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user142019
20:00
@FredOverflow Ye.
I assume that stands for "Yes"?
@RyanTernier: i know a lot of .net devs in vancouver
user142019
Likewise, /^[a-z]+$/ === 'foobar' checks whether 'foobar' "is in" /^[a-z]+$/, which is also true.
user142019
@FredOverflow Ye.
==== is too simple, we should have ⥫⥫⥬⥬
20:01
@Zoidberg Does it check every character in "foobar"?
user142019
@LewsTherin it checks regex match.
@redtuna ಠ_ಠ
user142019
@FredOverflow (=?=) :: a -> a -> Bool
user142019
@FredOverflow (=?=) _ _ = unsafePerformIO randomIO
@Zoidberg I mean it obviously isn't a string compare in that case. So does it check f o o b a r in the regex pattern?
20:02
if (a≣b) // a is really really like b
if (a ~= b) // a is kinda sorta like b
user142019
@LewsTherin see the regex as the set of all strings that match it.
user142019
=== checks whether the right-hand operand is in that set.
@Zoidberg So the regex pattern is a permutation of characters?
if ("foobar" ∊ /^[a-z]+$/) would be kind of cool
20:04
Wtf
user142019
No. xD
It lists all characters a..z right?
user142019
/^[a-z]+$/ is a regex. regex === string checks whether string matches regex.
It is a regex notation, yes. But what does it mean in this case. a..z? a..z and a space?
user142019
You can see a regex as the (possibly infinite) set of all strings that match it. It's obviously not stored in memory like that.
user142019
20:06
/^[a-z]+$/ is a regex that checks whether all characters are in the range a-z, and whether there is at least one such character.
user142019
/^[a-z]+$/ === 'foo' is true; /^[a-z]+$/ === '123' is false; /^[a-z]+$/ === '' is false.
What if you had '124f'
user142019
Won't match.
user142019
1, 2 and 4 aren't in the range a-z.
20:07
But you said at least
> " and whether there is at least one such character."
user142019
and
user142019
Not "or". :P
I reread the statement. It seems contradictory
user142019
The following conditions must hold:
1. All characters must be in the range a-z.
2. There's at least one character.
Let me try to rephrase it for you: (all characters in the input string are in the range a-z) and (the input string has length at least 1)
Zoidberg beat me to it.
20:10
@redtuna And I think condition 1 makes condition 2 redundant
user142019
Integer === 42 also works. :')
user142019
@LewsTherin in the empty string, all characters are in the range a-z.
except that you tripped the "numerical list without specifying whether it's 'and' or 'or' " bugbear of mine.
user142019
A vacuous truth is a truth that is devoid of content because it asserts something about all members of a class that is empty or because it says “If A then B” when in fact A is inherently false. For example, the statement “all cell phones in the room are turned off” may be true simply because there are no cell phones in the room. In this case, the statement “all cell phones in the room are turned on” would also be true, and vacuously so, as would the conjunction of the two: “all cell phones in the room are turned on and turned off”. More formally, a relatively well-defi...
@LewsTherin nope. See "Vacuous truth", as Zoidberg helpfully pulled out for you.
user142019
lol
user142019
yay
continue to make us proud!
+1 imaginary internet point for Zoidberg! (why not?)
@Zoidberg Are you saying "" means everything is in the range a-z?
user142019
20:12
Reputation.
user142019
@LewsTherin of course.
This is a regex thing right?
user142019
All elements in the empty set satisfy all conditions.
2
user142019
See the Wikipedia article I linked.
Right,
So if my brain is an empty set.. which it is.. is it both smart and dumb?
20:15
> elements in the empty set
user142019
If it's an element of the empty set.
no, but its contents are.
user142019
Which it isn't.
Are there elements in an empty set?
user142019
@ShotgunNinja no, that's the point.
user142019
20:15
"All" does not imply "at least one".
@Zoidberg Figured.
@JerryBian yes, its from this github project....
Also, @Zoidberg, welcome to the cool kid's club.
user142019
If there are no people, all people are obese.
