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06:07
@Zoidberg my guess is school will get better once you are past the beginner stuff
 
2 hours later…
08:29
@Zoidberg Where exactly are you going to work?
 
5 hours later…
user142019
13:02
@JohanLarsson I won't make it this year anyway. XD
user142019
@FredOverflow I know somebody who owns a software company.
15:38
In scala, what is the difference between object and class?
16:32
77
Q: Scala difference between object and class

steveGreetings, I'm just going over some scala tutorials on the net and have noticed in some examples an object is declared at the start of the example. Can anyone explain to me what the difference between class and object are as far as scala is concerned?

it should be that
 
3 hours later…
19:14
@Sayakiss An object is an object, and a class is a class.
 
2 hours later…
21:37
@rightfold Can I see the definition of return for IO, or is that compiler magic?
user142019
@FredOverflow return x = IO x
user142019
It's in GHC.IO or something.
user142019
You should look in the sources of GHC.* modules.
> A value of type IO a is a computation which, when performed, does some I/O before returning a value of type a. There is really only one way to "perform" an I/O action: bind it to Main.main in your program. When your program is run, the I/O will be performed.
Is the above compiler magic?
user142019
I have no idea.
user142019
21:40
I think they just use the FFI.
You know, nano scientists are very mathematical, I would assume. They do physics and chemistry and stuff. Why not Haskell?
user142019
Why not not Haskell?
Why knot Haskell?
user142019
Slipknot Haskell.
Haskell Curry goes mountain climbing, and his wife says: "Slip not, Haskell!"
Why does reads return a list? Why would it ever return more than one pair?
user142019
21:45
@FredOverflow ambiguous grammars.
user142019
I think.
@rightfold Not in scope: data constructor IO
user142019
IO is an abstract type.
user142019
Its constructor is not exported by Prelude.
user142019
It is concrete if you import GHC.IO or whatever module exports it.
21:48
getInt :: IO Int
getInt = do
    putStr "> "
    input <- getLine
    case reads input of
        [(n, "")] -> return n
        _ -> do
            putStrLn (input ++ " is not a number")
            getInt
When exactly do I need nested dos?
user142019
This is a syntax error:
user142019
getInt :: IO Int
getInt = do
    putStr "> "
    input <- getLine
    case reads input of
        [(n, "")] -> return n
        _ ->
            putStrLn (input ++ " is not a number")
            getInt
user142019
case of isn't >>= hence you need a new do.
Or I could just write _ -> putStrLn (input ++ " is not a number") >> getInt :)
user142019
WHAT THE FUCK
user142019
21:51
I have a file.
user142019
It is readable and writable by daknok.
Did you misspell "I have a life"?
user142019
Yet daknok cannot access it.
user142019
In Windows. T_________T
user142019
Fuck you Windows.
21:51
Did you write backslashes in non-raw string literals?
user142019
Nope.
user142019
> path[1]="C:/Users/daknok/My Documents/GitHub/mountainware/ui.R": Access is denied
Can you open it with something other than daknok?
user142019
Vim can open it.
user142019
And R and Vim both run as daknok. Or however that works in Windows. :|
21:52
You must have misspelled the name. Oh wait, then it would have given a different error :)
user142019
Is Windows case-sensitive?
user142019
C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe /c mv ui.r ui.R
mv: `ui.r' and `ui.R' are the same file
shell returned 1
Hit any key to close this window...
user142019
user142019
I'm going to delete Windows tomorrow and install Arch Linux instead.
I usually do a dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda bs=1M count=10 or something to make sure to get rid of an OS :)
user142019
22:00
Why is Windows' access control crap so retarded. ;_;
user142019
Why isn't Windows a Unix yet?
Is there an obvious error in the following program?
main :: IO ()
main = do
    putStr "What is your name? "
    name <- getLine
    putStrLn ("Hello " ++ name ++ "!")
Because this happens when I run it:
homer@marge:~$ ghc hans.hs
[1 of 1] Compiling Main             ( hans.hs, hans.o )
Linking hans ...
homer@marge:~$ ./hans
fred
What is your name? Hello fred!
homer@marge:~$
Does getLine not flush the cash or something?
user142019
What is wrong with it?
user142019
Oh uh.
user142019
You type too quickly.
22:05
I waited several seconds.
user142019
In that case.
3
Q: Haskell Do Monad: IO happens out of order

DrewI'm a Haskell beginner, I'm just beginning to wrap my head around Monads, but I don't really get it yet. I'm writing a game that consists of asking the user for input, and responding. Here is a simplified version of my function: getPoint :: IO Point getPoint = do putStr "Enter x: " xStr <...

user142019
putStr probably won't print anything because of line buffering.
user142019
lol Do Monad
“Do monad”… This is simply awesome. — Artyom Kazak Nov 3 '12 at 14:39
user142019
22:11
I think buffering should never be enabled by-default.
user142019
It's bad and confusing.

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