« first day (584 days earlier)      last day (309 days later) » 

09:11
lol, the "show me the current return paths" feature in Karel depended on the fact that every function ends in a RET. Now that I support tail calls, that is no longer guaranteed :)
Make TAIL_CALL instruction.
I have it. The problem is that functions can have multiple exit points now. That feature wasn't designed with that possibility in mind.
You use JMP right? If you use JMP and you jump to a function that has a smaller stack frame size, what happens?
@FredOverflow OIC.
Before introducing TAIL, I always knew where a function was going to exit ahead of time.
I don't like such abbreviations. I'd call it TAIL_CALL.
09:13
@PolymorphicPotato Not an issue, because there are neither parameters nor local variables.
And RETURN, and JUMP.
@FredOverflow So you only have a stack of instruction pointers?
I store return addresses, loop counters and (temporary) boolean results on the stack.
But since tail calls cannot happen inside a loop, there's no problem.
Why can they not happen inside a loop?
for (…) {
    return f();
}
There is no return statement in Karel.
How do you return?
09:17
By completing a function, or by a tail call, which must be the last thing in a function.
void karelsFirstProgram()
{
    if (onBeeper())
    {
        lol();   // tail call
    }
    else
    {
        lulz();   // tail call
    }
}

void lol()
{
    pickBeeper();
}

void lulz()
{
    dropBeeper();
}
Ah, so you cannot do early returns?
exactly
And you can only return void?
That's right. Every user-defined function has a void result type.
Which is easily enforceable via the grammar :)
Just like COBOL!
Call it KAREL so you'll not only attract Java programmers but also COBOL programmers!
And people who think Java is called JAVA!
@FredOverflow I just realised I can do inlining quite easily, since modules are immutable so monkey patching is impossible. :D
09:21
@PolymorphicPotato Then you're going to hate my choice of abbreviations:
Ladies and gentlemen, forget about N'Sync and The Backstreet Boys! I present to you: JUMP plus his two brothers J1MP and J0MP!
Immutability allows so many nice optimisations.
Maybe I can even detect purity for some functions.
09:23
31 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@PolymorphicPotato What is monkey patching?
@chmod711telkitty I don't have much horizontal space on my ancient laptop, so I didn't want mnemonics longer than 4 characters ;)
import os
def my_putenv(key, value):
    print("{key} {value}".format(key=key, value=value))
os.putenv = my_putenv # this is monkey patching
You basically change the definition of something in another module.
Its existence is a horrible abomination.
Sounds like an invitation for hackers.
In my eyes, monkey patching is a hack by definition.
I wonder whether I should allow global let mutables.
Or let mutables at all.
Is detecting Singletons and making their existence a compile-time error still on your agenda? ;)
It never was.
I only put in my spec that singletons were UB, so no implementation has to do anything special with them.
09:27
oh right, that was it, lol
But in an immutable world, singletons are not an issue.
In fact, None is a singleton.
opaque struct NoneType { }
let None = NoneType{}
Since NoneType is opaque, you can only instantiate it in the same module as its definition.
09:48
And here is another thing I hadn't considered until yesterday:
def stepOver() {
  if (currentInstruction.category == TAIL) {
    // Tail calls don't grow the stack, so a normal "step over"
    // (see else case) would resemble a "step into" instead.
    stepReturn()
  } else {
    val oldDepth = callDepth
    stepInto(false)
    while (callDepth > oldDepth) {
      executeOneInstruction()
    }
  }
}
One of the few comments in my code :)
Do you ever use a debugger?
You mean inside Karel, or while developing Karel?
Well, the "debugger" inside Karel is purely for educational purposes. And there it shines really well.
Aside from that, no. I find debuggers way too much hassle.
I think being good with the debugger is a skill you don't want to have.
09:51
Good old "spread a bunch of print statements" always works for me.
Because it implies you introduce hard-to-find bugs.
interesting perspective
I think of the debugger more than a "runtime behavior explorer" that helps me understand the control flow.
