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00:14
nah, not a problem
need to have a lot of samples
and some docs ;)
but it helped me track down the bug
because I couldn't see a problem with Foggy's code -
(there wasn't one - it was a bug :D )
now just need to test it
 
7 hours later…
07:15
@s952163
I love recursion :) partition can be used like this, pass a predicate and a list as argument:
List.partition (fun x -> x > 0) [1;-1;2;3;-2]
and this will return a tuple of two lists ([1;2;3],[-1;-2])
@ReedCopsey ok, thanks for the explanation
07:55
When declaring a function, is these two lines considered the same in F#?
let sumTree (bt : float BTree),
and let sumTree(bt : BTree<float>
08:26
@GreatCubicuboctahedron I think so. you should get back the same signiture, right?
I would prefer the second version, but will use float List
@FoggyFinder Thanks Foggy. With Reed's new version it works now. Watch and BindDirect and editMember etc. works too. I guess I will still need to study the API. I've seen some weird stuff when Subscribing a function that outputs to the console, but thats not so important.
08:55
I have again not working :(
can't find the "noValidation"
Oh, it seems I have not updated all packages :D
Yay! Now everything works
@GreatCubicuboctahedron hmm...in square brackets usually indicates the type. But what principially the difference between the options - I don't know.
@ReedCopsey I've always wanted to do it :D
09:16
noValidation is there
yup update to 0.0.3 I think
 
3 hours later…
12:16
Ok, well I think the <> version is the one referenced to in the books after have reading a bit
"the <> version" ?
the one like this:
let sumTree(bt : BTree<float>) =
I didn't even know about the other version
Where are files saved created by using File.CreateText("test.txt") in F# interactive console?
12:41
System.Environment.CurrentDirectory I guess
 
1 hour later…
14:06
@franssu it's used for certain F#-ish types now and then...
haven't read / write F# for months :(
I feel your pain... :-)
maybe next week
I've got a question about idiomatic F#. If it isn't appropriate for Chat, let me know and I'll move it to a question.

