6.2.11 released! | pugs.blogs.com | pugscode.org | pugs.kwiki.org | paste: sial.org/pbot/perl6 Set by audreyt on 1 February 2006. |
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putter | ?eval 3 | 00:00 | |
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evalbot_8945 | 3 | 00:00 | |
putter | ?eval "a" ~~ /a/ | ||
evalbot_8945 | Error: cannot cast from VUndef to Pugs.AST.Internals.VCode (VCode) | ||
putter | "a" ~~ rx:p5/a/ | 00:01 | |
?eval "a" ~~ rx:p5/a/ | |||
rafl | putter++ | ||
evalbot_8945 | pugs: *** cannot cast from VUndef to Handle (VHandle) at <prelude> line 200, column 24-45 <prelude> line 224, column 13-25 <prelude> line 278, column 5-55 <prelude> line 62, column 30-59 | ||
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putter | stevan: err, how can t/pil/containers be failing when t/pil/metamodel is succeeding if the only thing going into containers is stuff needed to bootstrap the metamodel? what am i missing? | 00:24 | |
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svnbot6 | r8946 | putter++ | misc/Grammars/Perl6.pm and Perl6.t: renamed rules <ident> and <name>, which were failing to override similarly named PGE rules. | 01:08 | |
r8946 | putter++ | Perl6.t now passes! Time for someone to restart development of this perl6 Grammar for perl6. | |||
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putter | qtplatypus: re "More work on self hosting grammar. However this will go on hold untill PGE is more mature.", it is, it is! :) | 01:22 | |
svnbot6 | r8947 | putter++ | Perl6 grammar moved to new ext/Perl6-Grammar/. | ||
r8947 | putter++ | qtplatypus++ Aankhen++ | |||
putter | qtplatypus++ | ||
buu | How the hell do you make the evalbot join things? | 01:57 | |
evalbot_8945: ?join #perl | |||
Garh. | |||
?join #perl | 01:58 | ||
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evalbot_8947 | you should only do ?join in a private message so other bots don't accidentally come. | 01:58 | |
buu | I DID FUCKING PRIVATE MESSAGE YOU, GODDAMN DUMB ASS BOT. | ||
?eval 1 | 02:00 | ||
evalbot_8947 | 1 | ||
Daveman | haha | 02:03 | |
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buu | irssi's nickcomplete was fucking up | 02:19 | |
It managed to nick complete for users that didn't exist. | |||
Daveman | awesome | ||
putter | buu: all I did was /msg evalbot_8947 ?j o i n #mumble | 02:22 | |
buu | Yeah, I figured that out, thanks. | ||
Irssi was screwing it. | |||
putter | k | 02:23 | |
buu | I wonder if svnbot6 got fixed. | ||
putter | Commit something and see :) | 02:24 | |
buu | I have no commit l33tness. | ||
Oh well, we'll find out when it starts spamming #perl | 02:25 | ||
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Alias_ | Who was I supposed to talk to about 6PAN again? | 02:26 | |
Alias_ just took a look at the new 6PAN code in the release and was a little shocked :) | |||
buu | So much for feather | 02:27 | |
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buu | Alias_: What was shocking about it? | 02:27 | |
Alias_ | First, that any code existed yet at all :) | ||
buu | Heh | 02:28 | |
Alias_ | When the design hadn't even really been finalised I though | ||
thought | |||
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Alias_ | Second that the index system appears very crube and it's based on YAML if I read it right | 02:29 | |
I wanted to find out if that's just shim code or meant to be the basis of something more serious | |||
rafl | Alias_: Hello | ||
Alias_ | hi! | ||
rafl | Alias_: You had some ideas about the sixpan repo layout? | ||
Alias_ | And various other bits | 02:30 | |
Since I've been using JSAN to test out ideas I had for CPAN/6PAN concepts | |||
rafl | I'd be happy about a mail from you to [email@hidden.address] | ||
I'm just too tired to discuss that now. | 02:31 | ||
Alias_ | Is this YAML code I see just something to get started ? | ||
sure, I have to run anyway | |||
Gotta get the car home | |||
Just wanted to see if we could set up a time for later | |||
Find out when you'd be around | |||
rafl | I'll be around tomorrow from 4 or 5pm CET. | 02:32 | |
Alias_ | err... what's that in GMT? | ||
or a city name | 02:33 | ||
rhesa | 3 to 4 pm GMT | ||
Alias_ | oooh... Central European Time? | ||
rafl | Right. GMT+1 currently. | ||
Alias_ | ok | ||
Had NFI what it was for a minute there | 02:34 | ||
hmm... that's 2-3am here | |||
erk | |||
ok | |||
rafl | Well. We can also meet later. | 02:35 | |
Alias_ | no, that should be fine | ||
rafl | 10pm to 2 am CET is also fine with me. | ||
Alias_ | I don't have much of a body clock left, and there's time for me to sleep beforehand | ||
rafl | However you like. I'll be there. | ||
Alias_ | 4-5 CET is fine | 02:36 | |
rafl | Great. | ||
Alias_ | gotta run, see you then | 02:38 | |
rafl | Bye | ||
