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09:00
@BartekBanachewicz I did. shortly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn I missed it. How's the legs?
@Abyx "how did you like it?" was implied, I s'pose.
@BartekBanachewicz Jared Par
@BartekBanachewicz There are some F#anboys in the FP room from time to time.
@BartekBanachewicz It was the best! (<-- obviously not Haskell infected)
09:01
> Sequences are generated on-demand (i.e. are lazily evaluated), while lists and arrays are evaluated eagerly.
it sounds like really well-thought
@FredOverflow See, I didn't want a fanboy opinion.
Makes sense. A bit early to call that "really" well-thought
@BartekBanachewicz Java 8 streams are also lazy.
@BartekBanachewicz Then, look outside the chat rooms :)
@FredOverflow Yay.
@BartekBanachewicz It's an ocaml with access to the .NET library. Rich library is good, and ocaml is meh (no function overloading, etc)
F# has no higher kinded types or whatever they're called, though. Or does it?
09:03
however ocaml can be imperative (mutable arrays) so it's cool
@FredOverflow dunno
@Abyx Google results suggest that F# does not support higher kinds.
@sehe I'm reading other examples too.
@Abyx Overloading in what sense? Haskell doesn't have overloading either.
@Abyx every reasonable FPL can be imperative
let operations = [op1, op2, op3];
sequence operations;
woo.
@BartekBanachewicz overloading like in C++.
> Values and record fields can also be labelled as mutable. For example:
ewww..
@BartekBanachewicz yeah that
09:08
but that's optional and requires a keyword so I could live with it
@Abyx meh, useless.
it really can have imperative code
it looks ok.
like a more down-to-earth Haskell
with .NET on its back.
@BartekBanachewicz not really. e.g. you can't overload operator+ for both ints and strings without overloading
// Create a window and set a few properties
let form = new Form(Visible=true, TopMost=true, Text="Welcome to F#")

// Create a label to show some text in the form
let label =
    let x = 3 + (4 * 5)
    new Label(Text = sprintf "x = %d" x)
@Abyx which is great and should work that way.
next thing you'd like would be "test" + 5
eh, I need silverlight to run it in the browser
well I'm just saying that some dangerous and weird tools might be really useful in some cases.
09:11
oh, but of course.
I am not looking at safe FPLs to use those dangerous tools though. I've had my share in C++.
hmm
let mutable modifiable = "original value"
modifiable <- "new value"
it uses <- for rebinding
which would imply the whole code is implicitly in a Stateful context
@Abyx "dangerous and weird tools might be really useful in some cases" makes me think of a chainsaw with a high intensity laser beam attached to a rocket launcher ^^
> Note: The designers of F# use term "computation expression" and "workflow" because it's less obscure and daunting than the word "monad." The author of this book prefers "monad" to emphasize the parallel between the F# and Haskell
Okey.
I am sold.
For a cent?
user image
5
it has faux-do notation <3
let maybe = new MaybeBuilder()
let sugared =
    maybe {
        let x = 12
        let! y = Some 11
        let! z = Some 30
        return x + y + z
    }
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Of course Haskell has overloading
09:23
via typeclasses.
Xeo
Xeo
That's still overloading
member Bind : M<'a> * ('a -> M<'b>) -> M<'b> hihih
@Xeo that's why I asked in what sense.
Xeo
Xeo
(also, overloaded strings, integer literals, floating literals, record accessors...)
oh okay okay
wait wut is that * in the signature
Xeo
Xeo
Product
09:24
F# isn't curried-by-default? :F
Xeo
Xeo
I think that's just how they have their signatures. a * b * c -> d
Dunno for sure
val map : 'a -> ('a -> 'b) -> 'b
Xeo
Xeo
hm
@Xeo, think of them as tuples and you aren't very far off.
Xeo
Xeo
I know what products in type-algebra are :P
09:26
bah, that was for @BartekBanachewicz :)
You know, this is actually pretty cool.
@S.R.I I also know what product types are. I wasn't sure what it would mean here, but now I know, it makes a lot of sense.
@BartekBanachewicz, nice - I'll shut up on Lounge... :P
@S.R.I why, no :)
ironically, Haskell's on the Ideone's "popular" list, but F# is not :F
welp, neither is Lua.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz I guess it is
incidentally, F# just jumped way up in the Tiobe rating
Xeo
Xeo
09:30
Guess it's just Bind that seems out of place with uncurried parameters
@BartekBanachewicz Because you use it now? ;)
@FredOverflow haha
May'13 - #38. May'14 - #13.
but tiobe ratings are total shit so yeah, that doesn't mean anything
user1804599
@Xeo a * b is a 2-tuple type.
