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user142019
00:07
Is there a less fugly way to do this?
user142019
fetchRow stmt >>= \xs -> return $ xs >>= return . fromSql . head
where
    fetchRow :: Statement -> IO (Maybe [SqlValue])
user142019
fetchRow stmt >>= return . (fromSql . head <$>) seems rather nice.
user142019
(fromSql . head <$>) <$> fetchRow stmt :D
user142019
03:10
Yo dawg I heard you like fmap, so I put an fmap in your fmap so you can map while you map.
14:12
5
Q: Plagued by indecision - how to choose technologies to use for projects?

dvcolganI have always been fascinated with the newest and best technologies available. I graduate from college this year, and over the course of the past few years, I have spent a lot of time learning new programming languages, web frameworks, Linux distros, IDEs, etc, in an effort to find the best of e...

@rightfold Have you decided on what you're gonna write the compiler with yet? :)
user142019
Haskell.
user142019
døh
Awesome. I'll do that too and bury you in Haskell questions, then ;)
user142019
lol
user142019
Do you know how I can make this less ugly?
user142019
14:14
(fromSql . head <$>) <$> fetchRow stmt
where
    fetchRow :: Statement -> IO (Maybe [SqlValue])
Have you asked lambdabot?
@rightfold
Sir listemn me
user142019
I haven't installed lambdabot.
user142019
It wouldn't install.
lambdabot says it can't be simplified.
user142019
14:15
It says it can't find readline but readline is clearly installed.
user142019
Oh. :(
user142019
What if you ask it about the equivalent fetchRow stmt >>= \xs -> return $ xs >>= return . fromSql . head?
lambdabot> @pl fetchRow stmt >>= \xs -> return $ xs >>= return . fromSql . head
((fromSql . head) `fmap`) `fmap` fetchRow stmt
user142019
@Nikhil okidoki
user142019
@FredOverflow that's the same I had. :)
user142019
14:16
But more fugly.
user142019
Okay, thanks. :P
(<$>) = fmap, right?
user142019
Ja.
sir I asked a question and I am not getting solution or reason
user142019
It's there to make it look great with <*>.
user142019
14:21
Whoop.
14:31
"And this is relevant to Functional Programming how?" doesn't really fit in the Java room anymore :)
user142019
lol
@Nikhil You are over-thinking simple syntactic design issues. There is no deeper reason for allowing two spaces instead of one. It's just the way it is. If you don't like, design your own language where two consecutive spaces instead of one are a compile-time error.
And now say something relevant to FP or GTFO.
user142019
15:32
This isn't chat.careers.stackoverflow.com.
user142019
Stop trolling.
user142019
room topic changed to Functional Programming: fmapping to your boob operator [erlang] [f#] [haskell] [linq] [lisp] [ml] [scala]
user142019
room topic changed to Functional Programming: fmapping to your boobs operator [erlang] [f#] [haskell] [linq] [lisp] [ml] [scala]
user142019
That's cool.
17:05
Speaking of precedence, "And now say something relevant to FP or GTFO." should be parsed as "And now (say something relevant to FP) or GTFO.", not "And now say something relevant to (FP or GTFO)." :)
Oh, I didn't know there was a Haskell IDE.
@rightfold How big (LoC) is your biggest Haskell project yet, approximately?
user142019
I don't know.
user142019
500?
user142019
17:20
Nah.
user142019
300.
@rightfold Mine was 100 :)
user142019
@FredOverflow Emacs!
the only semi-useful thing I do in this room is star useful links
2
user142019
lol
17:24
> I've lost interest in unsafe performance tricks quite a while ago. Don't we have enough ultrafast buffer overflows already? ;)
I have become such a pussy!
 
2 hours later…
18:59
@rightfold How can emacs help with Haskell development?
user142019
I don't know.
user142019
But it is an IDE for everything so also a Haskell IDE. :P
I tried it once, and there was a shortcut to display the type of something, IIRC.
user142019
That's awesome.
user142019
21:05
@FredOverflow inserting into a hash table in Haskell is O(n) best-case. :)
user142019
Where n is the number of buckets.
@rightfold Hakell has hash tables?
user142019
If you implement them.
user142019
But since they're immutable… :P
user142019
The hashtables package provides mutable hash tables, though.
user142019
21:14
You need the IO or ST monad to use them.
@rightfold Scala has immutable hash maps with log_32 complexity (effectively constant time). They are implemented with hash tries.
user142019
What are tries?
