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user142019
03:11
@FredOverflow now I come to think about it, E.T. was quite bad at telecommunication so he must suck at Erlang.
13:45
Dang, I just thought it might be fun to implement Sokoban in Haskell, but it seems someone already did it:
Xeo
Xeo
13:56
Erm, @FredO, I got a Haskell question.
What exactly does do{ a <- getLine; b <- getLine; putStrLn "hi"; putStrLn $ a ++ b } desugarise to?
Oooh, nvm, got it
getLine >>=
    \a -> getLine >>=
        \b -> putStrLn "hi" >>=
            \_ -> putStrLn $ a ++ b
@Xeo I'm pretty sure >>= \_ -> can be shortened to >>. Or does that not play nicely with the surrounding stuff?
Xeo
Xeo
I thought of >> at first too, but that throws me an error in the face.
Prelude> let x = getLine >>= \a -> getLine >>= \b -> putStrLn "hi" >> putStrLn $ a ++ b

<interactive>:45:62:
    Couldn't match expected type `IO b0'
                with actual type `String -> IO ()'
    In the second argument of `(>>)', namely `putStrLn'
    In the expression: putStrLn "hi" >> putStrLn
    In the expression: putStrLn "hi" >> putStrLn $ a ++ b
Unless I'm using it wrong.
Eh... parens around the last part solve it. :(
14:12
@Xeo Why so sad?
Xeo
Xeo
cause I didn't think of that before.
Any way to easily get rid of the parens? I don't like them in Haskell. xD
do notation xD
Xeo
Xeo
lol
So, a statement of the form a <- b in a do-block becomes b >>= \a -> ..., and a statement of just c becomes c >> (...). Right?
Possibly. I know too little about do-desugaring.
Xeo
Xeo
16 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
14:42
@Xeo All these arrows look funny, are they normal?
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah
To show it was a moved message
You have an arrow pointing --> when moving messages out of a room.
@Xeo Anyway, are you doing something concrete in Haskell, or just dabbling around?
Xeo
Xeo
Actually doing nothing in Haskell, but in C++. :)
And for that I needed to find out what do really does.
Translating some examples from Haskell to C++ then?
Xeo
Xeo
Translating do to C++. :D
14:50
Why?
Xeo
Xeo
Just for fun.
Haskell puts the fun in functional programming.
So many interesting videos, y u terrible audio?
Xeo
Xeo
y I terrible internet. :(
Hm, this is helpful: haskell.org/tutorial/monads.html
Damn, you can do True <- getSomeBool in a do-block, because of pattern matching... I don't think I can easily translate this to C++... hm.
15:54
how do you go from IO() -> a or IO() -> String?
 
2 hours later…
17:35
@pyCthon You don't
17:47
@CatPlusPlus so lets say i curled a text file from a web page
What happens in IO stays in IO
(There's unsafePerformIO but it's for special purposes and not of any interest to you ATM)
right but how could i save it to file or convert from IO() to something useful like a String?
You operate within IO
something :: IO String
somethingElse :: String -> IO ()
foo = do { s <- something; somethingElse s }
Read a book or something
18:06
thanks my learning style is to just dive into problems and to look things up as i go along
but with haskell it's a bit different
 
1 hour later…
19:16
@pyCthon I don't understand the question.
@FredOverflow i was just having trouble understanding how to handle IO in haskell
i've been reading up
So what is the answer to the question "How do you go from IO() -> String"?
Maybe if I see the answer, I can understand the question.
Xeo
Xeo
2 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
@pyCthon You don't
Oh wait, now I get it. He wants to leave the IO monad?
i'm not sure if I want to,
i had a text file i curled from teh web

