»ö« Welcome to Perl 6! | perl6.org/ | evalbot usage: 'p6: say 3;' or rakudo:, or /msg camelia p6: ... | irclog: irc.perl6.org or colabti.org/irclogger/irclogger_logs/perl6 | UTF-8 is our friend! Set by moritz on 22 December 2015. |
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Zoffix | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 00:32 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
Zoffix | Is there a way for the default on $what to take even if it's specified as Any? | ||
'cause it's pretty damn useless | 00:33 | ||
gfldex | m: say Any.Bool | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«False» | ||
gfldex | it is takin :$what | ||
Zoffix | Yes, I know that, and I want to avoid that. | ||
I want to propagate what was given in bar() | 00:34 | ||
m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo (:$what if $what) }; bar | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Too many positionals passed; expected 0 arguments but got 1 in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | bisect: m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo (:$what if $what) }; bar | ||
bisectable | Zoffix: On both starting points the exit code is 1 and the output is identical as well | ||
Zoffix: Output on both points: Too many positionals passed; expected 0 arguments but got 1 in sub foo at /tmp/QBu3dxVJU7 line 1 in sub bar at /tmp/QBu3dxVJU7 line 1 in block <unit> at /tmp/QBu3dxVJU7 line 1 | |||
Zoffix | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 00:36 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Parameter '$what' requires an instance of type Any, but a type object was passed. Did you forget a .new? in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | m: subset Undumb where { $_ ~~ Any:U and $_ = Nil }; sub foo (Undumb :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 00:38 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Cannot assign to a readonly variable or a value in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix shakes head | |||
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gfldex | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (*%what) { foo |%what }; bar | 00:40 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
Zoffix | I may as well be using Perl 5 then | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |%($what) }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
Zoffix | gfldex++ | 00:41 | |
huh | |||
m: dd |%($what) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Variable '$what' is not declared. Did you mean '&WHAT'?at <tmp>:1------> 3dd |%(7⏏5$what)» | ||
Zoffix | m: my $what = 42; dd |%($what) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Odd number of elements found where hash initializer expected:Only saw: 42 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | dafuq | ||
gfldex | :$what creates a colon pair, what can be turned into a Hash | 00:42 | |
Zoffix | oh, you're not passing it, that's why it gets 42 | ||
m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |%($what) }; bar :what(72) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Odd number of elements found where hash initializer expected:Only saw: 72 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |%(:$what) }; bar :what(72) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Int $what = 72» | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { dd $what; foo |%($what) }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Any $what = AnyInt $what = 42» | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo (Any:_ :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { dd $what; foo |%($what) }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Any $what = AnyInt $what = 42» | ||
Zoffix | m: sub foo (Any:D :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |%(:$what) }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«Parameter '$what' requires an instance of type Any, but a type object was passed. Did you forget a .new? in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | Yup, it doesn't work. | 00:43 | |
This is a real flaw in design. I came across this issue many times, but in the resorted to duplicating or moving the defaults. | |||
m: sub foo (:$what //= 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 00:44 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar c57ac2: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Malformed parameterat <tmp>:1------> 3sub foo (:$what7⏏5 //= 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what)  expecting any of: constraint» | ||
Zoffix | there gotta be a way to fix this with a trait or something | ||
`is sane` XD | 00:45 | ||
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Zoffix | And worse is you can't just $x //= 'default' in the body; you gotta mark it as `is copy` too | 00:46 | |
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gfldex | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo(what => $what) }; bar; | 00:51 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
gfldex | Zoffix: is that what you want? | ||
Zoffix | No, that's exactly as my original example, except you changed :$what to what => $what; | 00:52 | |
The result should be 42, since there were not $what given to bar | |||
So when it's propagated to foo(), foo would also see it wasn't given and assign the default | |||
m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo(what => $what//Mu) }; bar; | 00:53 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Type check failed in binding to $what; expected Any but got Mu (Mu) in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | :( | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { dd $what; foo(what => $what) }; bar; | 00:54 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = AnyAny $what = Any» | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo ($p?){ dd $p }; foo; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $p = Any» | ||
gfldex | Zoffix: any optional parameter is given because it's a container and as such got a default value | 00:55 | |
Zoffix | That doesn't help me write my software. | 00:56 | |
Xliff | Does perl6 support the __DATA__ feature from perl5? | ||
parabolize | m: sub f(:$a = 2) { dd $a }; sub g(:$a) { $a ?? f(:$a) !! f() }; g(); g(:3a); | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $a = 2Int $a = 3» | ||
Zoffix | Xliff, I think the way to do it now is using the Pod, like the =finish marker | ||
gfldex | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { my %h; %h.push(:$what) if $what; foo(|%h) }; bar; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
Xliff | Zoffix: Any docs on that? | ||
gfldex | Zoffix: if you want to do fancy stuff with signatures you have to build it by hand | ||
Zoffix | parabolize, that's not a real solution | ||
gfldex, that's not fancy at all. | 00:57 | ||
gfldex | you want to lie about the value of :$what in bar. You have to expect to help Perl 6 to understand you in that case. | ||
Xliff | Zoffix++: That pointed me in the right direction | 00:58 | |
design.perl6.org/S26.html#___top | |||
^^ Data Blocks | |||
Zoffix | I don't want it to consider the penultimate-most-undefined type object as a value when I'm giving it an int as default. It's not rocket science. | ||
Xliff++ awesome | 00:59 | ||
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Zoffix | m: say 'The second anti_Virtue is: ', $=data[1]; =data Weeee | 01:00 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Pod variable $=data not yet implemented. Sorry. at <tmp>:1------> 3ay 'The second anti_Virtue is: ', $=data7⏏5[1]; » | ||
Zoffix | Bah | ||
gfldex | Xliff: you could use a heredoc | ||
Zoffix | m: say 'The second anti_Virtue is: ', $=finish; =finishWeeee | 01:01 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«The second anti_Virtue is: Weeee» | ||
Zoffix | Xliff, ^ that works tho. | ||
Xliff | gfldex: Yeah, but I am trying to keep this as close to the original p5 test as possible. | ||
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Xliff | Plus, it helps me learn more about perl6 and I've done heredocs already. :) | 01:01 | |
gfldex | Zoffix: if Signature would discard Any and use the default value instead, you would get in trouble if you require to hand type object around. We don't have a type for type objects. | 01:04 | |
Zoffix | I don't pass around type objects when my defaults are ints | 01:05 | |
gfldex | that your fault :-> | ||
Zoffix | :) | ||
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holyghost | Hello FROGGS_, nice modules BTW | 01:14 | |
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Xliff | Heya, FROGGS! | 01:27 | |
Is anyone working on P6 bindings for wxWidgets? | |||
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Zoffix | m: say Parameter.^attributes | 01:33 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Method 'gist' not found for invocant of class 'BOOTSTRAPATTR' in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | :( | ||
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Zoffix | No idea how to set a value of the parameter given a Parameter object :( | 01:51 | |
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skids | Zoffix: Parameters and Signatures (other than literals) are actually really deeply baked into the VM. Their Perl6 interface is currently more for introspection than manipulation. | 02:35 | |
Zoffix | sucks | 02:36 | |
mst | skids: but how else are you supposed to chain calls? having them settable and re-callable was one of the great promises of perl6 | ||
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mst | I guess building stuff up as an array and a hash and then using slips? | 02:36 | |
timotimo | um, i think what you're looking for is Capture, not Parameter | 02:38 | |
what do you even expect to be able to do with a Parameter object? | |||
Zoffix | timotimo, well, I was looking into creating a trait that would use the default if the value given is an Any | 02:39 | |
m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { dd $what; foo |c }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Variable '$what' is not declared. Did you mean '&WHAT'?at <tmp>:1------> 3t = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { dd 7⏏5$what; foo |c }; bar» | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { foo |c }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
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Zoffix | Hm | 02:39 | |
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skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42; :$where = "there") { dd $what, $where }; sub bar (|c) { foo :$where, |c }; bar | 02:40 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Variable '$where' is not declaredat <tmp>:1------> 3dd $what, $where }; sub bar (|c) { foo :7⏏5$where, |c }; bar» | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42; :$where = "there") { dd $what, $where }; sub bar (|c (:$where)) { foo :$where, |c }; bar("here") | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Too many positionals passed; expected 0 arguments but got 1 in sub-signature of parameter c in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42; :$where = "there") { dd $what, $where }; sub bar (|c (:$where)) { foo :$where, |c }; bar(:where<here>) | 02:41 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42Str $where = "here"» | ||
