SmokeMachine | weekly: dev.to/fco/crolite-filling-the-moj...ystem-4ebi | 00:37 | |
notable6 | SmokeMachine, Noted! (weekly) | ||
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disbot2 | <simon_sibl> I enjoy lisp But now I can’t stop thinking What if Guix was using Raku | 07:53 | |
<simon_sibl> I mean technically it’s possible to add a Raku frontend to guile | 07:54 | ||
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ab5tract | There is a distro that uses Rakudo | 11:11 | |
Can’t recall the name but you can find it mentioned in a Rakudo weekly from way back | 11:12 | ||
tbrowder | hi, i just remembered that "my Hash %h" means a container of Hashes *instead* of a Hash!! the error msgs, looking back, said it expected an element to be a hash but i didn't pick up on it, duh. oh, what pain that caused. | ||
i would like the err msg to add something like "did you mean that element to be a hash, dummy?" | 11:15 | ||
ab5tract | tbrowder: yeah that is definitely a potential gotcha | ||
‘of’ is a good friend here | 11:16 | ||
m: my %h of Int; %h<a> = 5; %h<b> = <nok> | |||
camelia | Type check failed for an element of %h; expected Int but got Str in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1 |
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tbrowder | the parser now often gives friendly hints | ||
ab5tract | tbrowder: a “worry” would be appropriate, I think , for the specific cases of ‘my Hash %h’ and ‘my Array @a’ | 11:17 | |
I’d like to propose that you take a stab at adding this yourself via a PR | 11:18 | ||
tbrowder | yes, i was getting that msg, but, it didn't hit me because i was wrapped up in teaking a TWEAK | ||
tweaking... | |||
ab5tract: ok, on my TODO list, add to prob solving shall i? | 11:19 | ||
lizmat | problem is: there is nothing wrong with: my Hash %h | ||
and generally we don't warn on valid code constructs, do we? | 11:20 | ||
tbrowder | true, but ... | ||
ab5tract | Yeah I was demonstrating ‘of’ as a mnemonic rather than the error message | ||
lizmat: aren’t all “potential difficulties” valid code? | |||
lizmat | m: my $a; my $a | 11:21 | |
camelia | Potential difficulties: Redeclaration of symbol '$a'. at <tmp>:1 ------> my $a; my $a<HERE><EOL> |
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lizmat | m: my $a; my $a; say "foo" | ||
camelia | Potential difficulties: Redeclaration of symbol '$a'. at <tmp>:1 ------> my $a; my $a<HERE>; say "foo" foo |
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lizmat | ab5tract: I guess | 11:22 | |
ab5tract | m: no worries; my $a; my $a; say "foo" | ||
camelia | foo | ||
lizmat | yeah, problem is doing the "no worries" in a lexical scope in that case, but yeah | ||
tbrowder | yes, maybe another job for a linter | 11:23 | |
ab5tract loves a chance to use “no worries” :) | |||
tbrowder | ;-D | ||
my son-in-law's fav expresssion | |||
ab5tract | But yeah, we tend to be pretty conservative with worries.. in my proposal here, you can get past the worry in a number of sensible ways | 11:24 | |
‘my %h of Hash’ or ‘my Hash[Int] %h’ wouldn’t worry, for example | 11:25 | ||
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tbrowder | thnx for feedback, back to the trenches... | 11:27 | |
ab5tract | tbrowder: regarding a problem solving ticket, I think it could be an interesting discussion | ||
So if you have the time, please feel free to start one | |||
tbrowder | wilco! | 11:43 | |
thnx | |||
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SmokeMachine | simon_sibl: I was thinking about using Raku for configuration a few time ago ands wrote this for that: github.com/FCO/Configuration | 11:45 | |
ds7832 | Hey, I've created a Raku article on the unofficial NixOS Wiki: nixos.wiki/wiki/Raku (containing enough instructions to get people going, I hope, including on how to fix the Readline error that's common on NixOS). -- Anyone else using Raku on NixOS, please look over it and add your knowledge :) | 11:47 | |
lizmat | weekly: nixos.wiki/wiki/Raku | 12:00 | |
notable6 | lizmat, Noted! (weekly) | ||
tbrowder | see problem-solving issue #496 | 12:39 | |
librasteve_ | I thought we had a plan to bundle Readline (or something like that) …? | 12:40 | |
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Geth | raku.org/main: 263d8d734a | librasteve++ | 2 files redirect |
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raku.org/main: 5ad6b9cc1f | librasteve++ | lib/Org/Community.rakumod link whateverables |
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raku.org/main: e711f29fd8 | librasteve++ (committed using GitHub Web editor) | 3 files Merge pull request #267 from Raku/redirect Redirect Review done via video call |
