jackdaniel changed the topic of #lisp to: Common Lisp, the #1=(programmable . #1#) programming language<http://cliki.net/> logs:<https://irclog.whitequark.org/lisp,http://ccl.clozure.com/irc-logs/lisp/> | SBCL 1.4.5, CMUCL 21b, ECL 16.1.3, CCL 1.11.5, ABCL 1.5.0
<p_l> akkad: GCL is deader than dead
<akkad> xemacs still has users
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<p_l> I do wonder how much the mistake of trying for CLtL2 before ANSI led to it
<p_l> akkad: XEmacs never got as dead as GCL
<Xach> gcl is still alive
<Xach> i'll box the ears of anyone who says otherwise!
<p_l> akkad: when GCL was making doornails look lively, XEmacs was still something I would suggest over Emacs :)
<p_l> (partially because of better MULE and unicode)
<aeth> akkad: It's not good for the image of CL (a dead implementation that's barely supported by the ecosystem does not make a good first impression) or for the security of CL programmers (SBCL or CCL would patch a security issue next month... GCL would patch it in 5 years maybe?) to recommend inactive implementations.
* p_l ponders if Genera might not have actually wider usage than GCL now
<aeth> It's a lot harder to determine things about commercial implementations. It's likely they're not in the ASDF+Quicklisp ecosystem with the rest of us and if there's some issue it *could* still be patched quickly through a commercial support contract even if there's one user.
<akkad> Franz patches weekly. LW not so much
<aeth> I'm talking about obscure commercial implementations.
<aeth> Everyone knows LW and Allegro are alive
<aeth> aeth-lisp is also alive if someone is willing to pay $500,000 a year or whatever. Even if it has basically 0 presence anywhere else.
<Josh_2> nope not giffing you that moneys bad aeth
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<aeth> Josh_2: It's a lot harder than it looks. I can't just "git clone https://github.com/sbcl/sbcl.git" because I also have to find-and-replace all instances of the strings "SBCL", "sbcl", "Steel Bank Common Lisp", etc., except on the relevant copyright/contributor pages, etc.
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<aeth> (That's obvious satire, but soemone *did* make a commercial fork of CMUCL.)
<Josh_2> bad aeth
<Josh_2> xD
<akkad> it's unfree so, typical.
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<pfdietz> acl2 was keeping gcl alive, wasn't it? But they moved on.
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<Xach> maxima
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<p_l> aeth: SCL is kinda dead, moxcl is probably alive but isn't a full implementation, Liquid, Franz and Genera are in similar state of undead (you can still get support), I actually don't know about Interlisp because it feels at times that the owners forgot there was a language implementation under the program they were selling
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<p_l> Corman died to be reborn opensourced, MCL died in the OSX transition iirc
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<p_l> anything else from the CL world?
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<p_l> (I'm ignoring implementations that died back on DOS or were so obscure good luck finding mentions, let alone software or parts)
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<aeth> Is there a way to define a function with a defclass given some custom metaclass? It's very trivial with a defclass* macro, but I'm not sure how it can be done in the MOP. (setf (fdefinition foo) (lambda (...) ...)) in ensure-class-using-class :before?
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<Bike> oh, you mean, during the course of a defclass, define a function
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<Bike> :before method sounds right to me. you don't get to control the macroexpansion to put a defun in there, if that's what you're hoping for.
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<equwal> I'm not sure I understand what aeth means either. Are you talking about polymorphism?
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<LdBeth> aeth: you mean funcallable instance?
<Bike> i think aeth just wants a defclass of their custom metaclass to define more functions than just accessors.
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<aeth> Bike: right
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<aeth> I have it, but it's not particularly pretty. I can't just (setf (fdefinition foo) (lambda (...) ...)) because I have macroish things I want to do so I have to (setf (fdefinition foo) (eval `(lambda (...) ...)))