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Alias_ ponders Test::Forkable | 06:17 | ||
stennie ponders Test::Spoonable | 06:19 | ||
Alias_ | eep | ||
SamB | Test::Sporkable! | 06:21 | |
Alias_ shudders | |||
dduncan | spoooooooonnnnn! | 06:22 | |
Alias_ | I guess the first step would be to merge two groups of TAP output togethetr | 06:23 | |
And after that, add some ways to trigger off other processes that will write specific files | 06:24 | ||
And at the end of the main test, grab the files they wrote and tack it onto the end of your test output | |||
Which is more Test::Parallel than Test::Forkable, because forking is one specific case | |||
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Alias_ | A multiplexer is something that merges a whole bunch of seperate things and presents them as a single thing right? | 06:52 | |
dduncan | more or less, yes | 06:57 | |
an example is a large scale search engine | 06:58 | ||
Alias_ | So Test::Multiplexer would be something that let you spin off processes or scripts in other languages or whatever, and then collect up all the bits of test output from all of them and present it as a single test script. Sound correct? | ||
dduncan | I would say so | ||
a multiplexer is like taking multiple things and treating them like a single thing | |||
Alias_ | So you could test the interaction between a client and server, with the output for BOTH coming out of the same file | ||
yeah, right | |||
I think Test::Multiplexer is the best name for this thing | |||
thanks | |||
dduncan | for example, say you have a database that a million people are using at once, and no one piece of hardware can handle that | 06:59 | |
you could have copies of it on many computers | |||
Alias_ | right | ||
presented through a round-robin or something | |||
dduncan | when someone wants to read, their request is dispatched to one | ||
when someone wants to write, their write is sent to all of them | |||
Alias_ | I was thinking about the CPAN FTP Multiplexer | ||
dduncan | cpan has a hundred mirror sites | 07:00 | |
wolverian | video.google.com/videoplay?docid=75...7821122670 this is just too funny. and sad. | ||
dduncan | you could treat the set like one; it doesn't matter which server you talk to, and some smart front-end software could hide the multiplicity | ||
alternately | |||
Alias_ | dduncan: It does | ||
dduncan | sort of as you said ... | ||
each member of a group doesn't have to be the same; they can be complimentary | 07:01 | ||
you could, say have half of a database on one, and half on another | |||
you send a request, and it pulls leads from both and combines them | |||
Alias_ | You know what I really need? I want the clipboard between my desktop (this computer) (which doesn't have sound) to be shared with my laptop (which I play music on) | ||
dduncan | from your point of view, its just one single larger thing | ||
Alias_ | dduncan: Yep. Cool. Test::Multiplexer is in production | ||
dduncan | fyi, there's also a piece of hardware called a multiplexer for signal processing | 07:02 | |
maybe look that up | |||
that could be where the term originalted, and it was applied to software later | |||
Alias_ | yeah, I had though that "multiplexer" was a generic enough term to be manipulated into the Test::Multiplexer usage | ||
dduncan | yes | 07:03 | |
Alias_ | IT started in hardware, and got adopted by enough other places, that I could too | ||
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Alias_ | hoya | 07:33 | |
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clkao | summon audreyt | 07:45 | |
Alias_ | audreyt appears before in a bright flash and a huge cloud of smoke. She utters a girlish giggle at the pretentiousness of it all | 07:49 | |
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lypanov | dduncan: thanks for the summary yesterday! | 09:27 | |
dduncan | ah, boing boing | ||
you're welcome | |||
lypanov | dduncan: sorry about lack of reply, was stolen by $job :P | ||
dduncan | assuming it was you I was talking to about my database stuff, you should look on various Perl mailing lists now where I posted today | 09:28 | |
more good stuff there ... and a CPAN release | 09:29 | ||
lypanov grins | |||
yeah. it was db stuff | |||
thanks :) shall do :) | |||
dduncan | the email contains a lot of info that isn't yet on cpan | ||
lypanov | and yeah, i'm the moron on lypanov.net | ||
dduncan | right now I'm trying to contact Chris Date and Fabian Pascal for the first time, to tell them about my project and suggest they speak or do tutorials at OSCON 2006 | ||
re the latter, deadline for proposals is less than 2 weeks away | 09:30 | ||
lypanov wishes you/them luck | |||
dduncan | I may even propose a talk on Rosetta (45 minute variety) | ||
but I'm going to work on beefing up what's coded or on cpan first | |||
Alias_ | And have a backend? | 09:31 | |
