other words, sometime in the future
16:43
nice
smooth
@Loktar @Luggage @ssube @hilli_micha @KendallFrey thingiverse.com/thing:1917326 haha.. I guess.
I've got an exam tomorrow. I must not forget that the year has changed.

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