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user1804599
I’m writing a compiler.
user1804599
case (expr instanceof AST.LetExpr):
    var letExpr = <AST.LetExpr>expr;

    var letEnv = new Environment(env);
    var let_ = new Let();
    letEnv.add(letExpr.name, let_);

    // TODO: Allow recursive lets.
    var value = compileExpr(env, letExpr.value);
    var in_ = compileExpr(letEnv, letExpr.in);

    return new JS.CallExpr(new JS.FunctionExpr([letExpr.name], [new JS.ReturnStmt(in_)]), [in_]);
user1804599
No idea how to do recursive lets. :<
@rightfold Is that your standard pong reply to my standard YouTube pings? ;)
user1804599
I think I will just enforce type annotations on recursive lets. Way easier.
user1804599
Nice.
@rightfold Not enough books on my shelf since I gave some C++ books away to charity (that is, former students).
user1804599
Btw.
user1804599
TypeScript has had generics from version 1.0. :)
10:11
anyone can help from riak - erlang client mapreduce query error
 
3 hours later…
user1804599
13:28
@FredOverflow maybe you know the answer? :)
user1804599
0
Q: Is it possible to define an unnamed trait and use it as a mixin in Scala?

rightfoldI’ve implemented the cake pattern using structural types instead of wrapper traits. I am now wiring up my dependencies like this: trait GreeterDependency { def greeter = HelloGreeter } val printer = new Printer with GreeterDependency It would be nice if I could do something like this instead: ...

user1804599
18:49
@FredOverflow ever used path-dependent types in Scala?
user1804599
19:00
@FredOverflow If I return a tuple (T#D, T), is there a way to make sure that _1 is _2.D(…)? Likewise for Map[T#D, T].
user1804599
I guess I could return { val t: T; val d: t.D } instead of a tuple.
user1804599
Which may be a good idea anyway.

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