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<LdBeth> I think defined initialize method for the metaclass can do that
<aeth> And I also have to wrap it in an eval-when in CCL because of course CCL is picky about things and wants extra eval-whens
<Bike> whoa, whoa, what
<Bike> oh by "macroish things" you mean the source will be different
<Bike> no idea about eval-when though
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<aeth> I now have the source of the shader class definition itself down to just: https://gitlab.com/zombie-raptor/zombie-raptor/blob/036af6464f6517c13bed17416c7317391d733db4/data/shader.lisp#L89-146
<aeth> I guess the next step is seeing if I can generate the check-types in the setter automatically and perhaps doing the constructor type checks (via the generated function) automatically
<aeth> s/the setter/the setters/
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<Bike> yeah i have no idea why eval-when would be necessary here.
<Bike> but let me see if i have this right- you define a global function for every slot that takes an instance and checks that slot?
<Bike> or just one check- for the class that does all of them
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<aeth> Bike: I define a check-foo that checks the type of every slot that has a reader. This can be called separately since CLOS objects can't really be trusted even with the constructor and setters having type checks.
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<aeth> I also add :before to every writer to ensure that the types are checked. Atm, I do this manually, but it probably won't be that hard to do it automatically now that I have everything set up.
<Bike> you could just define a :before on (setf slot-value-using-class) since you have your own slotd class anyway.
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<aeth> Bike: And that would cover with-accessors, with-slots, and the constructor all together?
<Bike> everything goes through (setf slot-value-using-class), yes.
<aeth> great
<aeth> That simplifies things a lot
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<equwal> After several years of lisping this CLOS stuff still confuses me a great deal. In one ear and out the other. Hopefully it will click sometime.
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<loke> equThat part of it is complicated?
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<equwal> I just have a hard time remembering all the details, and knowing when it is better than the functional paradigm I am accustomed to.
<equwal> Do you recommend any resources? I've read Peter Siebel's book and Graham's On Lisp sections on CLOS, but I don't really get still.
<sjl> Keene's CLOS book is short, but was very helpful for me.
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<equwal> I found myself a copy, I'll definitely give this a read.
<equwal> Thanks!
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<aeth> I think there's only one person here who really knows CLOS
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<equwal> I think the main problem for me is that CLOS is so much bigger than any object orientation I have tried to do before. 'Thing's huge.
<aeth> And it's just underspecified enough for there to be annoying incompatibilities between implementations.
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<xsperry> what is your opinion of lisp-1 vs lisp-2 as far as functional programming go? and is there a way to reduce boilerplate in lisp-2 when doing that style of programming with some smart use of macros?
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<equwal> Well I like doing things like this ((lambda (x) x) 1) in scheme, whereas in lisp you must do (funcall #'(lambda (x) x) 1) which is not as cool.
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<xsperry> I was thinking something like this... (funcall (funcall 'f 10) 20) vs ((f 10) 20)
<aeth> it won't help you with that particular case (although you *can* drop the #') but it can help when funcalling named things
<equwal> But you get to do things like (define list (list) list) and have it work, whereas (define list (lst) lst) is not so good. I'm not really sure, but I know I've seen very good discussion on both sides.
<xsperry> equwal your lambda example actually works in CL.
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<equwal> Good point.
<equwal> Let me get a better example.
<xsperry> (funcall (funcall 'f 10) 20) vs ((f 10) 20) ? :)
<xsperry> (mentioned above)
<equwal> Oh partial application
<xsperry> no. just calling a function stored in f variable, and then calling the function it returned
<xsperry> (actually I guess that is partial application)
<equwal> Well yes.
<equwal> That is the same :P
<xsperry> :)
<xsperry> anything we can do in CL to make that more readable? custom macros included
<xsperry> by more readable, I mean less verbose
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<equwal> Yeah partial application is a mess. I'm not sure where I stand on the lisp-1 lisp-2, definitely pluses to both sides.
<equwal> I think clojure does something like ((partial 1+) 1) => 2
<stacksmith> Good morning. Apologies for slightly off-topic question.. Can someone help me out with roswell? I royally screwed up my environment by deleting an old version of sbcl-bin...
<xsperry> I only played with clojure briefly, but if f is a variable that stores a function that returns a function, I am pretty sure what I typed above will work.. ie ((f 10) 20)
<equwal> Right, but you can make the function f like (partial f 10) out of a function (defun f2 (x y) something)
<equwal> So you could do (funcall (partial f 10) 20) or whatever, which is marginally more readable I guess.
