« first day (131 days earlier)      last day (3393 days later) » 

04:35
posted on September 15, 2014 by Sergey Tihon

Welcome to F# Weekly, A roundup of F# content from this past week: News Paket is ready for testing. Try it and send feedback. Interested in F# Support in Azure ML? Up vote this idea. New F# testimonial up now “Consulting for a large multi-national organization producing financial software“. Vote for F# support in Unity3D if you […]

 
1 hour later…
06:00
Morning all
06:19
good morning
 
2 hours later…
08:35
@Maslow I see beginners often use methods to get the auto rec, rather than refactoring code. This is normally a side effect of coming from C# or porting C# to F#
Hi all
what do you mean by auto rec?
The fact that methods don't need a rec keyword to be (mutually) recursive.
In this case I guess @7sharp9 means that they use methods to avoid having to reorder their functions.
Yeah, its an ugly shortcut
You can get into real issue with initialisation order when you do that.
Especially with things like iOS where initialisation order can be important.
 
2 hours later…
IAE
IAE
10:57
Hello everyone. I was wondering how to go about a scenario where I need to map through a collection, but I need the previous and current element to perform an operation. Essentially list |> List.mapPairwise (fun prev curr -> operation prev curr)
List.map2?
IAE
IAE
That iterates over two lists
List.fold?
Fold is probably what you want
the state at each iteration would be a tuple (list mapped so far, last element done)
IAE
IAE
But fold reduces the list to one. At least from my understanding, fold is a generalized reduce operation?
11:00
reduce to 1 "state"
IAE
IAE
Oh I see
Or could you not use Seq.windowed
:Seq.windowed : int -> seq<'T> -> seq<'T []>
IAE
IAE
I wasn't aware that such a function existed, thanks!
My understanding of folds was limited, but I think I can manage a solution with either option. Thank you everyone.
> [1; 2; 3; 4; 5] |> List.fold (fun (list, last) cur -> ((last + cur) :: list, cur)) ([], 0) |> fst;;
val it : int list = [9; 7; 5; 3; 1]
That's what I mean by using fold to build a list and pass the current value onwards
probably want a reverse in there as well
IAE
IAE
Thank you for the nice example, that's indeed what I had in mind.
A little difficult to wrap my head around it at first, but I think I understand it
11:21
People using FSharp.Data or a lot of json in projects might find this interesting (github.com/fsharp/FSharp.Data/issues/677). Contributors / supporters requested :-)
11:34
you might also look at JSON.Net - it has f# and JSON schema support - it is not TP though
the json.net support for json-schema is quite poor (and Draft3 AFAIK)
btw your link inside your issue points to JSON.net - but you seem to be right about Draft3
decent implementations in javascript, python, java, ruby and php
Anyone got a strategy for managing adding links to e.g. json output from a HTTP GET that they are happy with (HAL style, using WebApi but ideally don't want to pull in 57 classes a la github.com/JakeGinnivan/WebApi.Hal ) ?
11:51
@RubenBartelink We have a quite satisfactory one but with ServiceStack.
@jruizaranguren ... OS or can you describe ?
What do you feed it?
... i.e. does the Representation need to fed enough info and/or context to generate links?
or do the links get supplied alongside the context and the formatter merges them
is there a predefined layout that the handler instantiates
and the the layer of which you speak just manages correct formatting/serialization?
@RubenBartelink Routes are defined with ServiceStack infrastructure. We have a convention, one DTO for operation. App layer returns the types of the allowed operations. And the answer has to carry enough information to fill the links information.
Then we take metadata of the routes, and data in the response to fill the links in a generic way.
12:11
@jruizaranguren Thanks! Is it based (heavily) on URI templates a la the WebApi.Hal thing or not at all ?
To your mind, does the link resolution / generation not belong in the handler?