dduncan | that would be nice, yes | ||
Alias_ is still hoping to see how it works in practice | |||
dduncan | what I have to do breaks down to this: | ||
Alias_ | (having an interest in this area) | ||
dduncan | 1. Finish reading "Database in Depth" | ||
lypanov | dduncan: which ml's? i'm on none and am not sure where to begin | ||
dduncan | 2. flesh out or rewrite Language.pod | ||
3. put some more basic code in Rosetta.pm and Model.pm | 09:32 | ||
3. write a basic Native.pm | |||
which mls: dbi-users, dbi-announce, poop-group, dbix-class, rose-db | |||
the others I posted to are local to my area | |||
the second hasn't propagated yet | 09:33 | ||
the first is archived at nntp.perl.org | |||
the Native.pm is the first backend | |||
Alias_ | You are writing a database? :) | ||
You know people have done that already right? | |||
dduncan | yes, hundreds of them | ||
but mine is closest to Tutorial D, and only maybe 3-4 of those exist | 09:34 | ||
and none of those are big players | |||
so in this respect, I'd say I'm getting into a rather unsaturated area | 09:35 | ||
Alias_ , that said, mine is a *federated* database | |||
Alias_ | uuum... ok, I need to read more books | 09:36 | |
dduncan | while Native.pm is standalone, for testing purposes, other backends will be made that layer on top of established products | ||
Alias_ | what is a federated database? | ||
dduncan | federated is another word for virtual | ||
Alias_ | in database speak? | ||
dduncan | its like an alternate API wrapper | ||
put another way | 09:37 | ||
Rosetta is a virtual machine | |||
like Parrot but specializing in databases | |||
or maybe its more like Pugs | |||
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dduncan | because it has multiple backends ... akin to Pugs targeting Parrot, javascript, perl 5, etc | 09:38 | |
Rosetta targets the perl native Native.pm and Genezzo, and SQLite, and Oracle, and whatever | |||
the Rosetta native query language, IRL, is like perl 6 in that respect | |||
Alias_, does that explain anything? | |||
Alias_ | more or less | 09:39 | |
How do you handle emulation of unimplemented features | |||
For example, does Rosetta support Sequences? | |||
dduncan | in this case, the native language should be more of a joy to use than what its layerd ontop of | ||
yes | |||
Rosetta tries to link to the backends own implementations if it can, leveraging those, or emulating features otherwise | |||
Alias_ | I don't mean auto_increment, I mean sequences... (to check) | 09:40 | |
dduncan | Rosetta's support specifies named sequences as distinct schema objects | ||
Alias_ | That could be a problem | ||
You can't implement sequences in SQLite | |||
or rather, you can't emulate sequences in SQLite | |||
dduncan | the SQL standard and various databases like Oracle do that | 09:41 | |
yes I can | |||
Alias_ | or rather, you can't use both sequences and transactions in SQLite | ||
And if you know how, I'd like to know how | |||
dduncan | I just declare a table storing the current value of the sequence | ||
lypanov | sequences can't have gaps? | ||
dduncan | and use triggers or whatever to read or update it | ||
Alias_ | ok, and then... | ||
dduncan | that's a simplification | ||
Alias_ | lypanov: sequences are only required to be unique | ||
dduncan | yes | 09:42 | |
lypanov | Alias_: then i don't see the issue with seqs and transactions? | ||
Alias_ | lypanov: Their prime responsibility is to NEVER issue the same number twice | ||
dduncan | yes | ||
Alias_ | ok, in SQLite a transaction is a file lock | ||
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lypanov | Alias_: ewww | 09:42 | |
Alias_ | And sequences MUST exist outside of transactions | ||
dduncan | that's a large part of what makes it 'lite' | ||
Alias_ | Numbers issues by a sequence must never be "rolled back" | ||
lypanov | so either a) do transactions in rosetta, or b) don't allow them in such a "lite" scenario | 09:43 | |
Alias_ | And so in order to change a value in the sequence table, you need to wait for any existing transaction to end | ||
dduncan | there is also a middle ground | ||
Alias_ | But what happens if you need a sequence value inside a transaction | ||
lypanov | b0rk horribly at runtime? ;) | ||
Alias_ | worse | ||
dduncan | I should point out that Rosetta doesn't promise support for any particular feature, but that only if the feature exists, it provides a consistent way to access it | ||
Alias_ | You lock, dead | ||
dduncan: ah, ok | 09:44 | ||
Because I solved the problem for Mysql | |||
See DBIx::MySQLSequence | |||
dduncan | the Rosetta API includes a means for a backend to declare support from a pre-declared list of features | ||
Alias_ | Fully atomic sequences without needing a transaction | ||
dduncan | an application can query this to see if the backend declares the features it needs, and so can programatically determine if a backend is suitable for it | ||