I understand it is preferred to not use mutability as an escape hatch, but as I'm learning F#, I'm having a difficult time not reaching to my imperative experience.
I just started doing some katas to learn F# and the one I'm doing now requires me to keep a count of a few different things as I'm iterating a collection. In C#, a trivial way is i++, x++ etc. But that's desctructive and, as I understand it, frowned upon in functional languages. I started reaching for a record type to hold the counts but I'd have to make that mutable or create copies everytime I wanted to change (seems wasteful). What's the idiomatic way of keeping count of several things as you are iterating a collection?
@JustinSelf I'm not so averse to mutability
it's not like Haskell after all... so you could just define it mutable x and keep updating it
another way would be just to redefine x
14:13
As a newbie myself, I'd say recursion :)
but generally you can say List.mapi
that will give you a count as you iterate
I should clarify a bit, I'm not just needing a count of the total items, but counts of the number of items that can be filtered by some predicate.
But if mutability isn't such a sin, then that works for me, too.
I could use recursion, I suppose.
I'd say you don't keep count, because you don't iterate in FP
yeah generally speaking why do you need to keep count
for example you can run .length or .count on your collection after the filter
This particular kata gives a collection and requires a count of three different predicates.
14:18
I think this is an interesting question though I would love to see some different approaches.
filtering and then doing .length is good. That's probably how I would have done it in C#, but I wanted to run through the collection just once.
this is a concern of procedural programming ("to run through")
depending on what you have this might be expensive or not expensive
you can filter into a dictionary too
(if it's a seq, it won't run twice)
(I think)
Mmmm... you might need to cache it
but generally speaking if you can do it in LINQ the F#ish way should be close
14:21
@Justin Self, Hello
unless you're like Great and think recursively...
:-)
I'm off to bed...but if you can reference that kata here would be great....
a LINQ way works but just didnt feel F#-y to me. If that's accepted as idiomatic, then that works for me.
Will do, I'll get the text and post it (or a link) in a minute
hahaha.... not sure what F# Gods will say lol
Hey @FoggyFinder
you can try on Slack there are a bunch of ppl there in this timezone
Zzzz.....
14:23
Slack? There's an F# slack?
yes, I didn't know either... until 2 days ago
cool. Checking it out now.
you should get an invite
I think....
if not ping Reed Copsey and he will send it out
awesome, thanks.
@JustinSelf I always thought about LINQ as embedded F#....
btw
14:27
If you mean the extension methods, then yeah, I can see that. It def adds more functional style. I'm just trying hard to not program F# using C#-isms, ya know?
programming F# using Linq-ism is fine IMO
@JustinSelf so what you want to do?
kata - "Given an array of integers, calculate which fraction of its elements are positive, which fraction of its elements are negative, and which fraction of its elements are zeroes, respectively. Print the decimal value of each fraction on a new line."
It's a trivial problem, but I keep leaning on how I do things in C#.
what causes the greatest difficulty?
avoiding mutability when keep tracking of matching patterns.
14:32
is it possible to use the standard functions from the F# modules ?
or need without it?
oh, absolutely. this is just a simple problem I'm doing to explore F#. There aren't any restrictions except those I've been imposing on myself.
@JustinSelf you don't keep track since there's no notion of flow, you don't describe how, you describe what
@franssu Ok, I get the idea, but not sure about how that translates to an implementation.
try to use Array.fold:
[| 1 ; -2 ; 4 ; 5; 0;  6 |]
|> Array.fold
    (fun (p,n,z) x ->
        if x = 0 then p, n, z+1
        elif x > 0 then p+1, n, z
        else p, n+1, z) (0, 0,0)
|> printfn "%A"
super concise. Nice. However, how is fold getting a return of the function? I see the increments but nothing is being returned.
oh nevermind
So, is that a tuple?
14:43
yes
fold is recursion so franssu should be happy
I'm busy but I think we can do less procedural
I can see it with pattern matching
with when?
14:45
than prepend 1 to each list then sum
with an intermediate Map or something
when or active pattern yes
@FoggyFinder thanks for typing that up. Very helpful. I hadn't thought about using tuples.
) May I ask why you have decided to learn F#?
Absolutely. A few reasons. Been reading through programmatic programmer and it got me thinking about learning something different. I wanted to learn something that was a different paradigm but still mainstream and something I could mix into projects.
I've also heard a lot (from F#-ers) that you can write less lines for the same program in F# vs C# and I wanted to see it for myself.
14:52
Well it's true
and I have a little bit of bench time and figured I'd use it for F#.
Some of the compiler error messages seem a bit cryptic at times, though. I struggled mightily with some code because the signature for main didn't accept any params.
Not afraid of that then just forget about C#? :D
@JustinSelf mm, for example?
"Type mismatch. Expecting a unit -> string[] -> int but given a unit -> unit. The Type 'string[] -> int' does not match the type 'unit'
This was the last line of the main method.
I was piping to ignore (which was me just trial/error).
I think I still have the snippet.. one sec.
let main =

//populateNumbers, calcCrossSumDiff

Console.ReadLine() //get size of array
|> Int32.Parse
|> (fun x -> Array2D.create<int> x x 0)
|> populateNumbers
|> calculateCrossSumDifferences
|> Math.Abs
|> (fun number -> printfn "%d" number)
The last line would complain about something expecting string[]->
I dont' quite grok it well enough to understand what the compiler was telling me.
what is calculateCrossSumDifferences ?
as entry point main expects a string array and will output an int error code
15:03
what about sleep?)
just use underscore after main if that bugs you
too much coffee
lol
good idea
I just envy you because my timezone so quiet
It would have made more sense to me to see the message around the main method signature instead of the last line.
the way you define main is a value in this case
let funcname () = blah is a function
let funcname x = blah is a function
by the way, for small programs, you can write code without main
ler funcname = blah is not a function
hence the weird error
15:08
instead:
but your point is very valid f# compiler errors msgs are cryptic for human beings
|> Math.Abs
|> (fun number -> printfn "%d" number)
better:
I think its being rewrtten
|> abs
|> (fun number -> printfn "%f" number)
even better...
15:09
@s952163 maybe it'll change
cant u just pipe to printfn
oh..brackets:
|> abs
|> fun number -> printfn "%f" number
@FoggyFinder my take :
let tuple3Add (a, b, c) (d, e, f) =
    a + d, b + e, c + f