Xeo
Xeo
7 mins ago, by Xeo
I know what products in type-algebra are :P
user1804599
09:33
A function from a to a function from b to a function from c to d is a -> b -> c -> d.
Buffallo buffalo buffalo.
user1804599
F# uses currying except for functions from .NET libraries not written in F#.
@rightfold are they all expressed with * signatures?
user1804599
Because overloading on arity, default arguments and variadic functions.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz I think they're special.
09:34
ooh. oh.
user1804599
But I think so. Lemme check.
user1804599
member Append :
        value:char[] *
        startIndex:int *
        charCount:int -> StringBuilder
user1804599
Yeah it takes a 3-tuple and returns a StringBuilder.
09:36
it looks really good.
user1804599
It's not just a tuple though.
user1804599
Notice the named elements.
user1804599
There's also stuff for variadics 'n shiz.
oh right.
it seems to append those names to signatures automatically
> let f x = x + 1
val f : x:int -> int
user1804599
You can define it as let f (x: int) = x + 1.
user1804599
09:38
let f (s: double<m>) (a: double<m/s^2>) = ...
Yep, you can annotate types. It's not necessary to leave it to the compiler to infer them.
user1804599
If you don't add the data types then they're inferred.
Same as in Haskell
what about IO?
user1804599
F# is impure, so there's no need for an I/O monad.
user1804599
09:40
Impure functions that don't need any arguments typically take unit.
welp, implicit RWST IO ()
user1804599
For as far I've used F# I like it.
user1804599
Especially the significant order of declaration.
user1804599
Makes it difficult to create cyclic dependencies.
You mean let rec being a thing?
user1804599
09:43
No, but let f = g; let g = 2; being an error.
user1804599
rec is silly.
user1804599
We have some software written in F#.
@rightfold uhm.
@rightfold is there :t ?
user1804599
I don't know.
09:46
|> looks neat.
@BartekBanachewicz nope, you can just type the function name and you get back the type definition.
but uh... isn't it just flipped composition or something?
@BartekBanachewicz yes
@S.R.I OIC
val it : ('a -> ('a -> 'b) -> 'b)
Xeo
Xeo
Isn't it application, not composition?
09:47
You also have <| for haskell's (.)
there.
@Xeo yep. That's why I wanted to see the sig.
user1804599
Composition is >> or <<.
Xeo
Xeo
Ye
user1804599
<< is Haskell's ..
it starts to get confusing
though Elm also uses |> and <| right?
09:48
You are not alone. I'm getting confused too. :P
user1804599
I like f >> g because f is applied first. :P
and single : for type signatures
damn these operators.
user1804599
@FredOverflow Scala does ( Í¡° ͜ʖ Í¡°)
user1804599
I also like that use is like a variable rather than an expression that requires an indented body. :v
user1804599
09:51
using (...) { ... } is fugly.
@rightfold so it's like a normal RAII?
member Using : 'a * ('a -> M<'b>) -> M<'b> when 'a :> IDisposable
seems so.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz no, because RAII is implicit.
user1804599
But yeah it extends to the current expression.
well, okey, but it's determined-time finalization
user1804599
let main argv =
    use server = new WebSocketServer (1337, IPAddress.Any)
    server.OnReceive <- OnEventDelegate (fun ctx ->
        try
            ctx.DataFrame.ToString ()
            |> fun json -> JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Item> json
            |> printItem
        with
            | e -> printf "%O\n" e)
    server.Start ()

    while Console.ReadLine () <> "exit" do
        ()

    0
09:54
so apparently it has nearly all haskell features and allows handling mutable data and external resources nicely
but it's impure and has no typeclasses.
@rightfold wtf is e) ?
oh wait
you close that goddamn paren there.
Xeo
Xeo
Wait a second. How do the Workflows actually... work without higher-kinded types?
also I have another exam on 5th
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz olol yeah
user1804599
@Xeo duck typing.
user1804599
There's no Monad type class.
user1804599
09:57
It just checks if the methods are there with the correct data types.
user1804599
You give an object which implements the methods in question.
type MaybeBuilder =
  class
    new : unit -> MaybeBuilder
    member Bind : x:int option * f:(int -> 'a0 option) -> 'a0 option
    member Delay : f:(unit -> 'a0) -> 'a0
    member Return : x:'a0 -> 'a0 option
  end
val maybe : MaybeBuilder
I wanted to get up and go places, but Daisy's infested my lap.
no idea why they called it Some/None instead of Just/Nothing
user1804599
09:59
An if expression without else branch defaults to Zero for the else branch. ( Í¡° ͜ʖ Í¡°)
stop using that face
Some of it, None of it. Just that or Nothing.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz no idea why Haskell called it Just/Nothing instead of Some/None.
user1804599
Also Ocaml uses Some/None so hence.
user1804599
(Who gives a shit really.)