timotimo | you'll have to go through a capture, otherwise you won't be able to do anything much | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42; :$where = "there") { dd $what, $where }; sub bar (|c (:$where, :$what)) { foo :$where, |c }; bar(:where<here>) | 02:42 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42Str $where = "here"» | ||
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Zoffix | m: multi trait_mod:<is> (Routine $v, :$sane!) { dd $v }; sub foo (:$what = 42) is sane { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 02:44 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Sub foo = sub foo (:$what = 42) { #`(Sub|61110648) ... }Any $what = Any» | ||
Zoffix | timotimo, by "go through capture", do you mean that skids is showing? | ||
skids tries to remember if there is a syntax or watnot to get the capture without using a subsig | |||
timotimo | aye | 02:45 | |
Zoffix | :( | ||
damn | |||
skids | Yeah | is a capture | ||
Zoffix | Yeah, but it's still LTA a bit. | ||
skids | Also there are a few places where f(|c (stuff)) is not quite as capable as f(stuff) | 02:48 | |
gfldex | m: sub f(|c){ dd c<what> = 10; }; f :what; | 02:49 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Cannot modify an immutable Bool in sub f at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
gfldex | m: sub f(|c){ dd c<what>; }; f :what; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Bool::True» | ||
skids | (some of those places being just NYI/LTA) | 02:50 | |
gfldex | m: sub f(|c is copy){ \(c.Hash<what> = 42;) }; dd f :what; | 02:51 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«\((42,), ())» | ||
gfldex | m: sub f(|c){ \(c.Hash<what> = 42;) }; dd f :what; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«\((42,), ())» | ||
gfldex | problem is that Capture isn't really a Hash | ||
no idea what would happen to positionals | |||
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timotimo | it seems problematic that you can change a capture's contents via .Hash; we probably want to use .Map instead | 02:52 | |
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { foo |c, :$what<"this"> }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Variable '$what' is not declared. Did you mean '&WHAT'?at <tmp>:1------> 3) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { foo |c, :7⏏5$what<"this"> }; bar» | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { foo |c, :what<"this"> }; bar | 02:53 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Str $what = "\"this\""» | ||
gfldex | do we have a type that is Positional and Associative and motable at the same time? | ||
skids | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (|c) { foo |c, :what<"this"> }; bar(:what<that>) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Str $what = "\"this\""» | ||
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timotimo goes to bed | 02:54 | ||
gfldex | i'm out of brainsteam too, gn8 | 02:55 | |
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Zoffix | m: use nqp; subset Undumb where { $_ ~~ Any:U and nqp::bindattr($_.VAR, Scalar, '$!value', 42) }; sub foo (Undumb :$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | 03:00 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
Zoffix curses the Computer Gods | |||
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Zoffix | lulz wut... Got this error: "replace this Array is copy logic in method" | 03:10 | |
Apparently I'm hitting this code: github.com/rakudo/rakudo/blob/aada...P.nqp#L435 | 03:11 | ||
AlexDaniel | bisect: ++blah++ | 03:16 | |
bisectable | AlexDaniel: Exit code is 1 on both starting points, bisecting by using the output | ||
AlexDaniel: bisect log: gist.github.com/c6d5ae56b7b8477ea3...181f2fb9f7 | |||
AlexDaniel: (2015-12-27) github.com/rakudo/rakudo/commit/373adc0 | |||
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AlexDaniel | goddamn filenames in the output :) | 03:16 | |
parabolize | Zoffix: what's wrong with using the capture? Also, what is LTA? | 03:17 | |
m: sub f($x, :$a = 2) { say 'in f'; dd $x, $a }; sub g($y, :$b, |c) { say 'in g'; dd $y, $b; f(|c) }; g(2, 3, :4a, :5b) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«in gInt $y = 2Int $b = 5in fInt $x = 3Int $a = 4» | ||
Zoffix | parabolize, because it isn't descripting on what sort of args I'm passing about. 'LTA' == Less Than Awesome | ||
s/descripting/descriptive/; | 03:18 | ||
AlexDaniel | committable: releases ++blah++ | ||
committable | AlexDaniel: ¦«release»: Cannot find this revision | ||
Zoffix | method foo ($cmd, :$server) { $.o($cmd, :$server) } is clearer than method foo ($cmd, |c) { $.o($cmd, |c) } | ||
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AlexDaniel | wasn't it supposed to work, hmm | 03:18 | |
Zoffix | Damn, this will now bug me for life ~_~ | 03:19 | |
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AlexDaniel | committable: releases ++blah++ | 03:20 | |
committable | AlexDaniel: gist.github.com/4333c1ddb4c74d8421...0afc5b6b10 | ||
Zoffix | parabolize, well that, and the fact that when I tried to use it I hit some cobwebbed error "replace this Array is copy logic in method" | 03:21 | |
m: sub foo ($cmd, *@args is copy, |c) { dd @args }; sub bar (:$foo, |c){ foo |c, 42, 55 }; bar :42server | 03:22 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«replace this Array is copy logic in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
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parabolize admits python code that has *arguments, **keywords drives him nuts. Especially when there is no doc string | 03:23 | ||
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Zoffix | m: sub (*@x is copy, |c) { }( 42 ) | 03:24 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«replace this Array is copy logic in sub at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
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Zoffix | m: sub prefix:<‖> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p !! Empty }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |‖:$what }; bar | 03:49 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
Zoffix | m: sub prefix:<‖> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p !! Empty }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |‖:$what }; bar :72what | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 72» | ||
Zoffix | I wish it were possible to get rid of that slip somehow :/ | 03:51 | |
psch | m: sub prefix:<``> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p.Slip !! Empty }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar :72what | 03:52 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 72» | ||
psch | can't get rid of it, but you can move it "up" | ||
Zoffix | m: sub prefix:<``> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p.Slip !! Empty }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
psch | oh no | ||
i removed the prefix call | |||
Zoffix | m: sub prefix:<``> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p.Slip !! Empty }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo ``:$what }; bar | 03:53 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Too many positionals passed; expected 0 arguments but got 1 in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
psch | sorry, not actually awake apparently | ||
Zoffix | :) | ||
m: sub prefix:<😜> (Pair $p) { $p.value ~~ Any:D ?? $p !! () }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |😜:$what }; bar | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
parabolize | m: sub f(:$a) { dd $a }; sub g(:$a, :$b) { dd $b; f(:$a) }; g(:2a, :3b) | 03:57 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $b = 3Int $a = 2» | ||
psch | m: sub f { (:1a).Slip }; say f.perl; say f ~~ :(:$) | 03:58 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Expected a term, but found either infix ~~ or redundant prefix ~ (to suppress this message, please use a space like ~ ~)at <tmp>:1------> 3b f { (:1a).Slip }; say f.perl; say f ~~7⏏5 :(:$)» | ||
psch | m: sub f { (:1a).Slip }; say f.perl; say f() ~~ :(:$) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«slip(:a(1),)False» | ||
parabolize | nevermind | ||
psch | that is a bit weird i think | ||
oh duh | |||
m: sub f { (:1a).Slip }; say f.perl; say f() ~~ :(:$a) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«slip(:a(1),)True» | ||
psch | that is more expected | ||
m: sub f { (:1a).Slip }; sub g(:$a) { }; say f.perl; say &g.cando(f()) | 03:59 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«slip(:a(1),)Type check failed in binding to $c; expected Capture but got Slip (slip$(:a(1),)) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
psch | ah | ||
Zoffix | m: sub K { \(@_, %_.grep: {.value ~~ Any:D}) }; sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo |K :$what }; bar :72what | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Too many positionals passed; expected 0 arguments but got 2 in sub foo at <tmp> line 1 in sub bar at <tmp> line 1 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
Zoffix | :( | ||
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Zoffix | ^ that would be the best. Some prefix or sub you sneak at the start of args and be done with it | 04:00 | |
Well, "best". The best would be making it actually work right in the first place :) | |||
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psch | not really sure what "right" is here, actually | 04:00 | |
i mean, i'd say a slip should always slip exactly once | 04:01 | ||
so if i return it from a sub and pass it into a call, it should then slip | |||
Zoffix | Well, in this context right == what I want it to do :) And that is not to assume Any:U is a valid value to use when I specify an Int default value to use. | ||
dalek | sectbot: dabed85 | (Aleks-Daniel Jakimenko-Aleksejev)++ | Perl6IRCBotable.pm: Empty string works better than 0 Turns out that setting RAKUDO_ERROR_COLOR to 0 does not work well enough across all Rakudo versions. This causes the output to be different on some commits, which may freak out bisectable or even committable if ran across many commits. Empty string works all the time. |
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Zoffix | As in.. it assuming my giving it Any:U is what I want rather than my wanting it to use the default. | 04:01 | |
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Zoffix | Happy new day! | 04:02 | |
psch | how does Any:U come into this? i'm only seeing a slipping Pair not slipping into a named..? | ||
Zoffix | Well, this adventure of mine started 3.5 hours ago with this: | ||
m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo :$what }; bar | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Any $what = Any» | ||
Zoffix | I want foo to use the default value, because the $what I'm giving it wasn't passed to bar, so it's an Any:U | ||
psch | well, you are giving a value | 04:03 | |
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Zoffix | Well, sure, I know why I get that result. | 04:03 | |
AlexDaniel | committable: releases ++blah++ | ||
committable | AlexDaniel: gist.github.com/93db4fc89fffe0009d...5653ddcfff | ||
AlexDaniel | ok that's much better | 04:04 | |
Zoffix | But it's not what I want, as a programmer. And I hit this issue many times, but I never hit an issue where I had a param defaulting to an Int and I was dissapointed that I couldn't give it an Any:U | ||
*excited that I could give it... | 04:05 | ||
psch | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { $what ?? foo(:$what) !! foo() }; bar | 04:06 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
psch | if you give the named it takes the nameds value | ||