let tuple3f f (a, b, c) =
    f a, f b, f c

[| 1 ; -2 ; 4 ; 5; 0;  6 |]
|> Array.toList
|> List.map (fun x -> x>0, x<0, x=0)
|> List.map tuple3f System.Convert.ToInt32
|> List.reduce tuple3Add
|> printfn "%A"
@JustinSelf ^
15:11
@FoggyFinder what about just |> printfn %d
@franssu impressive
exactly
more functionnal
funky lol
zzzzzz
@s952163 well, let it be....for educational purposes =)
but still not complete, the question was asking for the fraction, not the count..
15:15
I think it's useful to add yourself
how to say correctly "themself, youself, myself,..?"
always wanted to know what the difference is between these words.
@s952163 Ah, ok I see.
@Justin, May I ask what is your time zone?
CST (-5)
@franssu I've gotta wrap my head around that for a minute.
doesnt compile @FoggyFinder ?
15:24
|> List.map (tuple3f System.Convert.ToInt32)
missed the parentheses
I'm so uneducated that first heard about "CMT" :(
@franssu struggling to get that. I'll send you imaginary internet karma if you can explain how it does that magic.
oh wait
what's bothering you ?
So the first Map creates a new array of tuples with bools?
The second converts those bools to 1 and 0
Then the reduce sums them all up.
15:28
Wow, that is cool. Well done.
(not an array though, a list)
right, thanks.
thank you, I need karma :)
So are you able to access parts of a tuple outside of a function? Ie, if a tuple is the return type, can you get to parts of it.
let result = List.reduce tuple3Add
result....? how would I access the middle val?
result is a Tuple here
15:31
right. so how do you say I want to peek at the middle or first value?
Does that question make sense?
ok gotcha
I feel like I might be missing something.
(_, middle, _) = result
middle holds the middle value
(and it's beautiful :) )
15:35
let (_, middle, _) = ([| 1 ; -2 ; 4 ; 5; 0; 6 |]
|> Array.toList
|> List.map (fun x -> x>0, x<0, x=0)
|> List.map (tuple3f System.Convert.ToInt32)
|> List.reduce tuple3Add)

printfn "%d" middle
?
what you want to do?
wow
that's cool.
let getMid (a, b, c) = b
... |> getMid |> printfn "%d"
side note, how are you formatting the text as code?
let tuple3Add (a, b, c) (d, e, f) =
    a + d, b + e, c + f

let tuple3f f (a, b, c) =
    f a, f b, f c

let (first, middle, third) = ([| 1 ; -2 ; 4 ; 5; 0;  6 |]
|> Array.toList
|> List.map (fun x -> x>0, x<0, x=0)
|> List.map (tuple3f System.Convert.ToInt32)
|> List.reduce tuple3Add)

printfn "%d" first
printfn "%d" middle
printfn "%d" third
15:38
ctrl + k
@franssu why not snd ?
eheh
I'm rusty
what is snd?
but snd only works on 2 members tuples
?
oh
right
grr, it's not so convenient
15:40
I see, I just RTFM'd.
So when piping, is the result from the previous function added as the last parameter to the next function?
yep
kindof :)
Interesting. So you've gotta pay more attention to how you order your params.
yep but you get used to it
Is there anyway of working around that? For example, let's say your tuple3f took the tuple first instead of last.
and you can do things like let revFun f a b = f b a
15:47
And you still wanted to pipe it. Would you just create a wrapper function?
let tuple3f (a, b, c) f =
    f a, f b, f c
let revTuple3f = revFun tuple3f
how does that work if you are only passing tuple3f to revfun?
revfun is expecting three things
does it have something to do with partial applications?
yes
and high order function I guess
but @ReedCopsey can maybe explain better :) :p
16:02
@justin I'd probably do let tuple3f f (a,b,c) = though
that'd let you do tuple |> tuple3f f
though, if you use lists, you can do things like zip your earlier code ;)
yeah, that's what @franssu originally did. I was wondering what the standard approach would be to pipe to a function whose parameter order was inconvenient.
it's common to just wrap in a lambda
because it's not that common of a situation
I actually don't see a ton of usage with tuples, other than "locally" [where it's not a problem]
 