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[Coke] | librasteve_++ | 14:00 | |
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Geth | raku.org/coke/readme2: ad665d1671 | (Will Coleda)++ | README.md Standardize on --/test for local prereqs |
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raku.org: coke++ created pull request #268: Standardize on --/test for local prereqs |
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raku.org/coke/semver: 7cba01443b | (Will Coleda)++ | lib/Org/Home.rakumod Don't mention semver Closes #255 |
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raku.org: coke++ created pull request #269: Don't mention semver |
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Geth | raku.org/main: 7cba01443b | (Will Coleda)++ | lib/Org/Home.rakumod Don't mention semver Closes #255 |
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raku.org/main: 1bd382102e | librasteve++ (committed using GitHub Web editor) | lib/Org/Home.rakumod Merge pull request #269 from Raku/coke/semver Don't mention semver |
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raku.org/main: ad665d1671 | (Will Coleda)++ | README.md Standardize on --/test for local prereqs |
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raku.org/main: 3c8050fe75 | librasteve++ (committed using GitHub Web editor) | README.md Merge pull request #268 from Raku/coke/readme2 Standardize on --/test for local prereqs |
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disbot2 | <antononcube> Please vote : news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45405068 | 15:31 | |
ab5tract | Voted | 15:42 | |
disbot2 | <antononcube> Thanks! I am -- again -- spending too much time on LLM usage facilitation and related examples, so, any encouragement (like votes) helps. | 15:45 | |
ab5tract | I hope to one day make good use of it | 15:46 | |
I also felt defensive of your efforts in the comments | 15:47 | ||
disbot2 | <antononcube> I think the LLM-tooling and LLM-graphing can help adoption. But the important step is mental -- one has to have the habit to ask "can this be done faster or better with LLMs" and allocate (predefined) time interval for LLM usage. | 15:50 | |
<antononcube> Basically, it is like "smart" gambling -- trying to play and win within a certain budget. | 15:51 | ||
<librasteve> sorry … i am muck raking to see if we can lift this to the HN front page | |||
El_Che | . | ||
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disbot2 | <antononcube> @librasteve Just answered your question. 🙂 Please see/find my "conciseness of programming" statements. Honestly, I spent more time programming the LLM-graph visualization (via Graphviz DOT) than programming the actual core-computational functionalities. | 16:09 | |
<librasteve> so far your post got 5 upvotes in 30 mins, there is one about Ruby Gems that made it to the HN front page with 8 votes in 25 mins ... I would say two or three more votes could push you there but only if you get them in the next 5 mins or so | 16:17 | ||
<librasteve> I think that the graph and inversion of control stuff is very interesting and I think that raku (with rakudoc) is a very good fit for self documenting code ... so @antononcube I am very supportive of your LLM + Raku work and try to help upvote anything you write | 16:20 | ||
<antononcube> Yes, agreed. I plan to finish and publish the "inversion of control" article / blog post today. | 16:25 | ||
SmokeMachine | antoncube IoC? Interesting... I've played with that long time ago and not so long time ago... I like playing with that... | 16:28 | |
Geth | raku.org/redirect-fix: eda2f29a2b | librasteve++ | 2 files better redirect |
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raku.org: librasteve++ created pull request #270: better redirect |
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disbot2 | <antononcube> @SmokeMachine The inversion of control is "standard" for LLM function calling. The idea is the LLM calls your functions/subs running on "your computer." I.e. functions/subs external from LLM provider's POV. | ||
SmokeMachine | oh, OK... sorry I was thinking on "traditional" IoC on dependencies (like github.com/FCO/Injector and github.com/FCO/Deps). But about LLM, I also have a plan to play with that (dev.to/fco/introducing-mcp-a-proto...tial-19gp) (I still need to find some time to play with that...) | 16:37 | |
disbot2 | <antononcube> The problem with LLM functionalities is that different LLM providers have similar -- yet different -- ideas about the protocols. | 16:39 | |
<antononcube> I have (and had) to spent too much time figuring out those kind of differences and making suitable software architectures. | 16:40 | ||