Zoffix | You're the second person to suggest such a thing | ||
psch | okay, sorry | ||
Zoffix | :) | ||
parabolize | m: sub f(:$a = 2) { dd $a }; multi g(:$b) { dd $b; f() }; multi g(:$a!, :$b) { dd $b; f(:$a) }; g(:3b) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $b = 3Int $a = 2» | ||
Zoffix | psch, it's just the single-arg example is a simplification. That solution is already too hefty and it grows too unwieldy the minute you get a second named arg | 04:07 | |
psch | Zoffix: then use multi dispatch? | 04:08 | |
parabolize | I don't think I needed the ! there | ||
Zoffix | Isn't that just an even more verbose way to write a ternary? | ||
AlexDaniel | committable: 2016.02..2016.03 ++blah++ | ||
committable | AlexDaniel: gist.github.com/aee7c32eab4fbdbf9b...8e996959f2 | 04:09 | |
psch | i don't know, maybe | ||
AlexDaniel | Zoffix: by the way, I remember you were saying that things like this ↑ will take way too long. Well, it's not paralellized, so it does take very long. But it is already usable | ||
TimToady | m: sub foo (:$what = 42) { dd $what }; sub bar (:$what) { foo(|(:$what if $what)) }; bar | 04:10 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar aada71: OUTPUT«Int $what = 42» | ||
AlexDaniel | like you know, sometimes you have to put some effort into making a proper bisect query… why bother, just run it on every commit ;) | 04:11 | |
Zoffix | Yeah, the |( if ) thing is probably the shortest you can do it now with | 04:12 | |
Well, without some weird prefix op | |||
committable: 2016.02..2016.03 .WHERE.say | 04:13 | ||
committable | Zoffix: gist.github.com/f06a3ac587603fc735...d40ee16482 | 04:14 | |
Zoffix | neat | ||
AlexDaniel | MasterDuke: again, why do we have a 300 commit limit? | 04:15 | |
MasterDuke | no reason | ||
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Zoffix | But back to the Any:U -> Ideally the solution would be on the receiving end. Some sorta trait or something. I got one method to which a named param percolates from all the place to, so I don't want to put |(:) on all the calls, but rather in the sig or something | 04:16 | |
This is the actual real-world piece of code it's from and my current solution :) gist.github.com/zoffixznet/ef930e0...8c2172aff4 | |||
|(:) looks like a ninja if you angle your head right. | |||
Zoffix will call |(:$what if $what) construct "ninjaing a param" from now on | 04:17 | ||
Zoffix & sleep | |||
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AlexDaniel | MasterDuke: each run is limited to 10 seconds, so if you want to kill it you can run sleep 10 over 300 commits… | 04:18 | |
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AlexDaniel | MasterDuke: that's gonna send it to a little 50 minute vacation | 04:19 | |
MasterDuke | AlexDaniel: can we set an alarm before we start the loop that runs the code for all the commits with a larger timeout? will that conflict with the alarm for each run? | 04:21 | |
or would just that one alarm be needed at all? | 04:22 | ||
AlexDaniel | MasterDuke: maybe something that says “oops, sorry, will not manage to finish that job at such pace” | ||
MasterDuke: no need for an alarm, just check the time every now and then | 04:23 | ||
dalek | sectbot: 942ea65 | (Aleks-Daniel Jakimenko-Aleksejev)++ | committable.pl: Bump committable limit to 1000 If you wanted to kill it, then you could run sleep 10 over 300 commits and this will keep it busy for 50 minutes. However, most people will probably run really fast snippets, so we can bump it quite a bit. Global timeout will be introduced later, hopefully. |
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MasterDuke | AlexDaniel: github.com/perl6/bisectbot/issues/13 | 04:28 | |
AlexDaniel | yea | ||
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skids | .tell Zoffix f(:$f = "foo") { $f.VAR.default.say } -- I wonder if a design modification could be sold that this should say "foo" in which case :f<Nil> would work to set the default. | 04:51 | |
yoleaux | skids: I'll pass your message to Zoffix. | ||
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TimToady | thunky ops now warn in sink context | 04:56 | |
m: say [1,2,3] or 42 | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«WARNINGS for <tmp>:Useless use of constant integer 42 in sink context (line 1)[1 2 3]» | ||
TimToady | m: 42 with [1,2,3] | 04:57 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«WARNINGS for <tmp>:Useless use of constant integer 42 in sink context (line 1)» | ||
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FROGGS_ | Xliff: not that I am aware of | 05:53 | |
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ufobat | my hands feel so funny, i just wrote perl6 code ;-) | 06:54 | |
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ufobat | good morning | 06:56 | |
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holyghost | Does it somewhere have a meaning to buy an Amiga A500 ? | 07:43 | |
or should I wait for the A4000 ? | 07:44 | ||
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holyghost | ok nm | 07:47 | |
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DrForr | m: my $t = Int; $t.new(3); say $t.WHAT | 08:09 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«(Int)» | ||
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DrForr | m: my %x=(a=>Int); my $t=%a<a>; $t.new(3); say $t.WHAT | 08:10 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Variable '%a' is not declaredat <tmp>:1------> 3my %x=(a=>Int); my $t=7⏏5%a<a>; $t.new(3); say $t.WHAT» | ||
DrForr | m: my %x=(a=>Int); my $t=%x<a>; $t.new(3); say $t.WHAT | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«(Int)» | ||
DrForr | Mumble. | 08:11 | |
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lizmat | m: say Int.new(:value(3)) | 08:37 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«0» | ||
lizmat | hmmm | ||
DrForr | Well, I'm trying to do: | 08:38 | |
lizmat | m: say Int.new(3) | 08:39 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«3» | ||
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DrForr | Let me rephrase. The last code I put up works fine with the 'Int' builtin, but... | 08:40 | |
m: class Y { has $.v }; my %x=('$'=>Y); my $z = %x{'$'}.new(:v(1)); $z.WHAT | 08:41 | ||
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
psch | m: class Y { has $.v }; my %x=('$'=>Y); my $z = %x{'$'}.new(:v(1)); say $z.WHAT | 08:43 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«(Y)» | ||
DrForr | Hrm, maybe I'm debugging something incorrectly then. | 08:44 | |
(and forgetting that this evalbot doesn't print the return value as well.) | 08:45 | ||
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El_Che | I did some perl5 the last days, and while I loved perl5 I must say I really missed quite a few things of perl6. It's crazy how fast one takes stuff for granted | 10:00 | |
DrForr | Mmhmm. | ||
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Zoffix | . | 10:26 | |
yoleaux | 04:51Z <skids> Zoffix: f(:$f = "foo") { $f.VAR.default.say } -- I wonder if a design modification could be sold that this should say "foo" in which case :f<Nil> would work to set the default. | ||
Zoffix | That doesn't really help, since I'm passing Any:U and not Nil. Also, that default is different from the signature defaults. | 10:27 | |
m: my $x is default(42) = 72; dd $x; $x = Nil; dd $x | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar 5334cb: OUTPUT«Int $x = 72Int $x = 42» | ||
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davidcsi | hello guys, i'm trying to establish a memcached connection via a tunnel, the tunnel needs to be created by perl... has anyone ever done this? I've been able to do it by creating the tunnel with "my $pid = open(myh, 'ssh -L xxx:1.1.1.1:yyyy server -l user');" but the pid returned is NOT the pid for the ssh for some reason... | 11:01 | |
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DrForr | davidcsi: I think you want #perl, one door over. Unless this is perl 6 code and youv'e got the syntax wrong, for some reason :) | 11:08 | |
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davidcsi | sorry :) | 11:19 | |
DrForr | No worries. | ||
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El_Che | DrForr: the noisy neighbours next door? :) | 11:31 | |
davidcsi: irc network: irc.perl.org, channel: #perl | 11:33 | ||
DrForr | He's already over on the other channel. | 11:34 | |
El_Che | yeah, I am Mr Obvious today it seems | 11:36 | |
DrForr: now you answer "onviously" :) | 11:38 | ||
CIAvash | El_Che: IIRC mst said that don't refer people to #perl on irc.perl.org | 11:40 | |
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El_Che | why? | 11:41 | |
CIAvash | irclog.perlgeek.de/perl6/2016-05-23#i_12529400 | ||
irclog.perlgeek.de/perl6/2016-07-08#i_12807145 | 11:42 | ||
El_Che | CIAvash: thx | 11:44 | |
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FROGGS_ | mst++ | 11:59 | |
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dalek | c: fc83049 | (Daniel Dehennin)++ | doc/Language/concurrency.pod6: Fix name of Supply method which returns a Channel |
12:43 | |
c: 9fbfc11 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | doc/Language/concurrency.pod6: Merge pull request #766 from baby-gnu/fix/channel-method-on-supply Fix name of Supply method which returns a Channel |
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nebuchadnezzar | ho, merge was quick | 12:44 | |
moritz | nebuchadnezzar: what's your github username? | 12:45 | |
nebuchadnezzar | baby-gnu ;-) | ||
my DNS domaine | |||
moritz | nebuchadnezzar: invitation to the perl6 org sent | 12:46 | |
nebuchadnezzar | ho thanks | ||
moritz | nebuchadnezzar: if you accept, you don't need to wait for merges at all :-) | ||
(and we have less work merging) | |||
masak | Zoffix++ # blogs.perl.org/users/zoffix_znet/20...p-you.html | 12:47 | |
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nebuchadnezzar | Shouldn't we inverse the sythax colorization between code and output in docs.perl6.org/language/quoting ? | 12:54 | |
masak | 'We used maybe 50 or 60 competing design principles in the design of Perl 6, but the most important one is: "There is no single most important design principle, including this one."' | 12:55 | |
TimToady: ...I see what you did there. | |||
(from developers.slashdot.org/story/16/0...arry-wall) | |||
nebuchadnezzar | well for some the example blocks at least | 12:56 | |
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moritz | nebuchadnezzar: it would likely be easier to switch off syntax hilighting for blocks that aren't propery hilighted | 12:59 | |
nebuchadnezzar | moritz: yes, I saw that the first code blocs require B to emphasize the quote characters | 13:01 | |
moritz | which disables the rest of the syntax hilighting, because those two don't mix | ||
nebuchadnezzar | that's what I supposed, thanks to confirm it | 13:02 | |
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dalek | c: 9498349 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | doc/Type/Instant.pod6: Document future leap second behaviour Related to rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=126119 |
13:42 | |
timotimo | maybe at some point we should consider offering newer builds of older rakudo releases and rakudo star releases that have more leap seconds in them | 13:44 | |
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[Coke] | timotimo: I think if someone cares that much about leap seconds, they can get the latest copy of rakudo | 13:50 | |