let nasdaqlisted = curlGet "ftp://ftp.nasdaqtrader.com/SymbolDirectory/nasdaqlisted.txt" []
Xeo
Xeo
I don't think there's any way to leave the IO monad once you're in it, which is why you only do it at top-level.
lol
right i'm about half way through the I/O section on the learnhaskell book
Have you seen the boxes with feet that go out into the real world? They're so cute :)
Xeo
Xeo
Reminds me of the animation that happens when you transfer stuff from one Wii to another (or to a WiiU).
Xeo
Xeo
19:23
Little men stuff boxes in a rocket, as the progress bar on the source, then lift off. And on the destination, the rocket lands, and they carry the boxes back.
> You can think of an I/O action as a box with little feet that will go out into the real world and do something there (like write some graffiti on a wall) and maybe bring back some data. Once it's fetched that data for you, the only way to open the box and get the data inside it is to use the <- construct. And if we're taking data out of an I/O action, we can only take it out when we're inside another I/O action.
Xeo
Xeo
Lying! It's lying!
yeah i tried <- lol
@Xeo Care to elaborate?
@pyCthon Inside another IO action?
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow You should know what I mean - the desugarization. :3
getLine >>= \x -> printStrLn $ x ++ ", HAHA!"
19:28
getLine >>= putStrLn . (++ ", HAHA!")
Xeo
Xeo
pff.
Being all smarty-pants and point less free
@Xeo There is, but you don't need it (if you needed it, you'd know about it)
@CatPlusPlus Is it... unsafe?
Depends on the computation
user142019
Hi.
19:31
@CatPlusPlus Does it perform IO?
user142019
@pyCthon unsafePerformIO :: IO a -> a if for some exotic reason you really have to but please don't.
@Zoidberg You're no fun!
He doesn't need it
i loaded a random text file from the web, and all i wanna do is be able to parse it and save it to a file lol
main = do
    text <- loadText
    let whatever = parse text
    write whatever
so this room is where the children go to play huh
This is the room sbi banishes all Haskell code to.
user142019
type Perhaps = Maybe
Does that work? Shouldn't it be type Perhaps a = Maybe a?
user142019
Perhaps. I think Perhaps gets the same kind as Maybe. Should try it.
19:38
@FredOverflow see that example works when i load it from file because it loads it as IO String
but when i use CurlGet , i have an IO()
I don't know CurlGet.
form the Network.Curl package
curlGet :: URLString -> [CurlOption] -> IO ()
user142019
If you want to extract the string, use <- in do notation.
configure: error: curl libraries not found, so curl package cannot be built
See `config.log' for more details.
cabal: Error: some packages failed to install:
curl-1.3.8 failed during the configure step. The exception was:
ExitFailure 1
user142019
do string <- curlGet parameters to curlget here
   putStrLn string -- or do whatever you want with the string
19:44
How do I install this crap?
@FredOverflow windows or linux or mac?
user142019
@FredOverflow install libcURL.
Xeo
Xeo
@Zoidberg But curlGet is IO () not IO String.
user142019
@Xeo oh wait wat.
cabal: There is no package named 'libcURL'.
You may need to run 'cabal update' to get the latest list of available packages.
19:44
yeah
Already did that.
@pyCthon Xubuntu
user142019
> curlGet perform a basic GET, dumping the output on stdout. The list of options are set prior performing the GET request.
user142019
Read the documentation.
Xeo
Xeo
@Zoidberg Perhaps curl saves the webpage somewhere global? :>
oh, lol, it just prints it.
@FredOverflow just sudo apt-get install libcurl
user142019
19:45
You want curlGetString.
user142019
do string <- curlGetString parameters to curlget here
   putStrLn string -- or do whatever you want with the string
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow It's a C library.
homer@marge:~$ sudo apt-get install libcurl
Paketlisten werden gelesen... Fertig
Abhängigkeitsbaum wird aufgebaut
Statusinformationen werden eingelesen... Fertig
E: Paket libcurl kann nicht gefunden werden
fuck this shit
user142019
# apt-get install curl
Xeo
Xeo
"Abhängigkeitsbaum" sounds so strange...
user142019
19:46
I think that should do the trick.
@Zoidberg It did! But still, cabal seems to be unable to find it :(
user142019
Ganz geil.
trying it out now
haha it worked! it also loaded eveything up on one line
i need to read over the docs for curl
Xeo
Xeo
That's a good idea before and while using any library.
homer@marge:~$ sudo apt-get install libcurl-dev
E: Paket »libcurl-dev« hat keinen Installationskandidaten
fuck you apt-get!
Xeo
Xeo
19:57
lol
Wait, "homer@marge"? lol
I couldn't think of anything better during install. My laptop is bart@lisa IIRC :)
@Zoidberg thanks
20:20
new room?
user142019
Haskell room was dead.
but this is new right?
Yes this is totally not the Haskell room
But Haskell is definitely on-topic here.
Xeo
Xeo
Wat, it's not as off-topic as C++ is in the Lounge?
20:24
think I'm gonna be reg lurker and hope for some osmosis
@Xeo sbi doesn't like too much Haskell in the Lounge.
By the way, when has sbi been online last?
Xeo
Xeo
I think you misunderstood the question.
You are definitely encouraged to discuss serious programming language issues here :)
ByteString looks nice
any one know how well ByteString plays with regexs?
I'd be more interested to know how well it plays with Unicode :)
20:38
well its a word8 array
so 8-bit unsigned integer type?
It's bytestring, it has nothing to do with Unicode
which is what C uses in char i think so i assume it should play nice
Encoded Unicode maybe
Text is the Unicode datatype
 
1 hour later…
21:40
@Zoidberg I'm watching that Mongo DB video again :-)
user142019
Which one?
The one with the job on the farm.
user142019
oh xD
> MongoDB handles webscale. You turn it on, and it scales right up!
user142019
CouchDB is webscaler!
user142019
21:42
It's written in Erlang!
user142019
I'm actually writing my compiler in a language that targets the Erlang VM.
@Zoidberg Have you seen the look @ 1:40? lol
user142019
@FredOverflow xD
user142019
MySQL is worse than MongoDB in all cases.
user142019
21:45
PostgreSQL and SQL Server FTW! \o/
@Zoidberg also @ 5:16 lol
user142019
@FredOverflow xD
Xeo
Xeo
zoidAnswer = const "xD"
zoidAnswer :: a -> String
Does that make sense?
user142019
Xeo
Xeo
21:52
@FredOverflow Why the a =>?
user142019
Thank <insert non-existent omnipotent entity here> I'm going to Spain tomorrow.
user142019
@FredOverflow error.
@Xeo Because no matter what I tell him, he gives me a string or something?
Xeo
Xeo
Then wouldn't zoidAnswer :: a -> String be enough?
user142019
You cannot have a constraint that matches everything.
21:53
Better now?
user142019
zoidAnswer :: Show a => a -> String does make sense, for example.
user142019
@FredOverflow that works.
It looks weird that I can use a without defining what it means, but okay.
What is somebody later introduced a type named a?
user142019
zoidAnswer :: Show a => a -> String is similar to string zoidAnswer<T>(T x) where T : IFormattable in C#.
Oh wait, types have to start with an upper case, right?
user142019
21:54
@FredOverflow yes. :P
Problem avoided then.
user142019
I think I'll write a generator behaviour for Erlang.
user142019
Strict lists suck. :v
user142019
user142019
I should also add peek.
user142019
Maybe.
user142019
22:38
If only it worked. xD

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