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15:19
In F# Is it possible to pipe in the index of the element? So something like this [|10;20;30;40;|] |> Array.map (fun fi i -> printfn "value %d, index %d" fi i) |> ignore;;
15:33
So that would Array.mapi if anyone hit the same problem
@rightfold My first LZW prototype in Haskell seems to work :) The generated (text) output is only for educational purposes as of yet.
user1804599
Nice. :)
user1804599
But eww the underscores.
I used trailing ' instead of trailing _ first, but ideone fucked the formatting up pretty badly.
I think it assumes ' always starts character literals or something.
user1804599
I mean the underscores inside of the names.
user1804599
15:38
Like LZW_Table and lzw_encode.
Well... I'm a C++ programmer, what can I say :)
user1804599
Write LZWTable and lzwEncode instead. :v
LZWTable looks really weird for some reason.
user1804599
user1804599
I made this yesterday. :P
user1804599
15:39
And I made Maybe<T> : Sequence<T>.
Reminds me of PETSCII for some reason. Probably because of the X.
@rightfold Nice, so you can flatmap over a Maybe? :)
user1804599
enum Maybe<T> : sequence.Sequence<T> {
    None();
    Some(value: T);

    length: int {
        get {
            switch @ {
                case None() { return 0; }
                case Some(_) { return 1; }
            }
        }
    }

    operator[](index: int): Maybe<T> {
        return index == 0 ? @ : None;
    }
}
user1804599
@FredOverflow jup :P
What does @ mean?
user1804599
The object on which the method was called or the property was accessed.
15:40
So I can write someMaybeValue[0][0][0][0][0]? :)
user1804599
Jup. :P
user1804599
operator[] from Sequence<T> always returns Maybe<T> because it may be out of bounds.
user1804599
operator[]! returns T and throws an exception.
How is the latter invoked?
user1804599
15:41
foo[42]!.
For some reason that makes me think of strictness.
user1804599
interface Sequence<covariant T> : iterable.Iterable<T> {
    length: int { get; }

    operator[](index: int): maybe.Maybe<T>;
    operator[]!(index: int): T {
        switch @[index] {
            case maybe.None() { throw mk OutOfBoundsException(); }
            case maybe.Some(x) { return x; }
        }
    }

    iterator: { get = mk SequenceIterator<T>(@); }
}
user1804599
Default implementations!
mk = new?
user1804599
I dislike new. It’s ugly.
user1804599
15:43
mk means “make”.
I know, but what does it do differently than new?
Or is it just a different name?
user1804599
Being one character shorter. :P
user1804599
I have specialised Array<unit> to store only an integer internally. :P
user1804599
The non-private interface of a specialised implementation of a class must be a subset of the non-private interface of the default implementation.
@rightfold quote from the spec?
user1804599
15:58
I have no spec yet. :P
Ah, so making spec up as you go along :)
user1804599
But if I don’t require this, it would get funky with subtype polymorphism.
user1804599
I could make it illegal to upcast it but meh.
user1804599
I’ll also specialise arrays of Booleans, code points, bytes, short integers, integers, unsigned bytes, unsigned short integers, unsigned integers, floating-point numbers and double-precision floating-point numbers to use JavaScript typed arrays instead of normal arrays.
user1804599
16:01
With a mixin to prevent duplicate code!
Your language is gonna revolutionize IT as we know it!
user1804599
Generic mixins are like templates; constraints are optional.
user1804599
They are not used with subtype polymorphism anyway.
user1804599
16:58
@FredOverflow I don’t know of any languages which have the feature set I like.
user1804599
Scala comes close.
user1804599
I’d like a mix of Scala, C# and C++, with JavaScript as a target language.
@rightfold Isn't Scala that mix already? ;)
user1804599
No dynamic, AFAIK.
Scala has dynamic alright.
user1804599
17:02
oh :v
18
Q: How does type Dynamic work and how to use it?

sschaefI heard that with Dynamic it is somehow possible to do dynamic typing in Scala. But I can't imagine how that might look like or how it works. I found out that one can inherit from trait Dynamic class DynImpl extends Dynamic The API says that one can use it like this: foo.method("blah") ...