(or we can write up a doc on how they can update the leapseconds table and do a build themselves) | 13:51 | ||
unmatched} | Seems a bad idea. Right now you can workaround it by doing $*VM.version before '2016.07', for example, but that would either break if you use the same version number for the updated release or it'd require more conditionals for the new version | ||
[Coke] | maybe we can do a meta table that shows which seconds were available in which compiler. | 13:52 | |
(I am... only mostly kidding) | |||
unmatched} | Wouldn't be a bad idea for a module | ||
Leap::BackToTheFuture :) | 13:53 | ||
[Coke] | there we go. push to module space, people who really care have a place to go. | 13:57 | |
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jkramer | Ahoy | 13:59 | |
unmatched} | \o | ||
jkramer | Is there a way to check if an Array of stuff or something else matches a Signature? | 14:00 | |
timotimo | sure, you can just smartmatch against the signature, can't you? | ||
jkramer | Like $r.signature ~~ ['string', 123, SomeClass $foo] | ||
timotimo | well, you have the smart match the wrong way around :) | 14:01 | |
jkramer | Don't know, didn't try because I didn't find anything in the docs :) | ||
Oh | |||
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jkramer | Ah actually it is right there in the docs -_- | 14:01 | |
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timotimo | m: my Signature $s = :(Str $a, Int $b, Rat $c); say \("hello", 1234, 1.5) ~~ $s | 14:01 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«True» | ||
timotimo | m: my Signature $s = :(Str $a, Int $b, Rat $c); say \("hello", 1234, "lol") ~~ $s | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«False» | ||
jkramer | \o/ | 14:02 | |
thx | |||
timotimo | np | ||
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dalek | c: d0c34fa | (Zoffix Znet)++ | doc/Type/Instant.pod6: Move prose on future leap seconds to its own section There are many methods that have this caveat, not just .from-posix |
14:06 | |
c: 0ffd2a1 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | .gitignore: Add html/perl6.xhtml to .gitignore |
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c: 1366219 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | Makefile: Add make ctest for testing just content (tabs/traling ws) This makes it easier to test for just the content warts, without having to install prereqs like ::ToBigPage |
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c: 9d6b726 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | Makefile: Update make help |
14:07 | ||
c: aabab44 | (Zoffix Znet)++ | doc/ (3 files): Strip accumulated trailing whitespace |
14:09 | ||
unmatched} | [Coke]: BTW, I opened a ticket that may need to be forwarded to RT admins. Unless I'm misunderstanding how email-to-comments-on-RT-ticket works: rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=128749 | 14:10 | |
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unmatched} | oh, you responded. *reads* | 14:12 | |
jkramer | Also is there a way to check if something has a trait? E.g. $routine.has-trait('foo') or something | 14:13 | |
unmatched} | Well, I've no idea what address is the right one. It's just not the first time I see replies to tickets in the compiler list that are basically lost, since there's nothing replicated to the ticket *shrug* | 14:14 | |
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dalek | c: dc52b87 | coke++ | doc/Language/faq.pod6: use actual version literal |
14:15 | |
lizmat | m: sub a() is hidden-from-backtrace {}; say &a.?is-hidden-from-backtrace | 14:18 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«True» | ||
lizmat | m: sub a() {}; say &a.?is-hidden-from-backtrace | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«Nil» | ||
lizmat | jkramer: something like that? ^^^ | ||
jkramer | lizmat: Yes, but for random traits :) Like, my own self-defined ones | ||
lizmat | well, if they consist of mixing in something into the sub, than that would be the way to do it | 14:19 | |
unmatched} | m: say $*VM.version after 2016.07 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«True» | ||
unmatched} | m: say $*VM.version before 2016.07 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«False» | ||
jkramer | You mean just inject a is-my-trait method? | ||
unmatched} | Version has this magic treatment of Rats? | ||
m: say $*VM.version.Rat | 14:20 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«Method 'Rat' not found for invocant of class 'Version' in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
lizmat | jkramer: you see, when you add a trait, you're basically just executing a sub at compile time | ||
jkramer: whatever that sub does, is up to you | |||
unmatched} | m: say 2016.07.Version | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«Method 'Version' not found for invocant of class 'Rat' in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
jkramer | Yeah I know. I just thought it would keep track of that somewhere and I could check it later :) | ||
lizmat | this is the implementation of is-hidden-from-backtrace: | 14:21 | |
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine:D $r, :$hidden-from-backtrace!) { | |||
$r.^mixin( role { method is-hidden-from-backtrace { True } } ); | |||
} | |||
dalek | c: 17969cf | (Zoffix Znet)++ | doc/Type/Instant.pod6: Use version literal |
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lizmat | jkramer: there is no keeping track unless you do it yourself :-) | ||
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jkramer | lizmat: Alright, thanks :) | 14:27 | |
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holyghost | lizmat: thanks for that (^mixin) | 14:33 | |
now I understand roles | 14:34 | ||
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unmatched} | m: DateTime.new("2016-12-31T23:59:60") | 14:38 | |
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
unmatched} | star: DateTime.new("2016-12-31T23:59:60") | ||
camelia | star-m 2016.04: OUTPUT«Second out of range. Is: 60, should be in 0..^60; There is no leap second on UTC 2016-12-31 in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
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unmatched} | ^ another worm from the leap second can :) | 14:38 | |
harmil | Sorry for the utterly weird bug report, but it was strange enough behavior I thought I should rakudobug it. | 14:40 | |
rt.perl.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=128751 | |||
timotimo | right, you can apparently make a program crash if you can supply it with a date that's valid to the rest of the system, but not to rakudo | 14:41 | |
unmatched} | I wonder how evil an idea would be to expose this to the user: github.com/rakudo/rakudo/blob/6d1e...ls.pm#L841 | ||
And have a module that adds new seconds to it. So you can keep updating the module with new leap seconds that will be effectively updating the Rakudo's leap second table | 14:42 | ||
bisect: for 1..100 -> $i { say (((^$i).map: {^$_}) <<(-)>> ((^($i+1)).map: {$_ xx $i})) } | 14:43 | ||
Oh shit | |||
timotimo | isn't it supposed to be "bisectable:"? | 14:44 | |
unmatched} | bisect: 2+2 | ||
bisectable: 2+2 | |||
I think both work. And now it's churning my first one. | |||
timotimo | mhm | 14:45 | |
m: for 1..100 -> $i { say (((^$i).map: {^$_}) <<(-)>> ((^($i+1)).map: {$_ xx $i})) } | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«(timeout)WARNINGS for <tmp>:Useless use of $_ in sink context (line 1)(() ())(() (set(0) set(0)) ())(() (set(0) set(0) set(0)) (set(0) set(1) set(0)) ())(() (set(0) set(0) set(0) set(0)) (set(0) set(1) set(0) set(1)) (set(0) set(1) set(2) se…» | ||
timotimo | m: .perl.say for [\,] ^100 | 14:46 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 6d1e95: OUTPUT«(0,)(0, 1)(0, 1, 2)(0, 1, 2, 3)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7…» | ||
timotimo | are you interested in this kind of thing? | ||
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unmatched} | I was just trying to see if bisectable could point to a commit that shows what fixed harmil's bug | 14:47 | |
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unmatched} | harmil: there's a newer R*. Are you able to try with it? rakudo.org/downloads/star/rakudo-st...0(JIT).msi | 14:48 | |
harmil | will do later, got a delivery so now I'm off to @job[0] | 14:49 | |
unmatched} | I should probably do the same... | ||
lizmat | unmatched}: all for exposing the dates / posix values | 14:52 | |
but would probably not be in favour of allowing it to be added upon | |||
rather, so it can serve as a basis of a module that *does* allow adding ? | |||
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lizmat | hmmm... | 14:52 | |
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nebuchadnezzar | Is it on purpose that some module names or method references are not links to their definition ? like the antepenultimite and last paragraphes in docs.perl6.org/language/ipc ? | 14:53 | |
unmatched} | The module can even be updated automatically, by setting a script to watch when Rakudo adds new seconds | 14:54 | |
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unmatched} | nebuchadnezzar: don't think there's any hard reason. Just the person writing it used a C<> Pod marker rather than an L<> OTOH, I've no idea if L<IO::Path> would automatically make a link to that type | 14:55 | |
moritz | nebuchadnezzar: probably just laziness on part of the authors | ||
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nebuchadnezzar | moritz: ok, so it does not hurt if I convert some C<> to L<> ? | 14:56 | |
unmatched} | nebuchadnezzar: also RE your previous comments about highlighting on docs.perl6.org/language/quoting The reason code is not highlighted is because there's a bug that prevents highlighting when B<> or the like are used in the code sample. And I'm guessing the plain-text samples are highlighted as code simply because they're marked up as code. | 14:57 | |
moritz | nebuchadnezzar: it would be appreciated if you do that | ||
nebuchadnezzar | unmatched}: yes, moritz confirm that too | ||
unmatched} | oh | ||
nebuchadnezzar | moritz: ok, I'll do that, it's frustrating to search a clickable link when jumping to a part of a documentation | 14:59 | |
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dalek | c/css_animation: 917be4d | Altai-man++ | html/ (2 files): Css-based animation for TOC. |
15:10 | |
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sena_kun | Ah. | 15:11 | |
Wrong file. | |||
unmatched} | I'd say: 1 missing file. Both sass and css need to be updated | 15:12 | |
(at least until next week) | |||
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sena_kun | unmatched}, I noticed it just now. :) I'll update it now... | 15:12 | |
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dalek | c/css_animation: 5c3916b | Altai-man++ | assets/sass/style.scss: Actually needed SASS-file, fix for of previous commit |
15:13 | |
sena_kun | Autocomplete of filepaths is evil sometimes. | 15:15 | |
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sena_kun | Ah, I've ruined all the PR. Maybe not my day. | 15:17 | |
s/PR/branch | |||
unmatched} | sena_kun: how did you ruin the branch? | 15:18 | |
dalek | osystem: e9af3ed | (Peter Pentchev)++ | META.list: Add Test::Deeply::Relaxed to the ecosystem. Loosely compare two data structures in depth. |
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osystem: 204be27 | Altai-man++ | META.list: Merge pull request #229 from ppentchev/roam-test-deeply-relaxed Add Test::Deeply::Relaxed to the ecosystem. |