The first thing I do when I encounter a bug is writing an automated test that fails if it reproduces it. :D
2
But I almost never used it for debugging.
So the bug can never happen again after it's fixed.
09:52
That is very good advice.
Rule #9: if you’ve found a bug, write a test
This is a very sane approach: whenever a bug is found in production, first thing to do is to write a test that reproduces the issue. That way you’ll be sure to understand the bug correctly before thinking at the fix and you’ll have a non-regression test that will make sure the bug won’t happen again.
Never read that book.
Me neither, I just stumbled upon that blog post today.
I was thinking of writing a tool that automatically generates bug reports with steps to reproduce, but it would require tremendous amounts of memory in order to work.
09:54
downloadmoreram.com
I want a tool that reports all uncaught exceptions and generates statistics of them.
Looking through log files once you get a bug report is shitty.
It's better to fix the bug before anyone places a bug report.
@PolymorphicPotato Whoa, that book is already 15 years old?
It's old.
I have one book from the Pragmatic Bookshelf and it's pretty good.
It's about Erlang, functional programming and concurrency.
I think I have several of those pragmatic books... the ANTLR book comes to mind.
It was a fantastic read, but I never used ANTLR in practice.
Scala's parser combinators library works well enough for me :)
I should still read the book by Jacobson when I have time.
10:05
It was a bit of a surprise when parser-combinators was moved out of "core".
Ivar?
Ah, I knew it had something to do with UML or whatnot :)
The first part was about object-oriented programming and fairly boring, but I still have to read the second part which has nothing to do with object-oriented programming. :P
@FredOverflow It does nothing with UML.
The second part sounds lovely :)
I think the book is older than UML.
10:07
oh ok
Maybe I was confused by the fact that "use case" is also part of UML vocabulary.
Yeah, but not specific to UML.
The idea is that use cases are the central part of the application.
The Unified Modeling Language (UML) is a general-purpose modeling language in the field of software engineering, which is designed to provide a standard way to visualize the design of a system. It was created and developed by Grady Booch, Ivar Jacobson and James Rumbaugh at Rational Software during 1994–95 with further development led by them through 1996. In 1997 it was adopted as a standard by the Object Management Group (OMG), and has been managed by this organization ever since. In 2000 the Unified Modeling Language was also accepted by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO...
It was created and developed by Grady Booch, Ivar Jacobson and James Rumbaugh at Rational Software during 1994–95 with further development led by them through 1996.
ah so he invented it
And the book is from 1992. :P
Which has the nice side-effect that there's no Java code in it!
awesome
It uses Eiffel for examples. :V
10:10
Does it use Design by Contract? :)
I don't think so.
There's little code in the book anyway.
Now that I have cleared "tail calls" from my Karel TODO list, there is nothing left. For the first time in 2 years, the TODO list is empty!
I don't know if I should laugh or cry.
Yay!
Ship it!
I want to write something in Scala.
so do it
What to write?! :D
17 mins ago, by Polymorphic Potato
I want a tool that reports all uncaught exceptions and generates statistics of them.
10:14
I don't know... does the book have exercises maybe? :)
Seems reasonable. :P
Orr …
in Lounge<C++>, 2 days ago, by Polymorphic Potato
A tool in which I can record what decisions were made when and by whom, and in which they can be categorized.
I need such a tool as well.
And it's more urgent, so I'll make that first.
Nothing is more annoying than forgetting why certain design or business rule decisions were made.
 
1 hour later…
11:30
@PolymorphicPotato I just tried to "step return" from a function containing an infinite loop. Wanna guess what happened? :)
@chmod711telkitty lol tape
12:14
@FredOverflow Ooh Freddy, have your students been scared off your course like young rabbits by a fox?
those young tender CS/CE flesh
 
3 hours later…
15:28
@chmod711telkitty What course? None of the courses I plan to use Karel in have started yet.

« first day (584 days earlier)      last day (309 days later) »