<librasteve> it reminds me of the PC-DOS vs MS-DOS war ... | 16:44 | ||
<antononcube> 🙂 It is not that different. I am not sure are the stakes higher or lower, though. | 16:45 | ||
<jubilatious1_98524> Sorry, really don't like the whole worries thing at all. | 16:49 | ||
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Geth | raku.org/main: eda2f29a2b | librasteve++ | 2 files better redirect |
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raku.org/main: 2189253bf7 | librasteve++ (committed using GitHub Web editor) | 2 files Merge pull request #270 from Raku/redirect-fix better redirect |
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disbot2 | <antononcube> weekly: rakuforprediction.wordpress.com/20...sal-specs/ | 19:07 | |
notable6 | antononcube, Noted! (weekly) | ||
ab5tract | jubilatious : are you opposed to the entire idea of worries? | 19:32 | |
This Raku thing is pretty complex. I love that the compiler can provide me with helpful hints as to why the behavior im seeing is not the behavior I’m expecting | 19:34 | ||
Since they can be trivially disabled, I’d like to hear more about why you don’t like them | |||
Also, it’s slightly amusing that you combined sorry and worries in your sentence :) | 19:37 | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> Actually, it's sad that I worry about being sorry and amusing. But I'll try to formulate a response and come back to this when I have something coherent. | 19:58 | |
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ab5tract | I hope it’s clear that I’m referring to sorry and worry both referring to the two modes of exception produced by the core setting | 20:04 | |
disbot2 | <librasteve> weekly: rakuforprediction.wordpress.com/20...sal-specs/ | 20:09 | |
notable6 | librasteve, Noted! (weekly) | ||
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disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> @ab5tract which is what I need to understand better before replying. If you have a link it would help. (I remember Vadim's video series on Core but I don't have 5 hours to re-watch). | 20:30 | |
ab5tract | Sorries are emitted during compilation when we know for a fact the code won’t work | 20:31 | |
m: my Int $a = <nok> | |||
camelia | Type check failed in assignment to $a; expected Int but got Str in block <unit> at <tmp> line 1 |
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ab5tract | ah, oops, that’s still runtime | 20:32 | |
m: f() | 20:34 | ||
camelia | ===SORRY!=== Error while compiling <tmp> Undeclared routine: f used at line 1 |
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ab5tract | A less contrived example would be | 20:35 | |
m: sub f($,$) { say “ok” }; f(5) | |||
camelia | ===SORRY!=== Error while compiling <tmp> Calling f(Int) will never work with declared signature ($, $) at <tmp>:1 ------> sub f($,$) { say “ok” }; <HERE>f(5) |
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ab5tract | So a sorry is a fatal compile time exception | 20:37 | |
Worries are non-fatal and instead are intended to point to the user that they may be holding something wrong, even though the way the user is holding the thing is technically 100% valid Raku code | 20:38 | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> Thanks! | ||
<jubilatious1_98524> "holding"? | 20:39 | ||
<jubilatious1_98524> "implementing"? | |||
ab5tract | Its a turn of phrase. A tool rarely works as expected if it’s being held upside down, for example | ||
disbot2 | <bscan> It is a bit confusing, but is it basically: sorrows, sorries, and panics are all errors while worries are warnings? Why not use the more standard terminology of error/warning? | 20:40 | |
ab5tract | A hammer held upside down can still drive a nail | ||
bscan: I wasn’t around at the time but i expect it’s so that there is no confusion about whether it is coming from the compiler or from user space | 20:41 | ||
In the end they are all exception objects | 20:42 | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> Are there design docs on worries? Who decides what's a worry and what's not a worry? That's what I worry about. | ||
ab5tract | :) | ||
If you aren’t adding a feature to Rakudo, there’s absolutely nothing to worry about | 20:43 | ||
If you are, you can discuss for consensus with other core devs | |||
In this case, I am suggesting a worry be added because anything a dev can encounter that Less Than Awesome should at least be discussed | 20:44 | ||
Here tbrowder wasted time that could have been saved if the compiler had simply shared some concerns that are relatively obvious to the compiler | 20:45 | ||