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sena_kun | unmatched}, I forked it not from master, but from another branch, so it can't be merged without this another branch changes. | 15:19 | |
unmatched} | github.com/ppentchev/perl6-Test-Deeply-Relaxed | ||
I'm still waiting for someone to do P6 version of P5's Test::Deep(ly?) | 15:20 | ||
So you could, say, compare data structures that have timestamps or other volatile info by checkign them with regexes, while doing exact matches for other keys in a hash or array | |||
[Coke] | unmatched}: I've already pinged the rt bug admins and pointed them to that ticket, I'll let you know what I hear back. | ||
unmatched} | [Coke]++ | 15:21 | |
dalek | c/animated_css: 8d8f62f | Altai-man++ | / (2 files): Css-based TOC animation |
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travis-ci | Doc build passed. Altai-man 'Css-based animation for TOC.' | 15:31 | |
travis-ci.org/perl6/doc/builds/147786240 github.com/perl6/doc/commit/917be4d16b76 | |||
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travis-ci | Doc build passed. Altai-man 'Actually needed SASS-file, fix for of previous commit' | 15:35 | |
travis-ci.org/perl6/doc/builds/147787164 github.com/perl6/doc/compare/917be...3916bbb963 | |||
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bisectable | unmatched}: Exit code is 0 on both starting points, bisecting by using the output | 15:36 | |
unmatched}: bisect log: gist.github.com/e83b51a5a4032fced1...8d37a5cbe9 | |||
unmatched}: (2015-12-25) github.com/rakudo/rakudo/commit/07fecb5 | 15:37 | ||
unmatched}: On both starting points the exit code is 0 and the output is identical as well | |||
unmatched}: Output on both points: WARNINGS for /tmp/Q_XxJSFL8Q:Useless use of "+" in expression "2+2" in sink context (line 1) | |||
unmatched}: On both starting points the exit code is 0 and the output is identical as well | |||
unmatched}: Output on both points: WARNINGS for /tmp/fY8PKahj4r:Useless use of "+" in expression "2+2" in sink context (line 1) | |||
unmatched} | :D | ||
FWIW that animation code can be greatly simlified. The JS bit can just be Cookies.set('toc_state', el.text() == '[hide]' ? 'hidden' : 'shown'); el.parents('nav').find('tbody').toggleClass('hiddenTOC'); or something similar and the CSS code can use one class/classless to style + the vendor prefixes can all go away, since all browsers that we support can handle `transition` | 15:39 | ||
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unmatched} | sena_kun: this needs to be converted to a class toggle too: github.com/perl6/doc/blob/8d8f62fe...ain.js#L40 | 15:40 | |
Right now once you hide toc you can't unhide it, from what I see | |||
err... well, the conditional below it... that still calls .hide() | 15:41 | ||
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sena_kun | unmatched}, ah, right, this should be changed too. I didn't know about safe prefixes, so I went with all-case variant. Yes, I'll update it now. | 15:42 | |
unmatched} | sena_kun++ | 15:43 | |
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travis-ci | Doc build passed. Altai-man 'Css-based TOC animation' | 15:44 | |
travis-ci.org/perl6/doc/builds/147789719 github.com/perl6/doc/commit/8d8f62fe7203 | |||
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hursh | Does anyone know if the latest star release should build on SLES11? | 16:47 | |
"make_path" is not exported by the File::Path module | |||
moritz | hursh: what's the perl 5 version? | 16:48 | |
hursh | Looks like perl 5.10 is too old. I'm just wondering if that's intentional. | ||
dalek | c: 62cc649 | (Jan-Olof Hendig)++ | doc/Type/Pair.pod6: Added docs for Pair.keys |
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moritz | hursh: no, we don't intentionally break the build :-) | ||
though 5.10 is *OLD* | 16:49 | ||
hursh | :-) I mean stop supportting version of perl older than ??? | ||
SLES11 is old. | |||
ok | |||
moritz | afaict we still try to support 5.10.1 at least | ||
or maybe 5.10.0 | |||
hursh | I'm building it for the systems in my cluster. Just wondering I need to skip sles11. | 16:50 | |
stmuk | I think there are recent dependencies on versions of perl > 5.10 | ||
hursh | perl-base-5.10.0-64.72.1 is the problem here. File::Path is too old. | ||
TimToady | m: 42 xx 42 | 16:51 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 4c848b: OUTPUT«WARNINGS for <tmp>:Useless use of constant integer 42 in sink context (line 1)» | ||
TimToady | m: my method bar($a) { $a xx 42 } | ||
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
TimToady | with latest change, finds a real bug in the setting | 16:52 | |
in src/core/Block.pm: my $need_cap = $sig.count == Inf and not ($slurp_p and $slurp_n); | |||
skids: ^^^ your code, according to git :) | 16:53 | ||
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TimToady | oh, this isn't -dev oops | 16:54 | |
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dalek | c/animated_css: 21893b2 | Altai-man++ | / (2 files): Simplification of both js and css code for animation |
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sena_kun | afk for an hour, reviews are still welcome. | 17:00 | |
unmatched} | sena_kun: looks good to me | ||
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Coleoid_n | Hi, #perl6! | 17:29 | |
unmatched} | \o | ||
Coleoid_n | I updated to R* 2016.07 and the REPL seems kaput, is that a known issue? | ||
unmatched} | Coleoid_n: nope. What's the issue? | 17:30 | |
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Coleoid_n | I enter perl6 on the command line and it returns without output. I'll put together a paste if that's useful. | 17:32 | |
unmatched} | 0.o | ||
What OS? | |||
Coleoid_n | I'm on Win 10 in Powershell. | ||
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Coleoid_n | I'll try it in cmd... | 17:33 | |
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Coleoid_n | Also weird, in cmd it reports "Access is denied." and exits. | 17:34 | |
unmatched} | Coleoid_n: Would you please report it as a bug? Testing such basic operation of REPL is part of the build process, so it's really weird that it slipped through. Please include some details about OS and any installed tools and modules that may affect this. | ||
huggable: rakudobug | 17:35 | ||
huggable | unmatched}, To report a bug, email detailed description and any test cases to [email@hidden.address] or use perl6 query on rt.perl.org ; see github.com/rakudo/rakudo/#reporting-bugs | ||
Coleoid_n | I'm newly updated to Win 10, so it could be an issue with that. | ||
unmatched} | I got Win10 at home and REPL worked fine there last time I tried. | ||
(via cmd.exe) | |||
Coleoid_n | I'll send that report, after poking it a bit more. Thanks! | 17:36 | |
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stmuk | maybe it's a perms/ownership issue? | 17:38 | |
do you get the same error opening a cmd.exe windows as Adminstrator? | 17:39 | ||
Coleoid_n | perl6 -v works in a shell with admin permissions, otherwise another "access denied", and I'm having other perms issues, so I believe you're right, stmuk. | ||
stmuk | :) | 17:40 | |
gfldex | Coleoid_n: can't reproduce on a clean Win10 VM. I didn't upgrade tho (hence clean). | 17:41 | |
Coleoid_n | Oh, that's another possibility. When I was upgrading, I ran into file overwrite problems. I'll do an uninstall and clean reinstall. | 17:42 | |
(of R*) | |||
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[Coke] | ok, this is so off topic, but I was just followed by "Beverage Consulting, liquid brands management"... probably because I've got a coke in my name... and their handle is @liquidbm | 17:55 | |
I realize younger than me and you probably won't get why that's a.. crappy nick, but damn. | 17:56 | ||
Coleoid_n | Blugh. | ||
Guess I'm >= your age, then, Coke. | |||
unmatched} doesn't get why that's a crappy nick | |||
[Coke] | bm is what my grandmother called a bowel movement. | 17:57 | |
unmatched} | heh | 17:58 | |
Yeah, google search corroborates that usage.... Right after showing Beverage Consulting as first result :P | |||
[Coke] is 40 something. | |||
unmatched} is 15 | |||
dalek | sectbot: eee0383 | (Aleks-Daniel Jakimenko-Aleksejev)++ | bisectable.pl: Reduce bisectable timout Given that this timeout is per each run, 200 is a bit too much. Each bisect query should test about 12 commits, so with the previous limit it meant that it would hang for half an hour. Now it will hang for two minutes, but that's okay. |
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AlexDaniel | unmatched}: ↑ hehe | 18:00 | |
[Coke] | unmatched}: seriously? huh. | ||
stmuk is 31 (but not in base 10) | 18:01 | ||
unmatched} | [Coke]: sure, why not. It's not like I would make something like this up. | ||
And my 10-years of Perl experience are also true :) | 18:02 | ||
I started writing code when I was 3. My mother read me programming manuals in leu of children's books :D | 18:03 | ||
hoelzro didn't start coding until 17 =/ | |||
unmatched}: good on you for getting an early start =) | |||
unmatched} | :D | ||
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AlexDaniel | how can I do that with a loop? | 18:04 | |
m: say :4<31>; say :5<31>; say :6<31>; say :7<31>; say :8<31>; say :9<31>; say :10<31>; say :11<31>; say :12<31>; | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar 4c848b: OUTPUT«131619222528313437» | ||
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AlexDaniel | bisect: for 1..100 -> $i { say (((^$i).map: {^$_}) <<(-)>> ((^($i+1)).map: {$_ xx $i})) } | 18:07 | |
:P | |||
[Coke] started somewhere between zz and hoelzro | 18:10 | ||
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lambd0x | Hi everyone o/ | 18:11 | |
unmatched} | I was kidding lol. I'm 30 and I started coding at 14 :) | ||
hoelzro | o/ lambd0x | ||
gah | |||
I'm way too gullible =S | |||
unmatched} | lol | ||
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AlexDaniel | nah, still not enough | 18:12 | |
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lambd0x | people is there a way to take an existing image open it and show it in a program? | 18:13 | |
perlpilot | lambd0x: "is there a way to ..." style questions mostly have an answer of "yes, but ..." and it's the "but ..." part you really need to know about :) | 18:14 | |
[Coke] | jnthn: found another segfault for you in RT #123434 | 18:15 | |
synopsebot6 | Link: rt.perl.org/rt3//Public/Bug/Displa...?id=123434 | ||
[Coke] | ww | ||
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unmatched} | m: use MONKEY-GUTS; nqp::radix($_, "31", 0, 0)[0].say for 4..12 | 18:17 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 4c848b: OUTPUT«131619222528313437» | ||
unmatched} | AlexDaniel: there's that. No idea how to do with P6 tho | ||
lambd0x | perlpilot: I wanted to display an image to the user I've found inumerous ways of read, manipulation, etc. but not that though. | 18:18 | |
perlpilot | lambd0x: maybe one of the SDL or Gtk modules has something for you? | 18:19 | |
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perlpilot | lambd0x: there may be others, search modules.perl6.org | 18:19 | |
gfldex | m: 31.base($_).say for 2..16; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 4c848b: OUTPUT«111111011133111514337343129272523211F» | ||
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lambd0x | perlpilot: In our modules there're some about that creates an image and even apply some effect or resize it. But not for displaying it really. | 18:21 | |