Alias_ | ok | 09:45 | |
Now it makes sense | |||
dduncan | this feature doesn't care if the Rosetta engine emulates the feature or the product natively does it, only that the application can use it | ||
Alias_ | But just so you know, you won't be able to | ||
:) | |||
well, if you emulate sequences in Rosetta, you can't really do anything concurrent | |||
You are stuck in the same interpreter | |||
dduncan | if a feature can't be made to work reliably, then the engine declares it does not support it | 09:46 | |
Alias_ | Anyways, lets not talk aimlessly :) | ||
yep, get that | |||
dduncan | like the people working on perl 6, I'm making a clear distinction between interface and implementation | ||
the main thing I'm working on is an interface declaration | |||
many third parties, or myself, can make complementing or competing backends to satisfy it | 09:47 | ||
Alias_ nods | |||
dduncan | in that respect, it is like DBi and its drivers, but that Rosetta is higher abstraction | ||
Alias_ | I guess it's just a bit like Stem (uri's thing) for me | ||
dduncan | or perl 6 and the pugs backends | ||
Alias_ | It sounds like a good idea, but I've never been able to actually use it | ||
Or see it used | |||
dduncan | in my case, I've been thinking about these issues for years, and I think I have something that will solve peoples problems and/or do the work they need it to do | 09:48 | |
Alias_ | It's just that I see the components go by on CPAN, and yet it can't solve problems yet :) | ||
... for years | 09:49 | ||
I'd like to see something written in it | |||
lypanov | Stem? | ||
Alias_ | Say, a basic wiki | ||
lypanov: stemsystems.com | |||
dduncan | from my point of view, there's nothing on CPAN now which is anything close to what I'm doing | ||
Alias_ | lypanov: It's a messaging toolkit. It sounds really interesting, but nobody has ever used it other than uri | ||
dduncan: or pugs | |||
dduncan | and that's one reason I'm doing my own thing rather than patching an existing project | 09:50 | |
"not just another dbi wrapper" and all that | |||
yes, there's nothing like pugs out there either | |||
Alias_ | buut, you can write a program using pugs | ||
We have bots here that use pugs | |||
And I'd REALLY love to see something actually writting using Rosetta | |||
written | 09:51 | ||
dduncan | yes, pugs is closer to actually useable | ||
as would I | |||
well, once I do those 4 steps mentioned above, we should get something written using it | |||
I plan to follow pugs development style, grow vertical, then horizontal | |||
Alias_ | hmm? | 09:52 | |
dduncan | vertical means that *something* works early on, even if it isn't much | ||
Alias_ | right | ||
Which was my main point I guess | |||
dduncan | horizontal first means you can define a huge api and none of it works | ||
lypanov | the last sweetie in mah megamix is a parrot | ||
what does that mean? | |||
Alias_ | I've watched _something_ growing for like a year, and nothing exists | ||
it feels horozontal | |||
dduncan | going horizontal first was one of the mistakes I made in Rosetta prior to its rewrite | ||
lypanov | vertical is the way i have done rubydium also | 09:53 | |
Alias_ | Well, the acid test is a wiki | ||
dduncan | that's why it was never useable despite 3 years or releases | ||
Alias_ | dduncan: Someone at YAPC::AU wrote a wiki in shell live on stage. Write a Rosetta wiki and let me know when it's up :) | ||
lypanov agrees that a wiki is a good test of a db | 09:54 | ||
s/db/& abstraction/ | |||
dduncan | Rosetta doesn't have user or network I/O as part of its api, so it can't do that itself | ||
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dduncan | its api only handles data representation and storage issues | 09:54 | |
its a library, essentially | 09:55 | ||
however, one of the first things I plan to have ported to it is Bricolage and/or Catalyst, so you could have your wiki then | 09:56 | ||
or someone could write a trivial one from scratch that uses it | |||
essentially, the problem domain of Rosetta is like that of DBI, which doesn't do user I/O and stuff | 09:57 | ||
Alias_ | that's cool, but I found writing PPI that you can't just build something | ||
You have to write at least some things that use your thing | |||
So people can see it being used | |||
dduncan | yes, of course | ||
Alias_ | So I have Perl::MinimumVersion and such | ||
dduncan | I already have one planned | ||
Alias_ | Mainly so others can read the source of it | ||
dduncan | I may have mentioned here that I was making a consumer database app | 09:58 | |
that would be my own personal thing that uses Rosetta | |||
Alias_ | as long as it's something that DOES something people find interesting, and they can download it and try it | ||
Look what Rails has done for Ruby | |||