Of course, the constant factor is much higher than for mutable hash maps.
Trees that have data not only in the leafs, but in all nodes.
In computer science, a trie, also called digital tree or prefix tree, is an ordered tree data structure that is used to store a dynamic set or associative array where the keys are usually strings. Unlike a binary search tree, no node in the tree stores the key associated with that node; instead, its position in the tree defines the key with which it is associated. All the descendants of a node have a common prefix of the string associated with that node, and the root is associated with the empty string. Values are normally not associated with every node, only with leaves and some inner n...
user142019
@FredOverflow such as a BST?
user142019
21:23
Dankjewel.
But Scala's hash tries are not binary, but 32-ary :)
user142019
I wonder how relational databases store their data.
user142019
And especially indexes.
Interesting, Scala has 5 special set types: EmptySet, Set1, Set2, Set3, Set4. Only if you have more than four elements are hash tries used.
user142019
lol
user142019
21:25
Dat optimization.
Well, I guess it makes sense because very often, you only have a couple of elements in a set.
Also interesting that it only works for immutable sets. You cannot have a mutable Set2 type that magically adds a third data member at runtime :)
user142019
@FredOverflow In Objective-C that could work.
user142019
Because in Objective-C you can change the class of an existing object at runtime. :D
Sure, but not in statically typed languages such as Scala.
wow
By the way, I have the feeling that everybody who disses dynamic typing has never tried to write anything serious in a dynamically typed language.
user142019
> object_setClass — Sets the class of an object.
21:28
I only have experience in statically typed languages, but the arguments I hear from dynamically typed folks that DT is not a deal-breaker sound very convincing.
user142019
@FredOverflow Guido van Rossum considers people who say that Python sucks because it's dynamically typed "trolls".
I like Robert Martin's opinion that the type system doesn't actually matter.
@rightfold I know, I just watched a Guido talk from 2012 :)
user142019
Just as in right now? :P
It ended two minutes ago.
user142019
That's coincidental.
user142019
Dynamic typing isn't bad per se.
user142019
I like how he can't use Preview.
user142019
Preview is OS X's PDF (or actually, anything) viewer.
user142019
The trolls talk was nice.
user142019
Was it the one in which he said "oh right, Python 1…"? xD
21:32
I like to think of it this way:
- Static typing is great, because it detects trivial errors at compile-time.
- Static typing is bad, because since it detects some trivial errors, you are less likely to write tests.
@rightfold doesn't ring a bell
user142019
Oh.
user142019
In one talk he asked the audience who used Python 3 and who used Python 2 and there were still people left who hadn't raised their hands. :P
That is, a test suite that doesn't reveal the errors that a compiler would have caught is insufficient, so a static type system does not help catch more errors.
user142019
He said "oh right, Python 1…" and it was hilarious since that crap is ancient. xd
user142019
@FredOverflow He should try Haskell. :P
21:33
I have a handful of Guido videos, watching the 2nd now.
user142019
There aren't too many.
He dissed Haskell in the 1st talk :)
user142019
I discovered today that PostgreSQL has inheritance.
eew, inheritance
user142019
And polymorphism.
user142019
21:34
It's great, right?
user142019
One table can inherit from another one.
Well, it's in standard SQL, so...
user142019
Seriously? :v
user142019
I only use PostgreSQL. The rest is crappy. :)
ScalaIDE y u so slow???
user142019
21:36
> JVM
Sometimes the whole thing freezes while I write an entire line.
user142019
> garbage collector
user142019
I had that in Netbeans.
user142019
You could see when it did a GC run, and when it did the whole thing froze for like three seconds. xD
How can an IDE freeze for more then 0.1 seconds? That's totally unacceptable. You can do as much fancy stuff as you want in the background, but I want my fucking cursor blinking and my fucking characters appearing ASAP.
user142019
21:37
You should see Xcode once you start using Boost.Spirit.
That's funny, every time I measured GC times, it never rand for more than a millisecond or maybe sometimes 10 milliseconds.
user142019
I didn't use Oracle's JVM.
user142019
I use uh… what's it called.
user142019
daknok% java --version                                                        ~
Unrecognized option: --version
Could not create the Java virtual machine.
user142019
What.