OWNER ALL THE REGULARS!
user142019
20:16
They are also all superthin.
knock knock
user142019
Who's there?
Hope
You can split a set S into two subsets S1 and S2. If all elements in S satisfy some predicate p, it follows that all elements in S1 satisfy p, AND all elements in S2 satisfy p. A valid split of S is S1=S and S2=empty. qed (Note how the "zero" of AND is true, not false.)
user142019
20:19
and [] == True
user142019
@FredOverflow Oh, of course. XD
No, or [] == False actually.
any Entity Framework "player" around here?
@Michel Have you been abandoned recently?
user142019
@FredOverflow Is it a monoid law?
20:20
@ShotgunNinja Not really.
user142019
No, it isn't I think.
@Zoidberg I don't know, it's just something that makes sense to my brain :)
@Michel You said you were Hope. The sign clearly says "Abandon Hope all ye who enter here."
@ShotgunNinja It was "Hope to know how to make knock knock jokes"
room topic changed to C#: Abandon Hope all ye who enter here. [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
20:21
Good point =X
user142019
@FredOverflow nor [] == False :)
Anyone know why EF doesn't accept the objContext.Add() order?
@Michel order?
Not in scope: `nor'
Perhaps you meant one of these:
  `or' (imported from Prelude), `not' (imported from Prelude)
20:24
0
Q: Insertion multiple records in the same objectContext

MichelI'm having some trouble when I try to insert data using the same objectContext. My problem is, the order that the Entity read my code is not the order that I "Add" it. Example: EntityAB has EntityA's PK as a FK. 1-N relationship. objContext.DbSet.Add(EntityA); objContext.DbSet.Add(EntityAB...

@FredOverflow lol
user142019
@FredOverflow nor = not . or problemo solvo.
Prelude> let nor = not.or
Prelude> nor []
True
2 mins ago, by Zoidberg
@FredOverflow nor [] == False :)
@Michel Is AB a M:N table?
user142019
@FredOverflow I must be drunk.
user142019
20:26
I obviously meant nor [] == not $ or [].
@Michel: does EntityA have a collection of EntityAB's in your model?
Prelude> not $ or []
True
I think we should stop now :)
user142019
or []         = True
or (True:_)   = True
or (False:xs) = or xs
user142019
@FredOverflow Problem solved. :)
What problem? The zero of or is False, not True.
20:28
@LewsTherin 1-N
class Entity A {
   virtual ICollection<EntityAB> ABs;
}

myEntityA.ABs.Add(myEntityAB);
ctx.SaveChanges();
user142019
@FredOverflow the problem that I was wrong.
user142019
(Hint: it was a joke.)
Prelude> let forgiven = const False
Prelude> all forgiven []
True
What's the use of const ?
20:31
@drch Hmm gonna test it
@LewsTherin const False is a function that always returns false. It's an "abbreviation" (albeit longer) of \_ -> False
Rolls eyes
user142019
@LewsTherin const 42 is a function that always returns 42.
So const is a temp function?
Or creates a
user142019
20:32
It's a function that takes a value and returns a new function.
user142019
public Func<T> Const<T>(T x) {
    return (_) => x;
}
Prelude> let myconst x = \_->x
Prelude> myconst False 42
False
It threw 42 away?
user142019
Yes.
20:33
Yes. And it took so long to compute :)
Dang
all forgiven [] what does that do?
user142019
[] is the empty list.
Where does the lambda apply?
It checks whether all elements inside the empty list satisfy the predicate forgiven.
user142019
Yes.
user142019
20:35
So all forgiven [] == False
@Zoidberg Are you trying to be funny again? :)
user142019
But all forgiven [] == True, too!
user142019
Because all elements are both forgiven and not forgiven. :)
Why does the interpreter not crash? :P
user142019
all forgiven [] == all (not . forgiven) []
20:36
Yes, but that doesn't mean that either of those should return False. Both return True.