dduncan | however, it is likely that a number of existing perl apps will get ported to it first | ||
Alias_ | It shows it at it's best | 09:59 | |
just as Perl::MinimumVersion shows PPI at it's best | |||
It does something you couldn't do before | |||
or does something much better | |||
You do DDL right? | |||
dduncan | by porting a relatively small number of things, various popular dbi wrappers, all of the people that were using them are then using rosetta ... fast track to a user base | ||
Alias_ | schema creation and such? | ||
dduncan | yes, it does DDL | 10:00 | |
Alias_ | right, so make a database migration tool :) | ||
dduncan | in fact, with certain backends like Native and SQLite, it can even create the whole database | ||
Alias_ | sure, I do the same with my stuff | ||
dduncan | migration tools are on the list | ||
Alias_ | But yours is more pure-database, while mine limits itself to the subset that fits into entity-relationship concepts | ||
Mines more an object-relational system that doesn't think in database terms | 10:01 | ||
dduncan | are you talking about PPI? | ||
Alias_ | no, AppSpace | ||
phase-n.com/technology/index.html | |||
dduncan | I like the idea of do one thing and do it well ... componentization | ||
so I just focus on database and do better than anyone | |||
in particular, I exclude orm and obj-rel stuff | 10:02 | ||
since lots of people are doing that to meet more specialized needs than I am | |||
Alias_ | appspace is like 3 things working well, with a 4th thing working well writing the code that uses the 3 things :) | ||
dduncan | and so I help the makers of those tools | ||
Alias_ | eventually at least :) | ||
Like I said, I like the idea but I need to see something written with it | 10:03 | ||
So give me a yell when there's something I can demo will you? | |||
dduncan | another goal I have is to get paid to write perl ... that's never happened yet | ||
your last line | |||
can you clarify that statement? | 10:04 | ||
do you mean you want me to ask you to demo appspace? | |||
Alias_ | When you have written a wiki, or a tool, or SOMETHING that uses Rosetta in a practical way, let me know | ||
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Alias_ | something of yours that I can look at a demonstration model of | 10:04 | |
dduncan | I mis-read your comment | ||
Alias_ | yeah, sorry | ||
demo the other way around :) | |||
something I can omed | 10:05 | ||
dduncan | when you say "something I can demo" | ||
Alias_ | or is that omeb | ||
dduncan | your meaning is more like "something you can demo to me" | ||
and definitely | |||
Alias_ | thanks | ||
later | |||
dduncan | I realize fully that ... | ||
Alias_ has to go make PITA work | 10:06 | ||
So we can have a parrot smoker | |||
dduncan | the current lack of having anything actually run with Rosetta is the main reason that it's not taking off yet | ||
Alias_ | just like Stem | ||
dduncan | I figure I just need that, and boom, people will come and stuff will happen | ||
Alias_ | yep | ||
me included | |||
same happened with PPI | 10:07 | ||
dduncan | so I'm now focusing on getting there | ||
Alias_ | not much noise until I said "it's done, here's toys" | ||
And now we have Perl::Critic and a number of other things | |||
dduncan | in my opinion, the task ahead of me is considerably simpler than your task with PPI was | ||
since database languages are much simpler than Perl | 10:08 | ||
Alias_ | PPI wasn't hard | ||
It just required a certain leap of understanding | |||
There's maybe 20 people that could rewrite it now in a month | |||
once they get the critical bit | |||
dduncan | I recall someone high up (maybe Larry?) saying that PPI doesn't really understand the meaning of perl code, just syntax structural issues, so its incapable of some things | 10:09 | |
Its like its just a lexer | |||
Alias_ | more or less | 10:10 | |
It's a document parser | |||
But then Perl doesn't understand the syntax of a Perl file either | |||
Or rather, perl only understands code, PPI only understands documents | |||
dduncan | whereas, what Rosetta does is like being able to take one instruction and write a different one that does the same thing but looks non-trivially different | ||
Alias_ | And that's the leap in understanding | ||
Once you "get" that, the rest was (mostly) a SMOP | 10:11 | ||
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Alias_ | yep, I know | 10:11 | |
Anyways, I have to go make PITA work | |||
dduncan | anyway, go ahead with what you ahve to do | ||
Alias_ | You are distracting me :) | ||
Alias_ has too much of an interest in new database abstractions | 10:12 | ||
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lypanov | Alias_: thats not a bad thing you realize ;) | 10:40 | |
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svnbot6 | r8948 | scook0++ | * Minor updates to docs/getting_started | 13:11 | |
