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15:32
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Q: How to elegantly represent infinite Haskell recursive datastructure in Python?

Přemysl ŠťastnýRegarding How to elegantly represent finite Haskell recursive datastructure in Python?, I was thinking how would I represent an infinite data structure (without any non-constructor function inside it) from Haskell in Python using Haskell FFI. Unfortunately I haven't found anything as elegant as w...

@MisterMiyagi I don't see it. Can you be more specific please?
@chepner I didn't considered a data contrustor as a function. By no function a meant, there is nothing like (a -> b) inside the structure.
@LudvigH Is it better like it, or should I make longer summary?
@chepner I know, that pure FFI probably can't do it itself. So I was thinking about passing some function which would operate on infinite datastructure to Python, but haven't found any elegant way, how to do it... - I am also concerned about generation of many pointers to functions via FFI.
This question, like the one it links to, seems to be asking for an opinion-based thing. Please take some time to read What type's of questions should I avoid asking. Note, asking for "elegant" is useless, unless you define, in objective terms, what you mean by "elegant".
@TylerH Please, don't edit it like that. You changed the meaning of the question... This question is about infinite data structure, that before was about finite data structure.
@PřemyslŠťastný I have not changed any references from infinite to finite, I have only removed opinion-based language or "thanks" noise.
@TylerH No. I want simillary elegant way. Not better. It can't be better, because it is about different problem.
15:32
@PřemyslŠťastný You don't seem to be understanding... it may be a language barrier issue. The word "elegant" in English means "pleasing or graceful", which is not an objective thing. The problem here is that what you consider elegant, I might consider inelegant. Objective things to ask might be "how can I do this without using X function" or "how can I do this without fooing the bar?". Questions like "how can I do this in a more (or similarly) elegant way" are off-topic because they are opinion-based.
@TylerH It is possible. I am using elegant as a direct short not hard to implement way. So you are saying, the elegant have different meaning in English then I thought?
@PřemyslŠťastný Yes, that is apparently the case. What does "direct short not hard to implement" mean, exactly?
A more experienced programmer may find implementing something one way not hard
while a less experienced programmer finds that same way quite hard
Are you wanting a single function call, for example? One line of code? Do you want to avoid using certain data types? These are all objective metrics that anyone can look it and say "yes it passes that test"
but something being elegant cannot. It is like the saying "beauty is in the eye of the beholder"
Yes. But usually the extremes are evident to everybody. - Eg. if I ask for an elegant way, how to parse JSON and there are two answers, one implemented in C++ with 60 lines of code and unreadable memory managment and there is a simple answer on 3 lines in Python, we might everyone agree on that the Python answer was the elegant one.
Yes, it is opinion based, but these things are important to community too.
If somebody try to find a way to do the job, he probably want to do it the easy way. And exactly for these people are these questions.
Stack Overflow is about serving the programming community. Why would these questions wont be accepted even through, not everyone might agree about some degree of "elegancy"
@TylerH Please, explain me, what is wrong with it? - Is it useful for future visitor? Yes. Is it speculative? Only on level of similary nice way to do things.
I purposefully ask these questions here, because if I put it on some mailing list or chat room, it will be hard to anybody to find them.
And that's exactly the problem with vague questions.
Vague questions get a hodgepodge of answers, so the ones that are relevant to a person get drowned in all the others that are not.
15:48
@PřemyslŠťastný A question can still be a good question, and off-topic on Stack Overflow.
There are other sites on the Stack Exchange that allow more opinion-based questions regarding code implementations or software design.
but Stack Overflow is for specific, practical, and objectively-answerable questions/problems.
@TylerH Okey, good point. Where should I migrate the questions?
While some nuance is allowed, opinions that do seep in need to be backed up by citations and data. E.g. "I like this more than that, because in situations X, Y, and Z, you run into these problems, whereas in situations A, B, and C, you don't have to worry about it"
@PřemyslŠťastný Code Review is a good site for questions about improving already-working code. Software Engineering is a good site for higher level questions about design or general justification of certain implementations. They each have their own set of site rules and specific requirements for asking questions there, if you decide to check them out.
@PřemyslŠťastný - Just so you know. An edit that removes or rewrites a sentence, that is basically a request for elegant code, is considered a valid edit.
If you find yourself restoring your original language after it's been modified several times, is a red flag, that perhaps the original language needed to be changed. You will have a more positive experience by keeping that in mind.
@TylerH This seems to me like Wikipedia like rules. So you are telling me, that every question here should have an answer, which have a way to be proven correct?
@SecurityHound That wasn't problem with the edit. The problem was, that it changed the word elegant to better.
@SecurityHound Similary elegant and better are two utterly different things.
The edit that TylerH made used the word "other" which is NOT a subjective word.
A solution that is elegant, is subjective to the beholder, since not everyone will feel a specific solution is elegant.
I wrote a function in C that I thought was elegant 6 years ago, but after years of reflection, likely was overly complex and hard to maintain.
15:59
@SecurityHound I am mainly talking about edit: as elegant as was in this great -> "better than"
Both are subjective
@PřemyslŠťastný Well, yes, like Wikipedia we strive to keep Stack Overflow clean and orderly. This is a good thing, and why both Wikipedia and Stack Overflow have the reputations for accuracy and usefulness that they do.
I see you used the word elegant twice
I am talking about the actual sentence with a question mark, which in the English language, is used to indicate a question. So my point about reversing the edits, is that you kept a question, asking for a subjective solution without providing a single line of code.
Wikipedia would not be nearly the resource it is today if people were allowed to write whatever they wanted, use primary sources, make articles about themselves or about unimportant topics/events... it would have gone out of business long ago. There are many downsides to a 'walled garden' approach but it is used sometimes because it is very effective at doing its job: keeping the garden a nice, high quality garden.
@TylerH Okey, I get it. Could you flag both posts to be migrated to Software Engineering? I am out of flags today because of review queues.
@TylerH By the way, there are Wikibooks, which are exactly for the purpose of opinion based articals/books. They are not out of bussiness at all and might be very useful.
@PřemyslŠťastný There is no 'migration path' for Software Engineering, but you can self-delete the question and post it on that site manually, after viewing their site tour and making sure your question meets all their requirements.
16:07
@TylerH There is one...using "in need of moderator intervention"
I don't think that would be a good use of a moderator flag
Manual, moderator-instigated migrations are time consuming and difficult to complete. If the OP is able, it's much better for them to just delete and re-post.
If we migrated it you'd start out at -4 on SE anyway, and no one would see your post
(posts with a score of -4 or lower are hidden from the front page of sites)
That's not true. Migration resets the score to 0.
Oh, I didn't know that. Either way, it's ancillary information at best
I strongly recommend posting the question manually, because that will give you the best opportunity to review the language you've used and think about what it is you're really asking.
And it works fine for these cases. I used it other day for stackoverflow.com/questions/70821611/… post.
I will flag it tommorow, if you have problem about using moderator flag.

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