e.g. I'm considering using hyprlinkr to gen them in the handler and having no "infrastructure stuff"
... e.g. do you have a _links or a Links property and/or an abstract method to 'templatize it' ?
(i.e. do you do strongly typed link gen from Expression<T> calls to controllers vs uri template strings like github.com/JakeGinnivan/WebApi.Hal/blob/master/WebApi.Hal.Web/… )
(What's floating around my head is to return
{
  Body = result
  Links = [
        "self", this.Get( id)
        "detail", this.Detail(id)]
  Embedded = [ embedded ] }
And have a set of records with and without e.g. Embedded
Then the formatter just needs to take out the Body level out of the data structure and ensure that Links and Embedded get serialized with the corrrect names etc. (prob just via attrs)
13:05
@RubenBartelink Route registration:
_host.Routes
.RegisterGet<AllItems>()
.RegisterPost<RegisterItem>(() => new RegisterItem().Year, () => new RegisterItem().Catalog)
Routes:
./allitems
./registeritem/year/catalog
Links property:
Type[] Links = new Type [] {typeof(RegisterItem), typeof(AllItems)}
Response DTO must have "Year" and "Catalog" property. We enforce this through tests.
Actual links are created in a Response Filter (message-oriented ServiceStack makes this easy).
A bit of reflection magic...
@7sharp9 I thought the rec was required for any recursion, which would be great protection against accidental recursion. Although discouraging overloading helps some.
@Maslow Yeah its required on let bindings, members are implicitly recursive same as C#
13:26
@jruizaranguren Interesting - def seems neat and should suit a lot of designs v well. Will let it percolate (gut is that it's a bit on the magicy side...)
this talk is amazing, and I'm only 6 min in. Then again, I'm really starting to fanboy Greg Young like crazy. infoq.com/presentations/8-lines-code-refactoring
@maslow Is he talking about Partial Application :P
yeah, it seems like a keynote of his I attended just a few weeks ago
called Sacred Cows
@RubenBartelink any idea if he is for or against asp.net mvc?
@RubenBartelink Yeah, a bit of magic. But for new people in the project it is easy to understand the conventions and tests say when you don't follow them. So it is "explicit magic".
14:00
@jruizaranguren Magic in the right context is, well, ... magic!
@maslow Well, MVC is the epitomy of magic, innit!
morning
@RubenBartelink yeah, but it seems like cleaner magic than webforms by orders of magnitude
14:36
Dont actually know what ES uses - whatever it is needs to be OS to build on Mono
MVC has fit that desc for some time
@RubenBartelink you mean Event Store?
@Maslow Yes @geteventstore ... but in Greg's world better than web forms is going to get you quite the stare :D
I'd be pretty surprised if it is being used (MVC Depends on System.Web and a lot of cruft and has not exactly ever had design mistakes fixed)
it's a sad state of affairs, know anyone hiring F# devs that don't require relocation? =)
@maslow Depends on your hierarchy of needs re money vs lang I guess :)
I could easily afford a reduction in pay for an improvement in work
14:48
:) BTW If I was to guess what ES uses for Web, it's either Nancy or homegrown - both would be before MVC in the list
@RubenBartelink Homegrown. Just needs System.Net. No System.Web dependencies.
ES has very little dependencies. Nice code btw
@Maslow Not hiring and don't know you but just to say obv a big thing to have for that is lots of OS commits in F#...
@Maslow What sort of work are you looking to do?
including one repo that Don Syme tweeted about
work that makes me think, and challenges me primarily. I love tooling, apis, front-end, type-provider-based back ends.
15:01
mono/xamarin seems to hire - maybe this is sth for you - ask 7sharp9 when he is here
@weismat cool
15:16
@maslow That'll do Donkey :)
 
2 hours later…
16:48
@RubenBartelink but donkey's don't have sleeves
17:01
*donkeys
 
1 hour later…
18:29
@roundcrisis BTW - Cloudsharper (once installed) should work without web access, too - it works locally, as well

« first day (131 days earlier)      last day (3393 days later) »