r8948 | scook0++ | * Change release-date's year from 2005 to 2006 | |||
r8948 | scook0++ | (as reported by Uri Guttman) | |||
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nothingmuch | audreyt: ping | 14:37 | |
wolverian | yay, quasiquoting | 14:44 | |
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putter | Alias_: or perhaps Test::Multiplex? verb form | 16:39 | |
or not. it doesn't look like multiplex as a verb has made it out of computing. ah well. | 16:40 | ||
www.onelook.com/ ++ | 16:41 | ||
cognominal | thx putter, nice resource | 16:48 | |
putter | :) WordNet in particular is nifty. | 17:00 | |
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cognominal | I am subscribed to merriam-webster word of the day. That improves my vocabulary, not my grammar though | 17:04 | |
putter | lol | 17:05 | |
cognominal | but it so advanced, it hardly usable in every conversation. If I say that my cathexis (yesterday word) would be moving from Perl to Ruby, if not for Perl6, I guess few native anglophone would understand me | 17:07 | |
s/hardly/is hardly/ | |||
putter tries to picture "grammar construct of the day". "sentence to proof read of the day"? each day, you get a sentence or paragraph, and have to (web interface) do proof reading markup on it. Get to see what you missed, or unnecessarily changed. Perhaps a score. | |||
or just a "today you get the puzzle", tomorrow (or by clicking) you get the answer, and skip the nontrivial automation stuff. | 17:08 | ||
putter goes to look up cathexis... | 17:09 | ||
wolverian | stevan++ # Class::MOP | 17:10 | |
putter goes to look up Class::MOP... ;) | 17:11 | ||
stevan | wolverian: thanks :) | ||
it has the double benefit of being useful for current $work as well | |||
theorbtwo | putter: scoring would be difficult; there's more then one way to do it. | 17:12 | |
wolverian | stevan, s/it's/its/ in DESCRIPTION, and I think the , in "can do, is" is superfluous. | 17:13 | |
oh, and if you don't want language bug reports, please say so :) | |||
stevan | wolverian: no please,.. my spelling/grammer is horrid | 17:14 | |
stevan is a product of the american public school system | |||
although I do know where Iraq is,.. so I am on the upper part of the curve there ;) | |||
wolverian is a product of the finnish public school system.. unfinished though. | |||
wolverian is under construction | 17:15 | ||
Kattana escaped the system. | |||
cognominal | I had Englishat school but I really learnt on early SunOS which vanilla BSD of the time | ||
putter | stevan: re CLOS, my understanding is there is a real tension between CLOS features and performance, and thus that few if any implementations are actually fully conformant. | ||
cognominal | s/which/which was/ | 17:16 | |
stevan | putter: I think Allegro's version is fairly complete,.. and fast as well | ||
but you are correct otherwise | |||
cognominal | So I had enjoyed jewels long remove from Sun docs lke: you can tune a fs but you can't tuna fish | ||
stevan | however, CLOS is designed to have a MOP, and so performance/optimizations are addressed with that in mind | ||
whereas Java is not, and so performance suffers | 17:17 | ||
wolverian | cognominal, haha. | ||
I laughed out loud :) | |||
cognominal | the best puns are the bad ones | ||
stevan | putter: AMOP details where performance can be gained through memoization and such, it also seems that the real big performacne drain is in generic functions, and AMOP details possible optimizations for that too | 17:19 | |
hopefully Perl 6's multi-methods wont suffer the same fate | |||
stevan breaks for lunch & | |||
wolverian | stevan, s/it's/its/ under "meta" too | 17:21 | |
putter | stevan: does superclass's @ISA setting try to deal with perlbug's "yeah, you've changed @ISA, but too late, I've cached it, so I don't really care"? | ||
wolverian | oh no, recommending UNIVERSAL::can :) | 17:23 | |
putter | :) | ||
wolverian | I guess anyone who reads that far is sufficiently informed about what it really means. | ||
but still. | |||
why do these method names remind me of lisp... | 17:24 | ||
putter pictures a combination of Class::MOP and PPI... | 17:25 | ||
PERL6-IRC:WHY-DO-THESE-REMIND-YOU-OF-LISP | 17:26 | ||
dont know | |||
wolverian | hmm.. | 17:27 | |
yes, that should be useful for refactoring, that is, writing one. | |||
then again, perl6 supports this all natively! so! what are we waiting for! oh.. wait.. | |||
wolverian is too tired | 17:28 | ||
putter | lol | ||
putter considers trying to break PGE by pouring Parse.hs into Perl6::Grammar.pm | 17:29 | ||
wolverian | there's a Perl6::Grammar? | ||
I'm so out of it.. | 17:30 | ||
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putter | as of yesterday. qtplatypus's old misc/Grammars/Perl6.pl turned out to be almost working, and a bit of fiddling let it pass it's Perl6.t test-driven-development++ so now its ext/Perl6-Grammar | 17:31 | |