Haskell isn't powerful enough to handle vacuous truth huh?
user142019
lol
@LewsTherin Haskell is powerful enough, but Zoidberg is too drunk atm.
Stop drinking ale Zoidberg!
But seriously.. using const is terrible
user142019
20:38
const is useful in some cases.
Sorry I mean naming the method const
user142019
const 42 <$> print "Hello, world!" I don't want no (), I want 42!
user142019
@LewsTherin Why?
It doesn't create a constant
@LewsTherin Since there is no notion of "C++ const" in Haskell, const was free to use for anything else.
20:39
@FredOverflow Can't you bind a variable to a literal directly?
@LewsTherin I creates a constant function.
user142019
@LewsTherin you can but you cannot rebind it.
@LewsTherin What do you mean? All variables are "const" in Haskell.
user142019
Almost everything in Haskell is immutable.
20:40
In other words, there is no such thing as an assignment statement.
user142019
Only STRef, IORef and MVars (maybe) are mutable.
Haskell source files must be littered with variables
x = 1 +2
Can you do x++
of course not
I thought so.
Well, you can, but it means something else entirely :)
user142019
20:42
You cannot.
Prelude> :t ("hello"++)
("hello"++) :: [Char] -> [Char]
user142019
There are no postfix operators in Haskell.
You must be very drunk
user142019
Oh that works but needs parentheses. :)
user142019
20:42
@LewsTherin ++ is an infix operator.
user142019
("hello" ++) is a section; a partially applied infix operator.
Prelude> let foo = ("hello"++)
Prelude> foo "world"
"helloworld"
@Zoidberg section
user142019
Okay, I'm drunk.
@Zoidberg Did they redefine infix operator in Haskell?
user142019
You can create your own infix operators.
20:43
I'd guess it takes about 100 characters to increment a variable in REBEL.
Last time I checked 1 ++ 2 is use of an infix
user142019
++ is an infix operator.
@LewsTherin ++ isn't defined on numbers.
user142019
But 1 ++ 2 is a type error. :)
Then "1" ++ "2"
user142019
20:44
That's ok.
@Zoidberg Maybe it's your hormones. How are things going with the lady?
So it's a concat operator?
@LewsTherin yes
user142019
@FredOverflow haven't spoken to her since weeks. XD
user142019
20:44
++ does list concatenation.
Prelude> [1,2,3]++[4,5,6]
[1,2,3,4,5,6]
Which means "Hello" ++ concats to an empty list
?
user142019
No.
I give you: SQL!!!
REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(ISNULL(CAST(LatestEventData.ReportTitle AS VARCHAR(255)), 'NA'),N'&',N'&amp;'),N'<',N'&lt;'),N'>',N'&gt;'),N'''',N'&#39;'),N'"','&quot;') AS ReportTitle,
@LewsTherin No, ("hello"++) is syntactic sugar for \x -> "hello" ++ x.
user142019
20:45
("Hello" ++) is the same as \x -> "Hello" ++ x.
What is x?
A lambda parameter.
x -> "hello" + x in C# I guess.
user142019
\x -> "Hello" ++ x is like C# (x) => "Hello" + x.
Right..
So, it is an implicit argument?
What is?
20:46
@Zoidberg Are you sure?
user142019
("Hello" ++) is the same as (++) "Hello". :P
user142019
@LewsTherin Yes.
That doesn't seem right :S
user142019
\ ... -> ... is lambda syntax.
user142019
Why not?
20:46
@Zoidberg Do I need the parens if there is only a single parameter?
user142019
@FredOverflow no.
@Zoidberg I would assume "Hello" becomes the argument for x
user142019
No no.
No, "Hello" is the first operand of ++, and x is the second.
user142019
20:47
(42 +) is \x -> 42 + x
user142019
(+ 42) is \x -> x + 42
(+ 42) is just 42, right? :)
user142019
It works for all infix operators.
"Hello" ++ is (x,y) => x + y
user142019
@FredOverflow no.
user142019
20:48
The only prefix operator Haskell has is -.