4 hours later…
19:59
I found a solution to one of the things I talked about earlier.. the thing about me having trouble with lists ending up in reverse order
congratulations!
When I build a new list during recursive looping, I sometimes use an accumulating variable and sometimes not.. So the problem was related to me not fully understanding what I did :)
when in a match, doing something like this:
x::xs -> x::remove xs
rather than when using an acc variable like this:
x::xs -> remove xs (x::acc)
It is obvious that the second way, using accs, will reverse the list
don't worry, I also still do not always understand recursion :D
20:02
but the first way will build it 1::(2::(3::(4::(... and so on
hehe :)
yeah, it's easy with recursion to flip the order of lists
because you tend to process 1/2/3/4, but if you use cons, you do 1, 2/1, 3/2/1, 4/3/2/1, etc
I like ordering it correctly while building the list...
Nice :)
it's very, very common to build it backwards and do List.rev at the end
because it's often more efficient than "building it right"
since building it right often requires rebuilding the entire list every step
Is it? Intuivitly (spelling) it feels like it should be the opposite
(depends a lot on the algo in question, of course ;) )
well, the thing to remember is that doing a cons is extremely fast
20:04
Because what does the List.rev really do
if you have a list like this:
3/2/1
and you do 4::list, to get 4/3/2/1
it doesn't have to do anything except allocate a new head
so the 3/2/1 portion is shared (not recreated)
if you have 1/2/3/4
and you want to append 5
it has to build an entirely new list, allocating all 5 "elements"
and can't reuse the existing part
so writing things where they prepend, then reverse (which is O(n) and "cheats" in fsharp.core) is often more efficeint
you mean like [1;2;3;4]@[5]
yeah
if you do:
5::[4;3;2;1]
you have a new list: [5;4;3;2;1]
but... if you think of it in terms of data layout
it's really:
(4 (3 (2 (1))) -> (5 (4 (3 (2 (1)))) - and the (4 (3 (2 (1))) is shared by reference since it's immutable, so only a single list item (5, point to next) is allocated
if you build it forward: (1 (2 (3 (4))), then append 5
it has to do entirely new elements for 1, 2,3,4 and 5
oh I get it, It needs to allocate for every list
because they can't point to the original list reference
prepend is O(1) and append is O(n) in a list
so - most list routines work by flipping the list, then calling List.rev
Is that why List.fold is more efficient?
than List.foldBack
also, List.rev, internally, "cheats" and uses internal stuff in fsharp.core to make it not have to reallocate
you can't write your own List.rev as efficiently as the internal one
@great yes
Hmm very interesting, That's why they have been telling us to really prefer F# functions over our own versions
:)
29
A: cons operator (::) in F#

Tomas PetricekAs others said, there is no such operator, because it wouldn't make much sense. I actually think that this is a good thing, because it makes it easier to realize that the operation will not be efficient. In practice, you shouldn't need the operator - there is usually a better way to write the sam...

good explanation in there
as well as a nice approach to writing accumulators (reverse when empty)
20:13
Thanks, I'll read it
20:40
btw, there is a typo?:
I mean "with with"
21:35
Thanks - fixed (in next push)
21:46
)
now read the source code of Gjallarhorn
hehehe
some of the source is less than pretty ;)
some of it, esp. around Mutable, is damn ugly, tbh
:D
almost all functions are small - it's amazing
composition for the win ;)
that's how I try to write just about everything I can
22:22
do you ever find yourself forgetting about stuff and implementing the same thing again?
(not blaming small functions for that)
23:12
sometimes - though I actually find small functions helps
forces me to organize a bit more early on
so I tend to go to the same place to implement things, and then find it done
@FoggyFinder morning
sleepy
need more coffeee
morning
you have the morning - I'm going to sleep

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