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06:11
Shall we play a game ?
06:44
Scalaton?
 
13 hours later…
19:32
Unfrozen?
Happy days, the Haskell chat is born again!
Yeah! Another chance to run it into the ground again!
Those lucky bastards @ 0:20!
@FredOverflow Wrong chatroom?
lol, can you move it?
19:38
Me? Why not you?
Is that possible? Let's see...
You're the room owner
I don't know how to move messages :( I guess I'll just copy them instead :)
20:15
What would be the easiest way to map arrow keys to a directional vector?
Like holding up would return (0, -1.0)
Up and right would be (sqrt 2 / 2, -(sqrt 2 / 2))
Left up and right would just be up, etc
Oh wait, I can just assign each key a vector and then add them and then normalize I guess
I'm silly
Hello Haskell chat. My name is Tom, and I fear I am too dumb to understand Haskell.
(in the style of Alcoholics Anonymous, obv.)
20:31
@TomW Hi Tom
yay.
HI @Pubby
Everyone is too dumb to understand Haskell
I tried a while back to learn how to use it
the effect was somewhat like a rainforest-dwelling tribesman looking inside a jet engine
Hehe, what did you use to learn?
winhugs
took me a while to remember
20:36
I mean what book/tutorial?
shrug
misc, a variety of sources
Hugs sucks.
I remember watching a few webcasts by erik meijer
Yeah, unfortunately Haskell isn't something you can learn with one or two resources - it's all scattered about in bits.
Learn you a Haskell is good.
20:38
googling now gets a lot more relevant results than it did when I last tried
Also Real World Haskell.
It's not a complicated language, really.
my vague understanding of pure-functional languages is that you tend to end up writing the language you want to use as you go
Step 1: Give the programmer an idiomatic way of defining first-class functions
Step 2: There is no step 2.
Writing the language? Isn't that more of a Lisp thing?
shrug
I was responding to the statement that Haskell is a simple language
20:42
It is simple.
It's a simple thing where everything is complicated
from my brief investigations of functional languages - with which I didn't get very far - what I got from it was that most tend to make it quite easy to write functions which can then be used in a way that's quite fluid compared to the syntax of the language itself
examples of writing parsers in F#and so on
Yeah
Part of the intellectual dilemma I have is that I can't even begin to visualise what a functional language is telling the CPU to do
with imperative languages I can take a guess
I am largely expressing admiration here, by the way - the problem is me

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