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user1804599
13:26
@Kip9000 Because Seq.map is lazy. Use Seq.iter instead of Seq.map:
user1804599
open System

[| ""; "asdas"; "" |] :> seq<string>
|> Seq.skipWhile String.IsNullOrEmpty
|> Seq.iter (printf "%s\n")
user1804599
Also, the explicit upcast to seq<string> is unnecessary.
user1804599
16:59
@FredOverflow I think I’m writing my compiler in F#. I like it.
@rightfold But what about those precious 70 lines you have already written in some other language? Are you just going to start from scratch and lose all the valuable code?
user1804599
Yup. :3
user1804599
I’m also going to change the Styx syntax a little bit.
user1804599
Semicolons will be inserted for you and I’ll use [] instead of <> for generics.
user1804599
Also, var, val and fun keywords.
17:04
@rightfold What the... just two days ago, you insisted that [] for generics was terrible, and that you wouldn't get used to it, ever.
user1804599
I find them beautifuler than <>. :3
user1804599
# compare this:
private mixin IntrinsicTypedArrayBasedArraySpecializationImplementation[T, TypedArrayT] : sequence.Sequence[T] {
# to this:
private mixin IntrinsicTypedArrayBasedArraySpecializationImplementation<T, TypedArrayT> : sequence.Sequence<T> {
user1804599
Also, the implicit semicolon insertion will enforce that { are not placed on new lines.
user1804599
fun foo()
{
}
# would become
fun foo();
{
}
# which is illegal
What language gave you the idea that implicit semicolon insertion was a great idea? JavaScript oder Scala?
user1804599
17:18
Go.
user1804599
It’s better than whitespace-aware parser as it’s simpler and requires { be on the same line.
user1804599
I will use ; for separating things in array literals, so you can do this:
user1804599
array := [
    1
    2
    3
]
user1804599
:)
17:30
@rightfold How about no separator at all? What's wrong with [1 2 3]?
user1804599
@FredOverflow That would require ; be optional.
user1804599
It could be possible but meh.
@rightfold No I mean, why does the syntax have to include a separator between the elements? Why not simply whitespace?
user1804599
Strictly it doesn’t.
user1804599
But that’s not a reason for me not to require it, as the code still has to be non-ugly.
user1804599
17:33
And making it optional is even more ugly and confusing.
user1804599
There should be one and only one obvious way to do things.
And how is [1, 2, 3] any more obvious than [1 2 3]?
user1804599
Well, it is ambiguous. :)
user1804599
What would [foo (1, 2, 3)] mean? foo with tuple or applying foo to three arguments?
17:36
How did you come up with that corner case so quickly? :)
user1804599
Well, solved if I allow (1 2 3) or (1; 2; 3) I guess.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I’m good at this.
How come f(1, 2) isn't ambiguous in C++? (comma operator or multiple arguments)
user1804599
But meh I enforce commas to separate arguments so why not list and tuple elements. vOv
user1804599
@FredOverflow because C++ has an extremely complicated grammar.
user1804599
17:37
Also, stuff like [1 + 2 3] is most unreadable. I prefer [1 + 2; 3].
Does Styx have language support for vertical separators like ________? ;)
user1804599
########################## :v
21:59
I have an array. I need to take the difference between elements i+1 and i (i being the element index)
How do I do this?
22:17
Let me clarify, I need an array of differences between two consecutive elements of the source array
user1804599
@Kip9000 What programming language?
sorry, F#
user1804599
Something like this? I don’t know much about arrays so this example uses lists.
user1804599
let rec diffs (xs : list<'a>) =
    match xs with
        | [] -> []
        | x :: [] -> []
        | x :: x' :: xs' -> (x - x') :: (diffs (x' :: xs'))
user1804599
22:26
Or more like this?
user1804599
let rec diffs<'a when 'a : equality> (xs : list<'a>) =
    match xs with
        | [] -> []
        | x :: x' :: xs' when x <> x' -> (x, x') :: (diffs (x' :: xs'))
        | x :: xs' -> diffs xs'
Ok, I can kind of reason out the 1st version, but you lost me with the 2nd
user1804599
The second one returns a list of pairs of consecutive elements that are different.
22:48
diffs xs = zipWith (-)  (tail xs) xs
*Main> diffs [0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100]
[1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19]
@Kip9000 By differences, do you simply mean subtraction?
@FredOverflow yes arithmetic difference
Well, I'm sure F# will have something like zipWith in Haskell.
23:12
So I solved it as such:
[|112;133;124;115;136|] |> Seq.pairwise |> Seq.map (fun (a,b)-> b-a);;

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