10:00
more things to remember :F
It's just naming fluffery
user1804599
Scala uses Nothing for bottom type. :P
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold So you can't actually have a generic workflow (builder)?
Like, Maybe over any 'a?
user1804599
You can.
user1804599
10:10
But not say generic sequence that works for all monads.
user1804599
Maybe you can do it with hat types, but I'm not sure.
user1804599
Hat types compile like C++ templates, but I don't know if they use duck typing as well.
Types with hats?? I'm sold
Also I'll probably be downgrading the server
user1804599
ideone.com/Vrv0zx nope you cannot.
@rightfold bummer.
user1804599
10:15
Maybe if F# has structural types, but I don't think it does.
user1804599
Wait, it can. Lemme check.
user1804599
So you can with hat types. :P
Is there a maintained Lisp/Scheme for .NET?
user1804599
10:18
Clojure, maybe. Dunno.
I thought Clojure was for JVM
user1804599
Also CLR and JS.
user1804599
Last commit was February 2014.
let mapPlusOne =
    printf "haha fuck you"
    List.map (fun x -> x+1)
well.
user1804599
10:23
Use inline.
user1804599
.NET generics suck.
wut
"only functions might be marked inline"
it is a fucking function
user1804599
Oh lol.
user1804599
It takes no arguments.
the only thing "inline" seems to do is disabling point-free style
user1804599
10:24
I think you're just screwed.
  mapPlusOne [1..10]
haha fuck you
val inline mapPlusOne : xs:int list -> int list
val it : int list = [2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11]
str.replace(0, 2, "");
this is apparently giving me compiler errors
I can't help but notice that nobody wants to give anything for the server :<
6
how much is it?
50€
10:28
oh
I'm changing flats this month, so it's a bit of a strain
that's a lot in USD.
my finances are extremally crappy considering unconference
$65 or so
I can't even repro my error.
what a pain
error: no matching function for call to 'std::basic_string<char>::replace(int, int, const char [1]) const'
                 str.replace(0, 2, "");
                                     ^
Oh I see now.
why would anyone return const strings from a function?
Xeo
Xeo
because stupid
10:33
const string        string(const codecvt_type& cvt=codecvt()) const;   // native format
@Rapptz one of my colleagues likes such code. const string f()
damn it boost
const by value?
I trusted you
cast that away
show them the middle finger
10:34
lolconst
says it prevents writing f() = "abc". meh
yeah, that's sad.
ref-qualifiers do that in C++11
C++ is all about mutability
string f () &; ?
10:35
no
Why would you care about preventing that in the first place
string& operator=(string other) &;.
I used auto&& str = p.string(); and auto&& turned into const std::string&
:(
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Because int f(); f() = 5 also doesn't work!!
10:36
I wanted to write a genetic algorithm but learned that Haskell is immutable.
Uh what does that have to do with anything
@DeadMG I'd rather prefer good old void op=(T).
@Abyx but you can't a = b = c = d then
butt
@BartekBanachewicz Oh no
@CatPlusPlus see above
user3010322
10:37
Anyone here good with make?
Nobody anywhere is good with make
user3010322
Well, that's good to know.
@ThePhD use cmake to generate makefiles
gl with make
Use CMake to generate ninja files
Don't use make
user3010322
10:38
CMake is also evil, so...
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz ideone.com/55LEoU :P
yeah, ninja ftw
make is broken mostly
And stupid
And annoying
user3010322
ninja's syntax is worse.
16
A: Why does Lua have no "continue" statement?

catwellIn Lua 5.2 the best workaround is to use goto: -- prints odd numbers in [|1,10|] for i=1,10 do if i % 2 == 0 then goto continue end print(i) ::continue:: end This is supported in LuaJIT since version 2.0.1

10:39
@CatPlusPlus I suddenly what because plonk
RIP
Syntax is... not relevant?
@ThePhD but you write it. you shouldn't even read'em
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD It's not to be hand-written, so whatever.
Esp that you don't write ninja descriptors
user1804599
@Rapptz lol
I'd rather invoke the compiler manually than use make
@rightfold you really have to do this type jiggery? implicitly[Numeric[T]].fromInt(1) ?
user1804599
clang++ src/**/*.cpp ftw.
> Our main concern with "continue" is that there are several other control structures that (in our view) are more or less as important as "continue" and may even replace it. (E.g., break with labels [as in Java] or even a more generic goto.) "continue" does not seem more special than other control-structure mechanisms, except that it is present in more languages. (Perl actually has two "continue" statements, "next" and "redo". Both are useful.)
user1804599
10:40
@S.R.I integer literals are not polymorphic.
user3010322
@Xeo Obviously not, but I don't have the option of doing things like recursing a directory to get files. They all have to be stamped out manually.
