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13:02
@Jefffrey when are you free again?
13:21
-- | Takes the total size of the stream to be processed as l and the function
-- to map as fn
progress l = loop 0
  where
    loop n = do
        liftIO $ progressBar (msg "Working") percentage 40 n l
        !x <- await -- bang pattern to make strict
        yield x
        loop (n+1)
What the fuck is l
What are we returning?
What
@Jefffrey woah, slowly
where's that code from
Someone still wants to use the excuse that Haskell is great at inferring so we don't have to use annotations?
7
A: How to monitor computation process in Haskell

DavorakI know there is at least one library on hackage that has some pre-made monad transformers for this task, but I normally turn to the pipes package to roll my own when I need one. I am using pipes-4.0.0 it is going to be on hackage this weekend, but you can grab it form the github repo before that....

And don't even start with the "it's obvious by the context" bullshit.
I don't want to go around your motherfucking project to figure out what type everything is.
@Jefffrey the problems start when the signatures get too hard for a human to type :P
I had that problem recently
You type them anyway or refactor them, you lazy ass.
Types are documentation. Fucking excellent documentation.
@Jefffrey by type you might mean "copy from GHC output"
13:24
Do whatever the fuck you want, but write them down.
@Jefffrey the problem starts when you have more than just plain types in the signature
@BartekBanachewicz I don't care. When the type of something is more complicated is exactly where you need to write it down the most.
@Jefffrey how fluent are you with rank-n signatures? Because I'm not particularly good at them
sure, you can type the quantifications away, but that might just move the problem elsewhere
There's an extension to group type class constraints and if you have a function taking a lot of arguments then it's your fucking fault.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, types can be complicated. You write them anyway.
it's not "a lot of arguments", it's "arguments specifying a fragment of a transformer stack"
13:27
I really don't give a crap how many lines you have to write, you write them down.
@Jefffrey also Haddock should be able to read your types even if you don't write them
Write a plugin to infer them automatically and then copy and paste.
@BartekBanachewicz Sometimes I need to read code, not just what haddock decides to document.
I'd rather have an IDE that allows me to read the type of an arbitrary subexpression than community writing types everywhere
And anyway, this one is clearly not the case.
GhcMod can do that if the code compiles
13:28
Or at least I hope so, because I fucking don't know anything about l or what that function returns, because nobody told me yet.
@BartekBanachewicz Of course I didn't receive the ping for this one.
SO.chat notifications are so broken for me.
the function works inside MonadIO, and l is just the number of iterations
From today I'm free again.
@Jefffrey oh cool. I've made some significant improvements to Hate
but there's a lot of cleaning up to do still
@Jefffrey await consumes a value. yield pushes it further to the pipe. The type of x is a
it simply gets through every element that's going through the pipe, and advances the progressbar basing on the expected number of elements
it's quite elegant
wait a sec
@BartekBanachewicz Can you make develop the default branch?
13:45
@Jefffrey why?
Because every time I land on the github page I see something that is empty
@Jefffrey that might be because Hate is an unusable POS right now
I'd rather have something empty there. We can change it once it starts at least appearing functional
But currently it's in development process.
I don't really see why we should have master being displayed first now.
ah you mean that.
@Jefffrey ok fixed
thanks
What samples work right now?
13:47
@Jefffrey 1 and 3 (run by 2 because lazy)
images don't work yet
wat
So sample.hs and sample3.hs?
1 is more direct and low-level (the old api I used), 2 uses the global streaming pipeline
@Jefffrey cabal run sample1 and cabal run sample2
No, I mean on github
Which ones should I look at?
yeah those should be there
@Jefffrey sample3.hs right now
@Jefffrey but frankly you should also see the new shiny folder structure :)
solidColorPipeline could actually be removed right now because the global one should be working
13:50
alas, there's no way to activate the global one now
@Jefffrey it all changes so fast right now I don't have time for those fixes
I spent a lot of time getting the new stack to work
eh :)
my vim plugin would scream that at me so I wouldn't be able to ignore that
@Jefffrey don't get me wrong, I'm certainly going to revisit those samples because that's the first thing people look at
but I was struggling to get circle function to work :P
Why are we using ByteString again?
@Jefffrey for shaders
Is that required by the OpenGL API?
13:53
IIRC the GL util package uses it
It forces you to use bytestrings?
Recent events led me to conclude that unless you are certain that ByteString will make a difference, is better not to use it anywhere or anyway limit its use to where it's really needed.
@Jefffrey it provides loadShaderBS yeah
@Jefffrey technically we could write our own util, and OpenGL provides both string and bytestring version
wait nope
> Deprecated: Use shaderSourceBS instead.
Ok then
I don't get it, what changed? @BartekBanachewicz
That now you use Pipeline directly as UserState?
sample3.hs seems even more low level than it was before
@Jefffrey GraphicsState is now a part of LibraryState, that's separate from UserState. Graphics functions run in a newtype-wrapped monad that has a monadstate instance for graphics stuff cache.
@Jefffrey that was just for tests of circle. User can, but doesn't have to create his own pipeline. We have to provide at least one global one and that's what the all state gimmicks achieve
and that's irrelevant of the type of API the user receives; even in a purely functional one, the system still needs the cache
Wait, why is circle not returning a Polygon that can be drawn?
14:05
it could vOv
the mechanism is there, you'd just need to get rid of draw inside of it and add it in user code, dunno why I did it like that
as I said, there's still a long way from a functioning API, but at least we have much better fundamentals than before
Make some more complicated examples so that I can see where we are heading. Even if they don't work right now. Just to see what's your vision about this. Make araknoid work for example in your envisioned API :)
yeah I should get to that. I was too busy refactoring to think about the user :P
@BartekBanachewicz Now I gotta eat and then go to the library for few hours. I'll be back in ~4/4.5 hours ;)
@Jefffrey I'll be at home then. K. Cee ya
 
4 hours later…
18:12
@Jefffrey you there yet?
18:37
@Jhawins
 
2 hours later…
20:48
@Jefffrey also I'm making draw function readonly
in this very moment
 
1 hour later…
21:58
I don't want to start a whole question on Stack, but it is a problem for me. So here goes: fresh Win8.1, fresh latest Haskell Platform, fresh cabal, but when I try to cabal install the hoogle package I get: lpaste.net/118791 Couldn't find the answer on Google :(
22:57
@BartekBanachewicz nope
23:48
@Jefffrey: Concerning your question and your IO remark: well, you could use trace in order to print your current status. But that's not very reliable.

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