unmatched} | lambd0x: there are some GTK modules modules.perl6.org/#q=GTK%3A%3A and SDL2 module: github.com/timo/SDL2_raw-p6 | ||
lambd0x: but it also depends on your audience and purpose. `run "eog", $image` works fine on my box :) | 18:22 | ||
lambd0x | perlpilot: yes, but I wanted something OS independent.. | 18:23 | |
unmatched} | Show it in a browser :P | ||
There's probably a way to queue what the system's default thing for browing is | |||
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lambd0x | unmatched}: unmatched} hm... true. Is there a native way of doing it. or better rakudo perl already support it? | 18:24 | |
unmatched} | No idea. | ||
lambd0x | unmatched}: ahahah | 18:25 | |
unmatched} | heh | ||
lambd0x | unmatched}: Prob in perl 5 there is. | ||
if not in rakudo perl 6 :) | |||
thanks guys | |||
geekosaur | windows has a reliable way to open the default browser. os x has one with some edge cases. most linux does *not* have a reliable way; the documented one (xdg-open) is widely mis-implemented and often buggy | 18:28 | |
hoelzro | hehe, edge cases =P | ||
lambd0x | ahahaha | 18:30 | |
skids | Well, on sensible linux systems, you have sensible-browser | 18:32 | |
unmatched} | lol. I ran it not expecting much, but turns out it works | 18:34 | |
lambd0x | :) | ||
unmatched} | Event starts lynx on my headless debian server | ||
sena_kun | Since nobody is against, I'm merging css-animation for the TOC now. | 18:38 | |
unmatched} | sena_kun++ | ||
dalek | c: 8d8f62f | Altai-man++ | / (2 files): Css-based TOC animation |
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c: 21893b2 | Altai-man++ | / (2 files): Simplification of both js and css code for animation |
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c: 60aa1dd | Altai-man++ | / (2 files): Merge pull request #767 from perl6/animated_css Css-based TOC animation |
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harmil | m: say [*] set(1,2,3) | 19:06 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar debc7c: OUTPUT«set(3, 1, 2)» | ||
harmil | Is it wrong of me to expect that to be 9? | ||
moritz | yes | ||
a set is not a list | |||
harmil | Is it wrong of me to think that I'm not the last person who is going to ask that? | 19:08 | |
unmatched} | Well, also 9 is a wrong number :) | ||
m: say [*] set(1,2,3).keys | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar debc7c: OUTPUT«6» | ||
harmil | Sorry, I 'm upside down :) | ||
I meant 6 | |||
unmatched} | m: say [*] set(1,2,3), set(4,5,6) | 19:09 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar debc7c: OUTPUT«9» | ||
unmatched} | ehehe | ||
harmil | Well, obviously. | 19:10 | |
perlpilot | harmil: what would a reasonable person think the result of multiplying two sets should be? (or a set by a number?) | ||
hoelzro | I understand the concern that unmatched}'s snippet above doesn't look like multiplying sets together | 19:11 | |
harmil | I would expect that either it would warn, error or resort to a hyperoperation of the requested nonsensical operation. | ||
[Coke] | Looks fine to me. | ||
m: say +set(1,2,3) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
hoelzro | to me as well - but I understand how newbies could get tripped up on that | ||
[Coke] | ^^ good luck keeping that and making [*] warn instead of using it. | ||
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hoelzro | my $a = set(1..3); my $b = set(4..6); say [*] $a, $b; | 19:12 | |
that makes it more obvious | |||
[Coke] | m: my $a = set(1..3); my $b = set(4..6); say [*] $a, $b; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«9» | ||
harmil | The idea that set(1,2,3) and [1,2,3] are fundamentally incompatible views of collections of integers seems confusing to me | ||
One is an ordered list one is unordered. That's really the end of it | |||
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harmil | ((logically)) | 19:13 | |
hoelzro | my first "real" programming language was Java, so I'm biased in thinking that it makes sense | ||
(because the Java collections API defines a List as an ordered sequence of values, and a Set as an unordered collection of values) | 19:14 | ||
the important thing about a list is order; whereas the important thing about a set is membership | |||
unmatched} | harmil: set is a collection of pairs, really | 19:15 | |
m: dd set(1,2,3) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«set(3,1,2)» | ||
unmatched} | m: dd |set(1,2,3) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3 => Bool::True1 => Bool::True2 => Bool::True» | ||
perlpilot | Some multis for infix:<*> that took into account Set and warned might still be useful and non-onerus for those that would use sets | ||
unmatched} | m: my $s = SetHash.new: 1,2,3; $s<2> = 42; say $s | 19:16 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«SetHash.new(3, 2, 1, 2)» | ||
unmatched} | harmil: ^ this in particular is a curious effect. | ||
m: my $s = SetHash.new: 1,2,3; $s<2> = 42; dd|$s | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«WARNINGS for <tmp>:Useless use of "|" in expression "dd|$s" in sink context (line 1)block <unit>» | ||
unmatched} | m: my $s = SetHash.new: 1,2,3; $s<2> = 42; dd |$s | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3 => Bool::TrueIntStr.new(2, "2") => Bool::True1 => Bool::True2 => Bool::True» | ||
unmatched} | m: my $s = SetHash.new: 1,2,3; $s{2} = 42; say $s | 19:17 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«SetHash.new(3, 1, 2)» | ||
unmatched} | This, I guess is better. You can't have more than one member. | ||
That's the same | |||
harmil | I understand the implementation and the concept of bags, etc. I'm just asking why we're exposing that complexity at the level of trying to iterate over an object ala [*] [1,2,3] (which does produce 6,) | ||
[Coke] | m: say "this".path.WHAT | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«(Path)» | ||
unmatched} | m: say Set ~~ Iterable | 19:18 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«False» | ||
unmatched} | m: say [] ~~ Iterable | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«True» | ||
unmatched} | m: say Hash ~~ Iterable | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«True» | ||
unmatched} | *shrug* | ||
m: say [*] set(1,2,3) but Iterable | 19:20 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«Cannot resolve caller Numeric(Pair: ); none of these signatures match: (Mu:U \v: *%_) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
unmatched} | m: use MONKEY-TYPING; augment class Pair { method Numeric { self.key } }; say [*] set(1,2,3) but Iterable | 19:21 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«6» | ||
unmatched} | ehehe. I ♥ Perl 6 :) | ||
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mniip | so uh, any good resource for jumping straight into perl6? | 19:25 | |
unmatched} | m: use MONKEY-TYPING; augment class Set does Iterable {}; augment class Pair { method Numeric { self.key } }; say [*] |set(1,2,3), |set(4,5,6) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«720» | ||
unmatched} | mniip: straight from where? | ||
mniip | I don't know, generic programming experience? | 19:26 | |
perl 5 perhaps? | |||
harmil | I highly recommend the docs site. It has a lot of good high-level starting points | ||
unmatched} | mniip: for P5 we have a few 5-to tuts here: docs.perl6.org/language.html | ||
mniip: general; I guess Learn X in Y is a good site: learnxinyminutes.com/docs/perl6/ | |||
mniip | what I mean is I'm not looking for tutorials on programming | 19:27 | |
unmatched} | huggable: new | ||
huggable | unmatched}, See "For Newcomers" section on perl6.org/documentation/ | ||
hoelzro | oh, hi mniip =) | ||
unmatched} | mniip: yeah, LearnXinY is a good place. It just goes through concepts | ||
s/concepts/ways to do things in P6/; | 19:28 | ||
mniip | mhm | ||
also hi hoelzro | |||
what happened between you and lua :p | |||
unmatched} | There's also perl6intro.com/ but I've no idea what its target readers are | 19:29 | |
hoelzro | I still use it - I've just been taking a break from #lua | ||
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[Coke] | also, rosettacode is good for "I know how to solve this problem in X, how do I solve it in Y?" | 19:30 | |
Perl 6 has pretty good coverage there. | |||
mniip | huh | 19:33 | |
identifiers can contain apostrophes but not at the end? | 19:34 | ||
hoelzro | yup | ||
unmatched} | And hyphens too | ||
m: my \this-is-friggin'-awesome; | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Term definition requires an initializerat <tmp>:1------> 3my \this-is-friggin7⏏5'-awesome;» | ||
unmatched} | m: my \this-is-friggin'-awesome = 'meow'; | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Term definition requires an initializerat <tmp>:1------> 3my \this-is-friggin7⏏5'-awesome = 'meow';» | ||
mniip | I think you need an alpha between ' and - | ||
unmatched} | heh. I guess not followed by a hyphen either :D | ||
m: my \this-is-friggin'so-awesome = 'meow'; | 19:35 | ||
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
unmatched} | m: my \Δ = 42; say Δ | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«42» | ||
unmatched} | ^_^ | ||
gfldex | m: say 'foo{my $a'b}bar' | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Two terms in a rowat <tmp>:1------> 3say 'foo{my $a'7⏏5b}bar' expecting any of: infix infix stopper postfix statement end statement modifie…» | ||
gfldex | m: say Q:c'foo{my $a'b}bar' | 19:36 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5===Unrecognized adverb: :c'fooat <tmp>:1------> 3say Q:c'foo7⏏5{my $a'b}bar'Strange text after block (missing semicolon or comma?)at <tmp>:1------> 3say Q:c'foo{my $a'b}7⏏5bar' expecting any of: …» | ||
mniip | in haskell you add ' at the end of a function name to denote some small difference, e.g more strictness, not sure what the point of having ' in identifiers is in perl with that restriction | ||
gfldex | m: say Q:c 'foo{my $a'b}bar' | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«Use of uninitialized value $a'b of type Any in string contextAny of .^name, .perl, .gist, or .say can stringify undefined things, if needed. in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1foobar» | ||
unmatched} | Probably something to do with single-parse parsing and it needing to know where terms end and stuff | 19:39 | |
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[Coke] | .u u+F8F6 | 19:40 | |
yoleaux | No characters found | ||
mniip | no I mean I understand why it might be ambiguous without the restriction but then why have ' at all | ||
unmatched} | mniip: to write things like doesn't-hang() (actual sub from our test suite) | ||
There was a talk about ditching it before Christmas release, but luckily reason prevailed ^_^ | 19:41 | ||
m: "\x[F8F6]".uninames.say | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«(<Private Use>)» | ||
mniip is glad he isn't using his 'm' nickname on a regular basis | 19:42 | ||
unmatched} | :D | 19:43 | |
mniip | "Reduction operators work on lists of values. They are formed by surrounding the operator with brackets []" | 19:44 | |
is that a right fold, a left fold, or is associativity assumed | |||
unmatched} | m: say [*] ^4 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«0» | ||
unmatched} | m: say [*] 1, 2, 3 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«6» | ||