<xsperry> yeah, true
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<xsperry> actually I guess what I'd really like is do it in CL like haskell does it. where this would be just f 10 20 (since (defun f2 (x y) ..) equivalent in haskell is really just a function that takes one argument and returns a function that takes another)
<xsperry> which would be ((f 10) 20) in lisp syntax, even if we defined f as (defun f (x y) ..)
<xsperry> which would be ((f 10) 20) in lisp syntax, even if we defined f as (defun f (x y) ..)
<xsperry> (sorry)
<equwal> Yes, I know exactly what you mean. You don't want to have to (defun f (x) (lambda (y) (+ x y)))
<xsperry> right
<equwal> You want to be able to (defun f (&rest stuff) (apply #'+ stuff))
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<aeth> Bike: "you could just define a :before on (setf slot-value-using-class)" I can't get that to work. It doesn't seem to be called.
<loke> aeth: what did you try?
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<aeth> The only thing that has any noticable effect at all is (defmethod slot-value-using-class :before (class object slot) ...) which gives an SBCL error, which makes sense because I'm probably redefining some built-in.
<Bike> mop s-v-u-c
<aeth> loke: I'm trying (defmethod (setf slot-value-using-class) :before (new-value class object (slot slot-with-checked-type)) ...)
<loke> aeth: you need to defmethod sb-mop:slot-value-using-class
<loke> (or use closer-mop)
<Bike> where does it have t he reader and writer semantics...
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<loke> aeth: I'm pretty sure you are notpicking up slot-value-using-class from the correct package (which is why you need to use SB-MOP, or load closer-mop so that you get a standard interface to it)
<aeth> I'm using closer-mop
<Bike> if that was the case i don't see why the unqualified method would cause an error.
<loke> so did you defmethod CLOSER-MOP:SLOT-VALUE-USING-CLASS?
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<aeth> loke: Yes, and if I M-. it it'll take me to SBCL's definition (or it would if it had a valid builddir)
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<loke> aeth: Show some code
<aeth> (defmethod (setf slot-value-using-class) :before (new-value class object (slot slot-with-checked-type)) (format t "~S ~S~%" new-value (slot-definition-checked-type slot)) (check-type new-value integer))
<aeth> That should have two visible side effects. It should print and it should almost always fail
<aeth> I've also tried it with the class given
<Bike> 7.5.2 says they go through slot-value
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<equwal> I whipped up some partial application last month and just uncovered that file, I'll just dump the code here. The function we are looking at is called partial. This is why I brought up this "solution," which really solves a different problem then "how can we write (funcall (funcall ...) better, and instead solves the problem "how can we take a two argument function and make it partially applied to one argument."
<equwal> (defmacro generate-lambda (lambda-list body)
<equwal> (defmacro partial-aux (func &rest args)
<equwal> `#'(lambda ,lambda-list ,body))
<equwal> (with-gensyms (function new-args llist)
<equwal> `(let ((,function ,func)
<equwal> (,new-args (mapcar #'eval ',args)))
<equwal> (let ((,llist (nthcdr (length ,new-args)
<equwal> (stop-at-special (sb-introspect:function-lambda-list ,function)))))
<equwal> `(generate-lambda ,,llist (funcall ,,function ,@(append ,new-args ,llist)))))))
<equwal> (defmacro partial (func &rest args)
<equwal> (eval `(partial-aux ,func ,@args))) ;; Example call: (funcall (partial #'subst 1 2) '(1 2 3)) --> (1 1 3)
<Bike> when you paste more than one line, put it in an external website, please, equwal
<equwal> (defun stop-at-special (list &optional acc)
<equwal> (if (or (null list)
<equwal> (some #'(lambda (y) (equalp (car list) y))
<equwal> '(&key &optional)));Deliberately breaks on &rest and &body.
<equwal> (reverse acc)
<equwal> (stop-at-special (cdr list) (cons (car list) acc))))
<Bike> fuck's sake
<equwal> (defmacro with-gensyms (symbols &body body)
<equwal> `(let (,@(mapcar #'(lambda (sym)
<equwal> `(,sym ',(gensym))) symbols))
<equwal> ,@body))
<equwal>
<equwal> Sorry man.