21:39
Try only one dash.
user142019
Oh wait I do have Oracle's implementation. :|
user142019
HotSpot
user142019
daknok% java -version                                                         ~
java version "1.6.0_37"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_37-b06-434-11M3909)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.12-b01-434, mixed mode)
homer@marge:~$ java -version
java version "1.6.0_27"
OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.12.3) (6b27-1.12.3-0ubuntu1~12.04.1)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.0-b12, mixed mode)
user142019
> homer@marge
user142019
21:40
xDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
Have you never seen that before? :)
My laptop is bart@lisa.
user142019
I love CoffeeScript.
user142019
object = {a: b, c: d, e: f}
{a, e} = object
assert a == b
assert e == f
user142019
Unpacking dictionaries into variables!
What’s new in Xubuntu 13.04?
Duplicate partitions are no longer shown on desktop or Thunar
Woohoo, finally! And it only took them six months!
user142019
21:43
Woohoo, catch!
The ISO is 840 MB, what a weird size. Doesn't fit on a CD :(
user142019
It fits on a DVD.
But then they could have made it like 3-4 times bigger.
user142019
People don't want to download all that.
user142019
:v
21:46
So make a net install with only 50 MB or something.
user142019
Ø will have sections!
What’s new in Xubuntu 13.04?
Updates for the Greybird theme and a new wallpaper A new wallpaper?
Wow, that makes it a totally different OS!
@rightfold So it will support boobs!
user142019
One thing I'm not sure about is laziness.
user142019
I want strict by-default, but then how am I going to implement >> (say you want such a thing, just as an example)?
Laziness will help you to stay pure.
user142019
21:48
How?
Because you cannot have arbitrary side-effect in a lazy language. Standard argument by SPJ.
user142019
That doesn't mean you must have arbitrary side-effects in a strict language.
23:23
Okay, running Xubuntu 13.04 now. Loading a new website takes 5-10 seconds :(
@rightfold But hey, at least I got g++ 4.7.3 now :)
user142019
daknok% gcc -v                                                                ~
// lot of shit
gcc version 4.2.1 (Based on Apple Inc. build 5658) (LLVM build 2336.11.00)
user142019
^ XDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
There is a version 4 already?
user142019
Eh.
user142019
1 min ago, by FredOverflow
@rightfold But hey, at least I got g++ 4.7.3 now :)
23:28
I must have been confusing something lol
user142019
clang, probably.
user142019
user142019
daknok% clang -v                                                              ~
Apple clang version 4.0 // HAHA! :D
Can I apt-get install from several terminals concurrently? :)
user142019
No.
user142019
23:31
Aptitude locks.
But I have two cores xD
user142019
So?
trying 2b funny
user142019
Aptitude keeps a lockfile during installation.
What if I reboot my computer during that? Will I never be able to install anything again?
user142019
23:32
You cannot install something using aptitude if another instance of aptitude is still running.
user142019
@FredOverflow It will probably get deleted automatically.
user142019
I don't know how lockfiles work in Unix.
user142019
Well, probably you can force an install but I think it's a bad idea.
Oh, now I have Java 1.7 by default. Nice!
But Eclipse is still 3.8 instead of 4.x
user142019
Eclipse is a joke.
user142019
23:35
Use Vim and Z shell.
I don't like editors in which I need to remember special invocations just to quit :)
user142019
You need that for Eclipse too.
user142019
You need to remember that.
That has been the standard close combination for decades.
user142019
23:38
So has :q in Vim.
user142019
And GHCi.
user142019
And a dozen other tools. :P
Fucking eclipse just hang for 10 seconds to generate the main function.
user142019
5 mins ago, by rightfold
Use Vim and Z shell.
Fuck, there is no haskell-platform package anymore??
user142019
23:48
Just install GHC and cabal-dev.
user142019
haskell-platform is basically GHC, cabal, base and a clusterfuck of packages you'll never use.
homer@marge:~$ ghc --version
The Glorious Glasgow Haskell Compilation System, version 7.6.2
Is that fairly recent?
user142019
7.6.3 is latest; seven days ago.
> A bug which could cause GHC to accept or infer an incorrect type, resulting in a <<loop>> at runtime, has been fixed.
That's all :)
user142019
GHC bugs tend to punish people for making type errors.
user142019
23:53
I should make a tool that helps me complete my projects.
I should make a tool that helps me start projects.
user142019
lolwot
I'm always stuck in the "What technology should I use?" phase, and after some time, I lose interest :)
user142019
:P
user142019
When in doubt, choose Ruby.
user142019
23:56
General purpose and multi-paradigm so it can't be wrong!
I'm still not sure whether I should use Haskell or Scala or D for my compiler :)
user142019
Ruby.

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