unmatched} | m: say [\*] 1, 2, 3 | 19:45 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«(1 2 6)» | ||
unmatched} | I don't know what folds are :( | ||
[Coke] | [*] is on a single list, does that even have a fold? | 19:46 | |
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geekosaur | somehow I think you are talking different languages... | 19:47 | |
gfldex | mniip: you may want to watch youtu.be/BJIfPFpaMRI?t=2053 | ||
[Coke] | [*] and [\*] operate left to right, fwiw. | ||
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hoelzro | [*] is a fold, [\*] is a scan | 19:50 | |
m: [*] ^10 | |||
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
hoelzro | m: say [*] ^10 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«0» | ||
hursh | Hi. I have a stupid question. Where do we report bugs for the star releases? | ||
hoelzro | oh, ha | ||
m: say [*] 1..10 | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3628800» | ||
hoelzro | m: say [-] 1..10 | 19:51 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«-53» | ||
hoelzro | m: say [R-] 1..10 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«-35» | ||
hoelzro | I *think* using [R-] would be the right way to effectively make the fold go the other way | ||
gfldex | hursh: [email@hidden.address] | 19:52 | |
mniip | hmm | ||
geekosaur | my recollection is it's supposed to introspect the operator to determine associativity? (because iirc someone was noting it didn't work with exponentiation the other day?) | ||
hursh | gfldex: Thanks | 19:54 | |
mniip | all these functional-ish features crammed into syntax | 19:55 | |
harmil | Tried to do the monkey typing on set... less than clear on my results: | 19:56 | |
m: use MONKEY-TYPING; augment class Set does Iterable { method iterator { self.keys }; method lazy { self.iterator.lazy } }; say [*] set(1,2,3) | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«Cannot resolve caller Numeric(Pair: ); none of these signatures match: (Mu:U \v: *%_) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
dalek | c: c23d0f7 | (Jan-Olof Hendig)++ | doc/Type/Pair.pod6: Added docs for Pair.values |
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[Coke] | if you augment an existing class, you might have to re compose it. | 19:58 | |
jnthn | um...that method iterator ain't gonna work out well, it's not returning an iterator. | 20:00 | |
harmil | Should i be calling .keys.iterator? | 20:02 | |
THat gives the same error | |||
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ZoffixMobile | The error is because pair can't do Numeric. See unmatched's examples above | 20:04 | |
Also note: augmentation affects your entire program. You shouldn't be using it willy-nilly | 20:05 | ||
harmil | m: use MONKEY-TYPING; augment class Set does Iterable { method iterator { self.keys.iterator }; method lazy { self.keys.lazy } }; say [*] set(1,2,3) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«Cannot resolve caller Numeric(Pair: ); none of these signatures match: (Mu:U \v: *%_) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
harmil | But why should a pair be produced when I'm explicitly iterating over the keys? | 20:06 | |
I' | |||
ZoffixMobile | dunno | 20:07 | |
harmil | Hmm... I'll work on this more tomorrow. | ||
konobi | pmurias: how goes? | 20:09 | |
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mniip | why is Mu called what way? is it related to the least fixed point combinator? | 20:15 | |
ZoffixMobile | huggable, Mu name | ||
huggable | ZoffixMobile, "M"ost "u"ndefined. Or philosophical: "The nothing from which everything proceeds" | ||
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rindolf | ZoffixMobile: meow! Sup? | 20:21 | |
ZoffixMobile | Hi | ||
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jdv79 | rindolf: hows tge weather? | 20:24 | |
rindolf | jdv79: it's very warm. | ||
jdv79: and sunny - though now it's past nightfall. | 20:25 | ||
jdv79 | its a bit of a scorcher here as well | ||
rindolf | jdv79: how is it there? | ||
jdv79: ah. | |||
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AlexDaniel | re [*] set(1,2,3) discussion | 20:35 | |
m: say [*] set(1,2,3) # ok, I get it | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«set(3, 1, 2)» | ||
AlexDaniel | m: say [*] set(1,2,3), set(4,5,6) # hmmm… | 20:36 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«9» | ||
gfldex | m: say [*] 3, 3 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«9» | ||
AlexDaniel | gfldex: sure, I am just surprised that the first one is not 3 | ||
gfldex | the first one should produce some undefined value | 20:37 | |
m: say 3 * NaN | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«NaN» | ||
[Coke] | m: say [*] 3 | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
[Coke] | m: m: say [*] set(1,2,3) | 20:38 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«set(3, 1, 2)» | ||
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[Coke] | the metaop might be returning $arg there, instead of +$arg | 20:41 | |
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[Coke] | m: say set(1,2,3).Numeric.perl; | 20:44 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
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AlexDaniel | soooo… is it a bug? | 20:47 | |
[Coke] | m: say [*] (3i+2) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«2+3i» | ||
[Coke] | m: say [*] bag(1,2,3) | 20:48 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«bag(3, 1, 2)» | ||
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[Coke] | m: infix:<*>(3).say | 20:48 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
perlpilot | m: say [+] set(6,7,8) | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«Cannot resolve caller Numeric(Pair: ); none of these signatures match: (Mu:U \v: *%_) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
[Coke] | m: infix:<*>(set(1,2,3)).say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
[Coke] | O_O; | 20:49 | |
gfldex | AlexDaniel: there is a bug somewhere | ||
perlpilot concurs | |||
[Coke] | I would expect [*] *THING* to match infix:<*>(*THING*) | ||
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jnthn | Not the *THING* is iterable you wouldn't :) | 20:50 | |
[Coke] | I would also expect [*] *THING* to be the same as [*] +*THING* | ||
gfldex | also there is ENODOCS because we don't doc what happens with lists with 1 element | ||
jnthn | I guess the set iterates through its elements | ||
m: my @a = 1,2,3; say [+] @a | |||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«6» | ||
jnthn | m: my @a = 1,2,3; say infix:<+> @a | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar f0abe8: OUTPUT«3» | ||
jnthn | Just like that | 20:51 | |
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jnthn | m: my @a = 1,2,3; say [+] @a, 4 | 20:51 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«7» | ||
[Coke] | gfldex: for [*] ops, we should. (there's a default condition for each of the ops - [*] is the same as *1 on a single list, [+] is the same as +0...) | ||
jnthn | Single arg rule in action :) | ||
gfldex | m: dd [*] 3; | 20:53 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«3» | ||
gfldex | m: dd [*] (3,); | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«3» | ||
gfldex | m: dd [-] (3,); | 20:55 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«3» | ||
AlexDaniel | m: 'say [*] ‘abc’ | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«5===SORRY!5=== Error while compiling <tmp>Unable to parse expression in single quotes; couldn't find final "'" at <tmp>:1------> 3'say [*] ‘abc’7⏏5<EOL> expecting any of: single quotes term» | ||
AlexDaniel | m: say [*] ‘abc’ | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«abc» | ||
sena_kun | On docs.perl6.org, how update works? Isn't it preprocesses SASS file to use? It seems I need to push locally generated style.css. No good. | ||
AlexDaniel | m: say [/] ‘abc’ | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«abc» | ||
AlexDaniel | m: say [+] ‘abc’ | ||
[Coke] | identity is the word I was trying to remember there, I think. | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«Cannot convert string to number: base-10 number must begin with valid digits or '.' in '3⏏5abc' (indicated by ⏏) in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1Actually thrown at: in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1» | ||
AlexDaniel | m: say [-] ‘abc’ | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«abc» | ||
AlexDaniel | WAT | ||
[Coke] | sena_kun: yes, you need to build the sass file and commit it | 20:56 | |
sena_kun | [Coke], thanks. | ||
gfldex | AlexDaniel++ bugs++ | ||
[Coke] | commit the generated file, that is. | ||
committable | [Coke]: ¦«the»: Cannot find this revision | ||
[Coke] | commit or die! | ||
committable | [Coke]: ¦«or»: Cannot find this revision | ||
sena_kun | AlexDaniel, thanks for your notice, I've fixed animation now. | ||
dalek | c: 318cd11 | (Wenzel P. P. Peppmeyer)++ | doc/Language/operators.pod6: doc reduction of single element lists |
20:57 | |
[Coke] | maybe make commit only respond to "commit:" ? | ||
AlexDaniel | sena_kun: it seems like you have to update .css file every time you change sass file | ||
perlpilot | [Coke]: +1 | ||
hursh | Is there any methods or tricks to easily commafy a number? (1000000 => 1,000,000) | ||
moritz | isn't there an sprintf formatter for that, or something? | ||
AlexDaniel | [Coke]: sure-sure, but no. I mean, we are going to rewrite these bots in Perl 6 soon and the thing will go away. | 20:58 | |
[Coke] | m: say 1000000.flip.comb(3).join(',').flip.say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«1,000,000True» | ||
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[Coke] | m: 1000000.flip.comb(3).join(',').flip.say # only need one say | 20:58 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«1,000,000» | ||
dalek | c: dc817e6 | Altai-man++ | html/css/style.css: Style.css was updated |
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AlexDaniel | sena_kun: related: github.com/perl6/doc/issues/662 | 20:59 | |
sena_kun | Thanks. | 21:00 | |
hursh | [Coke]: cool. Thanks | ||
moritz: I didn't see any. | |||
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AlexDaniel | m: ‘1000000’.comb(-69).say | 21:03 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«(1 0 0 0 0 0 0)» | ||
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Zoffix | sena_kun, FWIW, my comments ( github.com/perl6/doc/pull/767#issu...-235719136 ) are based on the locally built version. The ToC doesn't lose its height on narrow pages and briefly looking at it, the reason seems to be font-size on table cells. | 21:06 | |
sena_kun | Zoffix, can you point me to example of the narrow page? | 21:08 | |
Zoffix | sena_kun, just resize your browser a bit. The ToC will be at the top of the page instead of the side | ||
sena_kun | Zoffix, let's try it... | ||
Zoffix | sena_kun, this is what I see when I hide the ToC: blob:http%3A//imgur.com/d279d9df-4560-4e40-a06f-c3bded35dff3 | 21:09 | |
sena_kun | Zoffix, yes, it doesn't, I know. | 21:10 | |
Zoffix | I mean i.imgur.com/ct2zOGz.png | ||
AlexDaniel | right, seeing the same thing here | 21:11 | |
Zoffix: should it also stop taking any horizontal space when it is on the left? | |||
otherwise why hide it? | 21:12 | ||
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sena_kun | Zoffix, the reason is: we need to know *exact* max-height of the element to "slide down". The solution can use js to determine it, but it's additional computations. We can just set some "really big" value, but it's terrible solution. Animation I used based on padding and font-size, so height is untouched. | 21:12 | |