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<Bike> hm, i don't see any output on sbcl for setf svuc either
<xsperry> equwal thanks a lot for the effort! but I was thinking of tackling this from the other way around.. from the call site. so I can use all the functions that are available.
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<xsperry> (defun f (x y) .. ) to turn (f 10) into (lambda (x) (f 10 x)). and also to make curried functions callable like this ((f 10) 20), not like this (funcall (f 10) 20)
<xsperry> would this be even possible? it would obviously only work in the body of my macro
<equwal> Definitely it is possible, but I don't know how you would do it yet.
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<Bike> the latter isn't really possible without a silly level of hacks.
<equwal> I agree.
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<LdBeth> equwal: CL21 provides some syntactic sugar for easier writing anonymous function.
<Bike> https://pastebin.com/DKJMUPCB here's the first one. be warned: it sucks
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<equwal> I'll decifer this schonfinkel
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<aeth> And no matter how many side effects I add, it never happens.
<Bike> you don't need the call-next-methods...
<aeth> And whatever combination of whatever
<Bike> but yeah, i think sbcl might be skipping it
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<aeth> Not just SBCL
<aeth> CCL also lets invalid things happen
<aeth> e.g. I can set the name to 42. (let ((s (make-instance 'shader :name :hello :stage :fragment-shader :source ""))) (setf (zombie-raptor/data/shader::name s) 42) (zombie-raptor/data/shader::name s))
<loke> aeth: You might want to try with a dfifferent metaclass
<Bike> what's wrong with this metaclass
<loke> you'r eusing standard-class, no?
<Bike> no, there's a checked-types metaclass.
<xsperry> Bike interesting! I'll play with your and equal's code. I am curious, and I must be missing something, but why would the other thing require silly level of hacks? ((x 10) 20) is only legal in CL if x is lambda, as far as I know. so can't we just prepend all ((x .. ) .. ) forms with funcall?
<aeth> I stripped out as much as I could and I've been changing around as much as I can in those 50ish lines for the past few hours
<xsperry> equwal*
<Bike> xsperry: there is no mechanism to do such prepension.
<Bike> is that a word? oh well.
<Bike> prépension is, in french
<equwal> Look at Bike's solution, or https://rosettacode.org/wiki/Partial_function_application#Common_Lisp for a macroless thing that messes with the symbol table.
<equwal> My solution is worse.
<aeth> Doesn't Alexandria have partial function application with curry/rcurry?
<equwal> But you can't ((f 10) 20) without scheme. I'm trying to recall why, but I suspect Bike knows the specific reason.
<Bike> yes. it's essentially like the definition on rosetta here, though maybe with a compiler macro too
<Bike> xsperry said why already. only ((lambda ...) ...) is legal
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<Bike> that's just syntax.
<loke> aeth: This works for me: http://pasted.co/17ab6e8e
<equwal> But ((f 10) 20) works in Scheme, because that's just the syntax.
<Bike> yes.
<loke> Technically, it works in scheme because the first element in a form is evaluated, while it isn't in CL
<Zhivago> You can ((lambda (x) (+ x 1)) 2) if you like.
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<Zhivago> There is no principled reason that ((f 10 ) 20) shouldn't work in CL also -- it's just not supported.
<equwal> Okay then.
<LdBeth> It’s still possible for (#c(f 10) 20) to work
<xsperry> just so we are both on the same page, I am talking about this syntax only working in custom macro, that would walk the entire tree, and prend funcall to all such forms where car is a list. why wouldn't this work?
<xsperry> s/both/all
<Bike> oh. that wouldn't work because you can't really walk code simply like that.
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<LdBeth> xsperry: (let (funcall (x 10) ...
<LdBeth> If the macro is two simple, it’s very possible to get get invalid code
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<xsperry> good example.. it would break all the macros where ((..)) is legal
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<xsperry> and we can't just check if ((x ..) ..) x is a function. because even if it is, (let ((x 10)) ..) should still be left untouched
<loke> Technically, it works in scheme because the first element in a form is evaluated, while it isn't in CL
<loke> Oops
<equwal> Looks like parser stuff to me.