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wolverian | heh, reverse those it's/its.. sorry :) | 17:32 | |
thanks! I'll take a look | 17:33 | ||
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japhy | hey, I've come up with another optimization the regex engine should make, and I figure you guys would like to be aware of it as well | 17:33 | |
putter | still pretty basic. and the test coverage of it's code is incomplete (writing tests when they all fail not being motivating). but, it's a start. | ||
japhy: do tell | |||
japhy | try this: perl -mre=debug -e '"1111111" =~ /^(1111).*?\1/' | ||
wolverian | I find writing failing tests motivating, for some reason.. or at least it makes me feel more secure about the eventual implementation. | ||
japhy | that regex matches "1111" to $1, and then tries to find \1 again after that. the engine KNOWS the length of \1, and it KNOWS how far into the string it is (thus how much of the string is left) | 17:35 | |
wolverian | heh, wow. that's kind of inefficient :) | ||
putter | btw, re lisp and regex engines, weitz.de/cl-ppcre/ is kind of neat. There is also www.geocities.com/mparker762/clawk.html , but... . | ||
japhy | therefore, it should KNOW it can't possibly match \1 | ||
wolverian | putter, wow, clawk.. | ||
japhy | I'm doing a backref-intensive regex right now, and I've been forced to add an assertion to make sure the string in \1 isn't too big for the rest of the regex. | 17:36 | |
putter | japhy: in p6 or p5? | ||
ie, under perl5 and it's regexp engine, or under perl6 and its pcre engine? (the syntax suggests we're not dealing with the p6 PGE rules engine) | 17:37 | ||
stevan | putter: no superclasses does not attempt to address that, but truthfully using that to assign a superclass is silly, you should use "use base" instead | 17:38 | |
japhy | putter - that's how it works in p5 right now (slow and ugly) | ||
I could probably write a p5 patch | |||
stevan | and you should not change @ISA at runtime | ||
japhy | regardless, p6 should implement the optimization | ||
stevan | and if you do,.. you get what you get | ||
its more for reflection than anything else | 17:39 | ||
putter | japhy: as a side note, depending on how intensive your need is, both of the lisp engines mentioned are somewhat p5 regexp compatible, cl-ppcre more than the other, and claim to be significantly faster than p5 on many flavors of patterns. | ||
japhy | well, my regex that I'm using has (?(...)TRUE|FALSE) and (?{ EXPR }) in it | 17:41 | |
putter | japhy: yes. p6 regexp optimization is in it's infancy. hmm, or hasn't really been born quite yet. lots of fertile ground. perhaps in a month or so we'll have enough foundation working that you could help with it! :) | 17:42 | |
japhy | ppcre explicitly states it doesn't support (?{ }), although it does support (?(...)T|F) | ||
and clawk doesn't appear to support more than looking assertions | 17:43 | ||
putter | is (?{}) the embedded predicate or the embedded regex? | ||
oh, right. not even a predicate. just "run me". | 17:44 | ||
wolverian | hm, load on feather. | 17:45 | |
stevan | putter: I added a NOTE in the superclasses description re: your question | ||
putter | but yes, while the cl engines have "filters", and so could do both, having to deal with callbacks to perl would take much of the fun out of the exercise. ;) | 17:46 | |
japhy | wolverian: sorry, that might have been me, running the program with aforementioned regex :/ | 17:48 | |
putter | stevan: is that an fyi, or is there somewhere I can see it, or...? putter perplexed | ||
stevan | putter: it is fyi for now, until I release the next version (maybe later today) | 17:49 | |
wolverian | japhy, it was eric256. if that's you, then don't worry, of it wasn't, don't worry either :) | ||
stevan | however if you want I will nopaste it | ||
japhy | nope, not me. | ||
putter | ah, ok. np. just curious. | ||
stevan | but it is really not that interesting | ||
wolverian | (the process was nice 10, but it slowed feather down anyway.) | ||
putter would work on pil... but I'm just not sure where to push on it... | 17:51 | ||
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putter | japhy: Just in case you read this, note that the behavior you see with (?{}) can vary depending on perl version. So if you care, don't forget to test. | 18:04 | |
nothingmuch | audreyt: ping | ||
putter notes that damian's Perl6::Rules is now generally failing testers.cpan. | 18:05 | ||
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putter | hi nm. not much audreyt the last day or two. | 18:10 | |
wolverian | post-release trauma? :) | ||
well, that sounded wrong.. | 18:11 | ||
szbalint | :) | 18:18 | |
