ever since moving into Immersive Engineering i had to start using a newer version of java to avoid crashes which helped, but it still crashes once every few hours
Does Javascript pass by references or pass by values? Here is an example from Javascript: The Good Parts. I am very confused about my parameter for the rectangle function. It is actually undefined, and redefined inside the function. There are no original reference. If I remove it from the functio...
so the second time I set item.elementProeprties for example, it nukes whatever I set in the firs tone that got added to the items array...they both contain the same values
It's confusing because "reference" in the sense that "a variable pointing to a value" is different from "reference" in the sense that "an object's identity", and they're both called "reference"
// generally, monads have three rules:
// 1. they have a constructor
var p = new Promise();
// 2. they have a function which converts a value to the monad type
var p = Promise.resolve(4);
// 3. they have an operator which receives the monad, and returns another instance of it
p.then(val => val + 1).then(...)
@ssube Because they're pretty simple to draw up and explain, and exception handling is common
@KendallFrey you would expect every monadic type to have a type parameter somewhere for the thing it contains? I'm just curious if monads are almost always generic in that sense or if they often are implemented against a particular type.
@MadaraUchiha You also see how promises abstract away the notion of time and give you a value you can work with and do operations on while still retaining its abstractions
@ssube hows this method of removing the reference?
var elementProperties = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(copiedObjects[i], null, ' '));
var inputDataProperties = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(formElementFunctions().createNewInputData(elementProperties), null, ' '));
Is it accurate to say that monads are a value and an assertion or operation to it? Most languages that feature monads heavily also seem to prefer lazy resolution. I always assumed that was to minimize the cost of the monads, turning them into something more like a flyweight.
@ssube Sort of. You get anomalies where optionals can have no value, and lists can have more than one value, etc. And the "operation" is essentially composition (nesting) the monad within itself.
The actual monad implementation defines how the operations are combined.
Hmm. In JS, would it even be possible to have a DI auto inject properties into functions, without wrapping them manually, and still maintain IoC? Its not like we have an assembly to work with, so I can't imagine how I could hijack things before construction
well assume you want it to inject into everything registered, the hard part is still injecting without explicitly wrapping things, since you need to get a hold of the instances somehow