Zoffix | sena_kun, how come do we need exact max-height? | 21:13 | |
sena_kun | Zoffix, to make animation with css, you need to change (max-)height - minimal(obviously 0px) and normal. This number of different for every page with ToC. | ||
*to know two heights | 21:14 | ||
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Zoffix | I'd think `auto` would work just fine | 21:16 | |
sena_kun | Zoffix, no. | ||
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sena_kun | It doesn't work. | 21:16 | |
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sena_kun | If it were so simple, I wouldn't come up with such solutions like font-size or padding changes. | 21:17 | |
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sena_kun | Of course, we can throw away idea of css-animations(since they're quite restricted) and just use js variant. Or I'm just dumb and someone smarter can patch it. | 21:20 | |
AlexDaniel | noooo! js animations… | 21:22 | |
perhaps we can throw away the idea of animations… | |||
although I have to admit that it looks nice | 21:23 | ||
Zoffix | I thought it was fine before with JS. | 21:25 | |
sena_kun | Zoffix, jsfiddle.net/thechrisjordan/3Fc7D/23/ - you can try to play with this fiddle if you want. | ||
Zoffix | sena_kun, nah. I just tried to fix it and I can make it show/hide fine but not animate | 21:26 | |
sena_kun | Also, we can use some css-framework with nice no-js animations. But it's a bit too much overkill here. | ||
Zoffix | Then I got bored with it :) | ||
Meh. My opinion is we should revert to JS version and be done with it. We're breaking our backs for a some hypothetical case that some hypothetical person who hypothetically actually uses the show/hide slider so often that they will hypothetically dislike our animation style so much that they will hypothetically make their own user stylesheets to override it. | 21:27 | ||
People with that mentality of doing some sort of nerd features are the same folks who overengineered www.wechall.net/ :) | 21:28 | ||
AlexDaniel | #128757 128758 | 21:29 | |
synopsebot6 | Link: rt.perl.org/rt3//Public/Bug/Displa...?id=128757 | ||
AlexDaniel | #128758 | 21:30 | |
synopsebot6 | Link: rt.perl.org/rt3//Public/Bug/Displa...?id=128758 | ||
sena_kun | There are one more way(maybe a bit hacky): check browser's width and if it's not wide enough, just hide insted. But it's ridiculously hacky. | ||
Zoffix | :o | ||
Just hide? Then people would have to scan the entire document to get what they want | 21:31 | ||
sena_kun | Zoffix, no-no. | ||
I meant "just hide, do not use animation". | |||
Zoffix | ah | ||
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ | |||
Zoffix opens up an ice-cream shaped like a slice of watermelon and leaves to put finishing touches on IRC::Client | 21:32 | ||
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sena_kun | AlexDaniel, why do you oppose js-animations so much? We don't use them TOO MUCH, and we already have jquery, so it can't be helped. | 21:33 | |
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geekosaur finds websites with animations anywhere from annoying to near impossible to use... | 21:35 | ||
(sensory issues) | |||
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hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) | 21:38 | |
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
hursh | p6: .say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«(Any)» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .say | 21:39 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«36893488147419103230» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip | ||
camelia | ( no output ) | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«03230191474188439863» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .=comb(3) ; .say | 21:40 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«(032 301 914 741 884 398 63)» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .=comb(3) ; .=join(',') ; .say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«032,301,914,741,884,398,63» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .=comb(3) ; .=flip ; .=join(',') ; .say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«36 893 488 147 419 103 230» | ||
hursh | p6: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .=comb(3) ; .=flip ; .=join(",") ; .say | 21:41 | |
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«36 893 488 147 419 103 230» | ||
hursh | rakudo: $_=[+]((1,2,4...*)[1..8**2]) ; .=flip ; .=comb(3) ; .=flip ; .=join(",") ; .say | ||
camelia | rakudo-moar 8ede35: OUTPUT«36 893 488 147 419 103 230» | ||
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AlexDaniel | sena_kun: well, did I say that I oppose it “so much”? :) I slightly oppose all animations (they are rarely useful, most of the time they are just time wasters), but if there are animations, then it feels wrong to do them on JS side… If it has to be done this way, then fine, but I think that “why should we have an animation there?” is a good question | 21:43 | |
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sena_kun | AlexDaniel, I'll reopen issue about this now... | 21:44 | |
We need some voting system for a questions like this, eh. And the solution still wouldn't be good for everyone. Eeeh. | 21:45 | ||
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AlexDaniel | sena_kun: 👍 👎 on GitHub work OK as a voting system, however, we are not going to have many votes ;) | 21:48 | |
sena_kun | We sure aren't... | ||
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sena_kun | Also, AlexDaniel, I wanted to ask you about my PR for binded search links, can you look at it, please? With this thing merged(or something similar), we can resolve part of Glossary page items and revive search terms like "Regular Expression". | 21:49 | |
AlexDaniel | sena_kun: I liked it. The number of lines changed is so small! | 21:51 | |
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sena_kun | It's because I just moved things around, without any parsing/checking/etc. | 21:54 | |
I think, if gfldex is agree with merging, we can accept it. | 21:55 | ||
AlexDaniel | yeah. Like, we can have a discussion about whether we should have manually defined items or not, but we already do, so… | 21:56 | |
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gfldex | sena_kun: code and content should not get mixed if possible, unless is requires tons of work | 22:06 | |
dalek | c: 2141eca | Altai-man++ | / (3 files): Now we take predefined search values from outer file |
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c: ea3b332 | (Wenzel P. P. Peppmeyer)++ | / (3 files): Merge pull request #763 from perl6/predefined_search Now we take predefined search values from outer file |
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AlexDaniel | by the way, what about github.com/perl6/doc/pull/762 ? | 22:08 | |
everything looks sane, but I know nothing about Callframes | |||
sena_kun | gfldex, actually, I've proposed to format search items with some simple markup and parse it manually in htmlify. It will be a bit more work, but for sure much reusable. What do you think about this approach? I can implement it quite easily, I suppose. | 22:09 | |
gfldex | AlexDaniel: that's actually a language designer question. It may just be an implementation detail that may or may not be subject to change. | ||
sena_kun: unless you know LaTeX well, don't fiddle with anything indexy or ToCy. We need less automatic magic in htmlify rather then more. | 22:11 | ||
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sena_kun | gfldex, I used LaTeX, but. Things pull out other things, and the other things pull out more and more. | 22:13 | |
gfldex | AlexDaniel: thinking about it, there are already modules in eco that depend on Callframe. I will merge it. | 22:14 | |
dalek | c: e864f30 | (Sterling Hanenkamp)++ | doc/Language/5to6-perlfunc.pod6: Update the caller 5-to-6 info |
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c: cf5210d | (Sterling Hanenkamp)++ | doc/Type/Routine.pod6: Add documentation for Routine.package |
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c: ff60064 | (Sterling Hanenkamp)++ | doc/Type/CallFrame.pod6: Add documentation for CallFrame |
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c: e1c155e | (Wenzel P. P. Peppmeyer)++ | doc/ (3 files): Merge pull request #762 from zostay/callframe Add documentation for Callframe |
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zostay | comparing CallFrame/callframe to Backtrace and S06, callframe is missing pieces, but it'll be pretty important to future introspection, profiling, debugging, etc. as the language matures | 22:22 | |
gfldex | sena_kun: in a ideal world the entire search index and targets for L<> would depend in X<>. Right now there are tons of shortcuts that depend on htmlify. If you write L<Foo> it rewrites the link to L</type/Foo> what corresponds to doc/Type/Foo.pod. That violates S26 and makes LaTeX output really hard. | ||
zostay | e.g., there's at least one method that is marked with an NYI exception and the .my information has seems to have some omissions when you actually try to use it | 22:23 | |
gfldex | sena_kun: my current idea to fix that is Pod::To::Source, that takes $=pod and turnes it back into Perl 6 code. That would allow to transform all bad links into good ones and would allow us to add missing X<> entries for headings. Many headings already got them, so something has to be done there anyway. | 22:24 | |
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gfldex | sena_kun: also, there are quite a few duplicated anchors thanks to generating them automatically from headings, without taking heading numbers into account. That needs to be fixed for sure. | 22:27 | |
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sena_kun | gfldex, I can be sleepy or dumb right now, but how will it fix our need for pairs of "Term -> Page address(not anchor)"? We really need to fix indexing for sure, I agree with that, but it seems to be a bit different issue. Except that htmlify is overflowing with magic now, of course. | 22:29 | |
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gfldex | sena_kun: if you parse $=pod and rewrite it you also must have checks. With the checks we can catch all missing bits and problems. Not everything can be fixed automatically but we can warn on odd stuff and fix that by hand. | 22:32 | |
sena_kun | It's time to read S26. | ||
gfldex, and hard-coded content surely "pass" all checks by design... Yes, it's a problem. | 22:34 | ||
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tbrowder | re Hinrik's emacs perl6-mode: I have submitted a PR that adds a rudimentary imemu Index for subs and vars. If interested my fork is at github.com/tbrowder/perl6-mode (branch "my-branch") | 23:21 | |
sena_kun | tbrowder, I doubt he is here now. But updates of emacs perl6-mode are always welcome(at least for me). | 23:27 | |
.seen hinrik | |||
yoleaux | I haven't seen hinrik around. | ||
tbrowder | sena_kun: give it a try if you have time--it doesn't sort names yet, but PRs are welcome! | 23:31 | |
sena_kun | tbrowder, my elisp code is terrible, sorry. Hinrik merged my little typo fix a few month ago quite quickly, so, I suppose, he can merge your PR too. | 23:33 | |
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