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putter | sleep? life? other projects? contemplating objects? a post-release pugs paws? | 18:28 | |
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putter | not a single groan. oh well. a paws in pugs development... | 18:38 | |
?eval 3 | |||
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evalbot_8948 | 3 | 18:38 | |
putter | ?eval "a" ~~ /a/ | 18:39 | |
evalbot_8948 | Error: cannot cast from VUndef to Pugs.AST.Internals.VCode (VCode) | ||
putter | ?eval /a/ ~~ "a" | ||
evalbot_8948 | Error: cannot cast from VUndef to Pugs.AST.Internals.VCode (VCode) | ||
putter | the first case works for me. the second generates a pugs: src/Pugs/Eval.hs:858:12-52: Irrefutable pattern failed for pattern (Pugs.AST.Internals.App (Pugs.AST.Internals.Var name') ...error. | 18:41 | |
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nothingmuch | bsg!" | 19:26 | |
AAAAAAAAAAAA | |||
nothingmuch wants it already | |||
putter | British Society of Gastroenterology? | 19:30 | |
nothingmuch | =) | ||
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putter | "Gut", the Society's scientific journal, is Europe's highest ranked, by citation-related impact factor. ;) | 19:41 | |
I'd like Prelude.pm to load a... PreludeExtras.pm, at runtime, regardless of whether Prelude.pm is precompiled or not. A simple "use PreludeExtras;" apparently gets inlined at precompile time. I currently playing with ways to delay it. Any thoughts? | 19:46 | ||
theorbtwo | putter: INIT {require "..."}? | 19:54 | |
putter | ah, I'll try that. thanks. :) | 20:12 | |
ah well. I didnt try INIT, because eval 'use PreludeExtras;' worked... but didn't allow me to sidestep the bug I'm trying to dodge. :( | 20:18 | ||
What editors are you using / would like supported by a perl6 "ide-server"? I'm gnu emacs. Any xemacs? Vi variants (which?)? Others? | 20:33 | ||
svnbot6 | r8949 | putter++ | t/pugsbugs/smartmatch_rx_obstacle.t added. Prelude.pm defines | ||
r8949 | putter++ | multi sub infix:<~~> ($x, Rul $r) is primitive is safe is builtin {$r.f.($x)} | |||
r8949 | putter++ | But it doesn't work. But it does if eval()ed. | |||
r8949 | putter++ | Its not working has been interfering with the development of rules on perl6. | |||
putter | theorbtwo: what editor do you use for p6? | 20:34 | |
wolverian: ? | |||
szbalint | vim? :) | 20:36 | |
Limbic_Region | gvim | 20:37 | |
Limbic_Region ducks | |||
theorbtwo | putter: I don't, mostly. But if I did, xemacs21. | ||
putter | LR: you use... aquatic birds?!? to edit code... wow... | 20:38 | |
Limbic_Region | putter - yes, but don't tell PETA | ||
putter | does vim==gvim? | ||
theorbtwo | Careful, or you'll catch the bird flu! | 20:40 | |
Limbic_Region | putter - for the most part yes. | 20:41 | |
the g is for gui or graphical | |||
which implies winders | |||
which is why I ducked | |||
putter | ok. let's see... (ah, re ducked)... bah, I can't find it at the moment. But apparently vim can be used as a --remote server one makes requests of, but this capability is determined by a compile-time flag. So the question is: do most vims usually have/not have, or something in between, this capability. | 20:45 | |
szbalint | dunno, I'm using debian's vim-perl package. | 20:46 | |
rhesa | actually I think the g is for gtk. | 20:47 | |
putter | drat. ok, the man page says +clientserver for N(ormally sized) vim, but at least on my old fedora core, :ver shows -clientserver. | 20:52 | |
szbalint, LR: does your :ver show + or - clientserver? | 20:53 | ||
putter crosses fingers... | |||
rhesa | FC 3: -cs, CentOS: -cs Debian: +cs | 20:55 | |
Limbic_Region | +clientserver putter | 20:56 | |
that was a vanilla install fwiw | |||
putter | hmm... ok, my thanks. | 20:57 | |
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szbalint | +clientserver, for vim-perl. | 21:05 | |
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putter | thanks. emacs, xemacs, (g)vim. not so bad. I was afraid there would be n vi variants, and assorted misc. | 21:06 | |
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putter | neat, Perl::Critic search.cpan.org/~thaljef/Perl-Criti.../Critic.pm | 21:13 | |
really going to need a Perl6::Critic... :) | |||
Limbic_Region | putter - combining Perl6::Critic with Perl6::Tidy should be a real possibility (i.e. not only finding but fixing mistakes/sloppy code) | 21:20 | |
rafl | Juerd: Squirrelmail is broken again. | 21:22 | |
putter | LR: neat idea | 21:25 | |
Critic and Tidy and MOP and PPI and Editor, oh my | 21:28 | ||
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putter | Alias_: in your copious free time, any plans for a Perl6::Editor? ;) | 21:29 | |
Or the Perl::Editor editor plugins... or just their framework... :) | 21:35 | ||
end of day for me. cheers & | 21:40 | ||
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