Isn't it that [T] is Numeric anyway so, +1 should work?
that's retarded
@rightfold that typeclass thing said they provide you with 5G
@ThePhD Because you generate it
10:41
Woot. Quality time with my 6-y/o :) paste.ubuntu.com/7572155
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus ... With CMake. Back to eating the evil cake.
ninja is a build engine, not a build system
Can you gues what it does? He actually had the patience to "do this together"
@Rapptz a bit annoying, orite
@ThePhD With anything
10:41
@rightfold, nope - [T] is typebound to Numeric. So, if you do (+1) it gets boxed to whatever type T is bound to within Numeric?
@sehe looks like hangman
You can write 10 line Python script that recurses through your thing and generates rules
@sehe btw no raw string literals = fail.
@BartekBanachewicz trololololololololololololol
no really. why doesn't it have them
10:42
Who cares
@BartekBanachewicz who cares? This is C++ anyway.
3
user1804599
@S.R.I no.
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Ew using namespace std; :P
can't help but notice this code is better than most C++ on Stack Overflow
IOW a typical SO C++ question is worse than if a 6yo wrote it
10:44
> HIEPERDEPIEP!
Dutch for HERP DERP?
user1804599
Hieperdepiep hoera!
user3010322
Anyone see anything immediately wrong with this makefile?
user1804599
10:45
It's a makefile.
user3010322
Thanks, Sherlock. :v
ITT ThePhd's secret plan for a custom build system ends on writing a makefile
Xeo
Xeo
I wonder why people always use if (bla.find(k) == bla.end()) for associative containers, instead of if (bla.count(k) == 0)
@rightfold subtle :D
@ThePhD that's what's wrong.
10:46
@Xeo I use the latter.
I use the latex
@ThePhD What doesn't work?
user1804599
@Xeo I don't like count for this ewrgh.
Also you're using arcane Make features that nobody really understands
user1804599
I don't want to know how many elements there are. I want to know if there is one.
user3010322
10:46
Oh.
user3010322
Goodie.
@CatPlusPlus Linus does.
Nothing really arcane (?)
Seriously, write a ninja generator
Looks like regular GNU Make to me.
10:47
You really don't need to use CMake
Yes that's what I said
> regular
> GNU Make
pick one
your nested patsubst is silly
user1804599
Lounge<C++> regular.
@Xeo Because one of them is the Holy Iterators, generic solution supreme, and the other is an integer comparison.
@Xeo One time I've had my existing code contracted to the first one from auto it = bla.find(k); if(it == end).
10:47
@DeadMG NO INTEGER COMPARISONS ON MY LAND
user3010322
I am writing a custom ninja generator. In the meantime, I need something that just compiles my goddamn code.
user1804599
I use if k in bla:.
your -include statement is silly
@ThePhD why would you need it if you're writing a custom generator at this moment?
you're not really doing much for dependency management
scratch that :v
you're doing -MMD
user3010322
10:49
@BartekBanachewicz Because it's not just a slap-stick generator that will break when I move some files around? :v
type PowerUp =
| FireFlower
| Mushroom of MushroomColor
| Star of int
how do I more parameters? @rightfold
Speaking of ninja generators, finally got mine working :v
Racist type
what's racist again?
It's a joke
10:50
oh right color
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Wild guess: Bla of A * B?
Yeah you need tuples
user3010322
No rule to make target all...
user3010322
10:50
Mm.
so type constructors are not curried? :F
OCaml is weird
@CatPlusPlus Great, club F# into that league.
It clubbed itself there :v
Like a masochistic seal
@S.R.I :lol:
user3010322
10:54
No rule to make target all again...
user3010322
Eh.
Did you write the rule to make all?
user3010322
What does that look like, again?
user3010322
all: ( stuff ) ?
all:
    ...
10:54
Uh, dunno, all: whatever targets you want
all: $(TARGET)$(TARGETEXT)
this doesn't exist
@ThePhD One rule to make them all
type Bla = Bla of int * int
let f x = match x with
    | (Bla (a, b)) -> a + b
yeah, that works. A bit suck, but mild.
user3010322
@Rapptz So I add $(TARGET)$(TARGETEXT): $(SRC_FILES), right?
user3010322
And that should build everything?
why src files
that's already in targets
all: main
10:58
You need a dependency between the executable and the sources
user3010322
I added that.
user3010322
I think.
main.exe: main.cpp
main: main.exe
all: main
wasn't that like that?
What's the intermediate main for
could need some internal libs for example
hm, or maybe on second thoughts
yes, fuck that
10:59
Uh

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