Imagine you're in a tall building with a cat. The cat can survive a fall out of a low story window, but will die if thrown from a high floor. How can you figure out the longest drop that the cat can survive, using the least number of attempts?
Obviously, if you only have one cat, then you can on...
Well, it could be done with something that's not monad (just by nesting functions like that), I think, but monad has laws to ensure that everything works in a sane way.
Haskellers love their typeclass laws.
> From the perspective of a Haskell programmer, however, it is best to think of a monad as an abstract datatype of actions.
@Cat What still confuses me about runState :: s -> (a, s) is that the function only needs the state as input, but delivers a result and a state. Why doesn't it need a previous result as an input as well?
@CatPlusPlus Because I remember Simon PJ saying that an IO computation is a function of type world -> (a, world) and that looks pretty similar to runState :: s -> (a, s).
I'm pretty sure the concept is sound. But whenever I try to figure it out, people try explaining in terms of metaphors, effectively throwing away the thing I'm trying to understand
@sbi The problem with monads is that they can be used to abstract from pretty much anything, as far as I can tell. So there is no easy way to explain them.
Monads are like Linux. When their proponents try to explain why they're awesome, they get hung up on one or two trite and pointless statements, and completely forget to explain the interesting parts. ;)
@Cat In C++, when a member function calls another member function on the same object, they have access to the same state (because technically, a this pointer is passed around). Isn't this exactly the State monad, only with a different syntax and less mathematics? :)
@sehe I skipped over that. (And thanks for such a nice message! I had visitors, and generally spent the nights chatting away until 3am — but offline. Had a great time, and little incentive to turn on my machine.)
@NikiC in practice, though, this always does exactly what you mean, and the only people who have to watch out for these cases are library writers, and especially library writers that use free functions by common names (i.e. modern style OO/multi paradigm libraries).
@NikiC There is a technique to be used ('ADL barrier') which basically means introducing a 'DMZ' namespace to avoid spurious lookups (if I recall correctly). It's one of these things that library writers deal with (besides writing funny variable names like __a and __b to avoid running into user defined macro conflicts and other C heritage)
@sehe Yeah, really. A very distant cousin of mine, which I had previously only known by name, visited with one of her kids. The boy and my kids got along splendidly. We got even the smaller kids to sleep until 9am (by putting them to bed at insane times). We spent the nights emptying untold numbers of bottles while talking, spend the days exploring the vicinity or hanging out in my garden, and generally had a great time. Too bad it's already over.
@sbi Oh nice. Yeah, our oldest didn't wake up before 9am this morning. We didn't even make it way late. Tonight, we came home at 21:00 ... from visiting grandma so... let's see what happens tomorrow. Starting now we'll all be having summer leave so let the unwinding begin
@jalf As far as I'm aware, it's basically regular functions which are "tagged" that have special meaning to the compiler or can perform compile-time transformations.
@sehe Always takes the smaller kids plenty of time to move their sleeping cycle so that they wake up later. Moving it back at the end of a holiday is easier, because you just wake them up earlier, and they'll fall asleep earlier the next night. But making the sleep longer is hard.
@FredOverflow That's like asking, because it's not safe to drink two bottles of whiskey all by yourself on one night, whether it would help to have three instead.
How would it be possible to automatically know which iterators that are deferenceable without decreasing performance? It would have to checked at runtime for every iterator or something?
And that means I have to lug around four iterators instead of two. And that means I'll have to lug around eight iterators instead of two when I build the next level on top of this.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Shrug. Iterators come in pairs in C++. That's unnecessary clutter, but it also is the way it is. Except for std::advance(), it makes no sense to have an iterator by itself. You always have two of them. So where's the problem?
@ManofOneWay Actually, the best language to program would be the one implementing the do what I want pragma. Yeah, tool support is severely lacking for it, "but that's not really the language now, is it?"
@R.MartinhoFernandes TBH, looking at Andrei's nose, there might be some punch in D, even if we can't find it.