Worries are the only nonfatal way to surface those concerns. And since the code was valid, a sorry would be inappropriate anyway | 20:46 | ||
Maybe it would be better left to a linter, and that’s what the problem solving ticket is there to discuss | 20:47 | ||
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disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> Did Perl6 announce on day-one (year 2000) that from now on everything defaults to use strict and use warnings? | 20:52 | |
<librasteve> these are quite weird terms - worry and sorry ... but not quite as quirky as the latterday perl tems - croak and carp | |||
<jubilatious1_98524> I've often felt that Perl6/Raku should have forced you to write use lenient; use imperiling if you wanted year-2000 Perl5 behavior. | 20:53 | ||
<librasteve> @jubilatious1_98524 on day one use strict was inverted to use nostrict (liley similar with warnings | 20:54 | ||
ab5tract | But that’s the way it is? | ||
librasteve: I think you mean ‘no strict’ | |||
You can disable worries lexically the exact same way: ‘no worries’ | 20:55 | ||
disbot2 | <librasteve> ah - yes | ||
<jubilatious1_98524> @librasteve not as much wordplay that way. And who in their right mind is going to write use imperiling at the top of their production code? | 20:56 | ||
ab5tract | I’m really confused right now | ||
jubilatious: are you saying you think the current defaults are wrong? | 20:57 | ||
That’s what I’m assuming based on what I understand to be your objection to adding a new worry | |||
disbot2 | <librasteve> sorry - must sleep | 20:59 | |
<jubilatious1_98524> I like the current defaults, and to distinguish ourselves from historical Perl behavior whe should have come up with our own terminology. use lenient eq no strict; use imperiling eq no warnings. | 21:00 | ||
ab5tract | librasteve: no worries mate :) | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> 😉 | 21:01 | |
<jubilatious1_98524> But yeah, my question still stands: "Are there design docs on worries? Who decides what's a worry and what's not a worry?" | 21:02 | ||
Voldenet | Can't worries simply be numbered and globally disabled/enabled somehow (by env vars?) | ||
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Voldenet | and then only defaults would need discussing, not implementing more worries | 21:03 | |
there could maybe be various level of defaults, e.g.: `use worries (NOVICE)` `no worries; use worries (CRITICAL)` `no worries (PAIR_DECONT)` etc. | 21:11 | ||
just thinking out loud | |||
imo a worry is when somebody types in some syntax and it works differently from what could be expected | 21:17 | ||
ab5tract | jubilatious: are you already familiar with the old design docs? I’m sure they are at least mentioned there but I’m also not sure what you are still missing | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> And that implies a second level of complexity: sorry|worry versus strict|warnings. | 21:19 | |
ab5tract | Strict is about declarations needing a scope specified or not. I don’t see that as intersecting with sorry or worry | 21:20 | |
Except inasmuch as no strict disables the sorry we would otherwise throw for a scope-less declaration | |||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> ab5tract: not really. I've dipped into them but hardly an expert. Some formatting problems made them hard for me to read. I wasn't able to resolve. | 21:21 | |
ab5tract | iirc strict is short for “strictures” here | ||
jubilatious; well, those are the Raku design docs, for better or worse | |||
I remember finding some version of them that could be read from the terminal vial perldoc (which I think can also generate html) | 21:23 | ||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> ab5tract: I get what happened. I've meant to scrape through them. | ||
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disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> (figuring I need an older browser to peruse wayback machine. | 21:24 | |
ab5tract | github.com/Raku/old-design-docs | 21:28 | |
pod2html comes with Perl, I think | |||
And Perl comes with everything :) | |||
But for sure perldoc can render these files without issue | 21:29 | ||
Now, what u *really* want is to be able to find the exegeses and apocalypses | 21:32 | ||
s/u/I/ | |||
disbot2 | <jubilatious1_98524> 👍 | 21:35 | |
ab5tract | These files aren’t going to be changing much. When I get back to a computer I may try to put them up via GH pages | 21:38 | |
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ab5tract | Now we are talking github.com/ab5tract/perl6-bible | 21:52 | |
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