Oh okay. It seems I've had a beer without noticing as well :)
user142019
@LewsTherin no.
@drch I think this is the solution, but I'm not sure how I can "convert" EntityAB to ICollection<EntityAB>
user142019
(++) is (x, y) => x + y.
20:49
omg
noob me
@Zoidberg Where did y come from?
Haha noob me
user142019
(++) takes two arguments.
So Haskell automatically creates both operands?
@Michel you don't convert it you just model the relationship
20:50
@Zoidberg Why only one +?
Good question..
user142019
@FredOverflow because C# uses that for string concatenation.
@Zoidberg Oh, you're mixing Haskell and C# in the same expression :) But why the double arrow?
Oh yeah.. C#
I thought that was Haskell
user142019
In Haskell, (++) is the same thing as \x y -> x ++ y.
20:51
Isn't that recursive?
No, (++) and ++ are not the same thing at all :) Sections, that is, operators in parens, are special in Haskell.
class Course {
   ICollection<Student> Students { get;set; }
}

var course = db.Courses.First();
var student = new Student() { ... };
course.Students.Add(student);
db.SaveChanges();
@FredOverflow Bloody hell :P
@drch Is because ICollection is coming null.
user142019
@drch Students is private, won't work.
20:52
So what makes Haskell hard?
user142019
Thinking it is hard.
@Zoidberg Why isn't (- 42) a function? There is a space in between :)
user142019
@FredOverflow because unary - is a retarded operator that shouldn't exist.
user142019
We have negate already.
class Course {
   private List<Student> _students;
   public virtual ICollection<Student> Students { get { return _students;} { set _students = value; } }
   public Course() {
      _students = new List<Student>();
   }
}
user142019
20:53
I think you need (+ (-42)). :v
EF will populate that from the db for you
if you create it new, it will initialize to a list from our constructor
@Zoidberg I heard monads or at least math stuff
note the virtual on the property
user142019
@LewsTherin not too difficult if you find the right tutorial.
@Zoidberg There are Monad tutorials?
user142019
20:54
People explain them in a way that makes them look difficult.
Also, for EF, you don't need a backing field. You can simply use
user142019
Fred linked a good article a few days ago. adit.io/posts/…
public virtual ICollection<student> Students { get;set;}
not if you want to create a new one and not get a null ref
new Course().Students.Add(...)
20:56
@FredOverflow @Zoidberg Looks good
@Zoidberg Is the Bill O’Reilly pic new?
user142019
@FredOverflow dunno
new Course {
  Students = new List<Students>()
};
IIRC, a->b means input->output right?
I just learned that CPUs are washed in water after being assembled.
20:56
@Zoidberg My favorite is still "An applicative watching a functor apply a function" :)
@DigitalD yeah you could do that but i like my collections initialized ;)
@LewsTherin a->b is a function from a to b, yes.
@drch you're doing that in the constructor already?
user142019
@FredOverflow No.
@FredOverflow A function from a to b? Dang that's confusing
user142019
20:57
a -> b is the type of a function from a to b.
user142019
:D
Just as confusing
user142019
@LewsTherin Func<a, b> in C#.
That is simple
user142019
20:58
(Action doesn't exist in Haskell.)
Haskell is not where the Action is!
a to b means input to output I take it
user142019
C# would've been simpler if void were a type, I think.
@DigitalD: yeah - its the responsibility of the course to initialize its collection imo
class Course {
   public virtual ICollection<Student> Students { get; set;}
   public Course() {
      Students = new List<Student>();
   }
}
user142019
20:58
@LewsTherin or "argument to return value".
erm, right
@Zoidberg Oh, so you cannot say Func<a, void>?
virtual call in constructor
user142019
@FredOverflow no, that's what Action does.
user142019
Action<A> = (A x) => {}
20:59
Sometimes our company president's ignorance surprises me.
I prefer not to need constructors for my POCO models
@Zoidberg How many arguments can an Action have?
@FredOverflow I think 12

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