user1804599
Non-virtual non-private methods?
@rightfold final?
user1804599
Generics that are not type-erased?
user1804599
Generic specialisations?
user1804599
17:09
Interface implementations with constraints?
17:59
@rightfold Why do you need all those features? :)
user1804599
Purrformance.
user1804599
Flexibility.
user1804599
I hate code duplication.
The most effective way of preventing code duplication is not writing any code at all.
user1804599
That would result in Haskell.
user1804599
18:05
@FredOverflow Sections?
@rightfold Not really necessary with underscores. Just write _*2.
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
Cool. :D
user1804599
Units of measure?
@rightfold Please don't tell me you're adding underscores to your language now ;)
user1804599
18:09
@FredOverflow No.
user1804599
Man, I’m working on software that has to do stuff with stocks of a warehouse.
amazon? :)
user1804599
Nope.
@rightfold You probably need non-type template parameters for that :(
user1804599
But I mixed up stuff with items per box and number of available items and number of available boxes.
user1804599
18:10
If I had units of measure, the compiler would have told me.
user1804599
Fuck meaningless integer types.
Have you solved the null problem?
user1804599
Styx has no null.
user1804599
It has Maybe<T>.
awesome
user1804599
18:11
Construction is C++-like.
Could you rename Maybe (Haskell) to Option (many other languages)?
user1804599
private sealed class SequenceIterator<T> : iterable.Iterator<T> {
    private sequence: Sequence<T>;
    private index: int;
    mk(@sequence: Sequence<T>) : index(0) { } # constructor!
    # …
}
user1804599
@FredOverflow I don’t like Option.
@rightfold I sentence you to a week of Scala, then you'll probably like the name.
user1804599
Nope.
user1804599
18:12
I prefer T?, but I already allow ? in identifiers.
? suffix instead of is prefix?
user1804599
?, ! and ' are allowed in identifiers.
user1804599
interface Iterator<covariant T> {
    next?: bool { get; }
    next: maybe.Maybe<T> { get; }
    next!: T { get = @next[0]; }
}
user1804599
@FredOverflow ?, ! and ' are allowed anywhere in the identifier except as the first character.
@rightfold Will you allow the upside-down question mark to make you language more approachable for the Spanish?
user1804599
18:15
No.
¿empty?
user1804599
Identifiers must be ASCII.
user1804599
Non-ASCII subset of Unicode is only allowed in character literals, string literals and comments.
lol why? Even Java supports Unicode identifiers.
user1804599
Because why in the name of rightfold would I allow that?
user1804599
18:17
Characters that are not in ASCII are extremely rare in English anyway.
user1804599
And only fools write non-English code.
But I want String motörhead = "awesome" :(
user1804599
Beh string typing.
user1804599
sealed class Band { public name: string { get; } mk(@name: string) { } }
enum Quality { Awesome; Shit; }
bands := mk Map<Band, Quality>() {{mk Band("Motörhead"), Quality.Awesome}};
user1804599
Should have a BandName type, so the compiler can tell you when you mix up band names with band member names.
user1804599
18:23
I should allow to mark types as “fundamental” and don’t allow such types to be used without strong type aliases.
22:43
@rightfold I finally finished the semantic checks for second order Karel: Duplicate parameters and calling with the wrong number of arguments are detected.
Also, the semantic checker now allows overloading, but I don't think the interpreter understands overloading yet :)
user1804599
Nice.
To be more precise, calling with the wrong number of arguments used to be a runtime error, now it's a compile-time error.
user1804599
Is it possible to write a web server in Karel?
Karel is Turing-complete, but given that his world is limited to 10x10 fields, it's probably very hard to fit the required logic in there :) Also no talking to the real world, so no.
user1804599
It’s not Turing-complete if it has a world limited to 100 fields.
user1804599
22:46
It would be Turing-complete if you don’t specify a maximum field size.
user1804599
I want to write something in Erlang or Haskell.
user1804599
Last time I did that was quite some time ago.
Turing machines have infinite memory, so every real computer is not really Turing-complete :)
user1804599
Is there something like “lambda calculus complete?”
Yes. It is called Turing-complete :) Lambda calculus and Turing machines are equivalent.
user1804599
22:49
It would imply Turing-completeness, as lambda calculus is Turing-complete.
user1804599
@FredOverflow Right. Lambda calculus and Turing machines can emulate each-other.
Although probably with some non-constant overhead.
user1804599
I should walk into Media Markt and ask what would be the best Turing machine for me.
I didn't know Media Markt exists outside of Germany?
user1804599
It does. :V
22:52
def argumentList = repsep(argument, ",")

def argument = ident // TODO lambdas :)
Non-capturing lambdas should be easy.
user1804599
As should capturing lambdas.
user1804599
I want to use Styx but I’m too lazy to implement it. :D
Hm, but in C++, you cannot pass a capturing lamba to a function expecting a good-old fashioned function pointer, and that's the syntax I use for second order functions in Karel, so it might be confusing if that works in Karel but not in C++...
@rightfold How far have you progressed with the implementation yet?
user1804599
@FredOverflow This far.
user1804599
@FredOverflow Just have first-class functions. vOv
22:56
@rightfold That's only 70 lines of code?
user1804599
@FredOverflow YES! :D
user1804599
Ignore the isFundamental things.
user1804599
They should not be there.
@rightfold Generalizing from second-order functions to higher-order functions is probably not worth the implementation effort, because I haven't found any uses cases for higher-than-second-order functions in Karel (yet).
user1804599
Implicit currying. :P
22:58
What do the number of parameters have to do with it?
user1804599
f, when of type Int -> Int -> Int -> Int, is a third-order function; it’s a function that returns a function that returns a function.
Hm, right. I don't support functions returning functions yet, primarily because the Syntax would probably confuse the hell out of beginners.
void id(void f())()   // Is this even the right syntax?
{
    return f;
}
user1804599
Wut no.
user1804599
What the fuck Fred.
user1804599
id(f: void()): void() {
    return f;
}
23:02
Remember, Karel syntax should be a subset of C++ syntax.
user1804599
Eww.
user1804599
ITT: Karel sucks.
I guess I could allow an alternative syntax... not sure if that would be more helpful or harmful, though.
user1804599
LTR or GTFO.
user1804599
I like Go’s syntax.
user1804599
23:03
func id(f func()) func() {
    return f
}
Why is func before id but after f? And why is there a trailing func?
user1804599
It’s a function named id that takes a function and returns a function.

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