<equwal> loke: what makes you sure that is why?
<loke> equwal: Well, it's more complicated than that
<loke> Even if CL did evaluate the first element, you wouldn't get Scheme's behaviour
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<aeth> loke: The problem is slot
<Bike> oh, shit, wait
<loke> equwal: The problem is that you can have separate value and function bindings for a symbol.
<Bike> you subclassed DIRECT slot definition
<Bike> Doh
<Bike> hm or maybe that's not it
<aeth> Bike: I already thought of that. My current version subclasses standard-slot-definition and then I have double-inheriting versions for direct and effective
<equwal> loke: in other words it is tangentially related to the lisp-1 lisp-2 debate we started out with.
<loke> Here's the most recent code I wrote that implemented a custom metaclass and overriding SLOT-VALUE-USING-CLASS:
<aeth> Bike: Okay, so I do get the side effect if I have the signatures (new-value (class checked-types) object slot) and ((class checked-types) object slot)
<aeth> And if I make the side effect (format t "~S~%" (class-of slot)) I get #<standard-class sb-mop:standard-effective-slot-definition>
<equwal> xsperry: I think you could get what you want by messing around with a parser. Flip to page 26 of SICP for details. There are problems with this kind of compiler, but whatever. http://web.mit.edu/alexmv/6.037/sicp.pdf
<Bike> mop effective-slot-de-cl
<specbot> Couldn't find anything for effective-slot-de-cl.
<Bike> mop effective-slot-definition-class
<Bike> mm, maybe since you didn't define a method on compute-slots, it loses the :checked-type initarg
<Bike> er not that one
<Bike> the... slot mixy one....
<Bike> compute-effective-slot-definition. that one
<equwal> so the substitution model, replace ((f 10) 20) where f is definted using Bike's schonfinkel with ((lambda f (10)) 20) and you are in business.
<equwal> But really at this point I feel like hairs are being split.
<loke> equwal: It could, but what would you do if F returns a symbol?
<equwal> I see.
<loke> equwal: You could probably define (X ...) to be equivalent to (funcall X ...), but that was never done.
<aeth> (And, yes, I'm commiting semi-broken code straight to master, which is evil.)
<Bike> i'm sticking with my diagnosis
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<equwal> loke: Yeah, I think the easiest way is to merge the symbol and function tables into a Lisp-1 at this point.
<loke> equwal: Easy, yes. That's why Scheme did it. They wanted to be simple. It's less useful though.
<Zhivago> It doesn't matter for this -- given (a b c) which has been macroexpanded to evaluate, a names a function. Allowing a to be a function name producing form wouldn't affect lisp-1 vs lisp-2.
<aeth> Well, I didn't import standard-effective-slot-definition and I did *NOT* get an error. Fixing that didn't fix it, though.
<Bike> hey. aeth. compute-effective-slot-definition. i'm tellin ya
<aeth> Apparently you can just inherit from random non-existent things without issues
<Bike> forward referencing a superclass, sure.
<Bike> there'd be a problem if yuou were actually instantiating the class, but you aren't
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<equwal> Zhivago: The loke asked what if #'a produces a symbol name. The answer is everything breaks because we are in a lisp-2
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<aeth> Bike: What is compute-effective-slot-definition supposed to return?
<Bike> it takes a list of all the inherited direct slot definitions and returns an effective slot definition
<Bike> the standard method doesn't know jack about your class and its extra slot, so it ignores it
<Bike> bye
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<equwal> /
<equwal> /
<equwal> | | \ \ / /|-----
<equwal> | | \ \/ / |
<equwal> | |__ \ / |-----
<equwal> | _ | / / |
<equwal> ||_| | / / |
<equwal> |____| / / |-----
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<LdBeth> gg, I believe it’s easier to work out a basic lambda calculator rather than hacking on CL’s read and eval behavior
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<aeth> Is there a way to get the return value of a method when I'm in an :after method?
<loke> aeth: no
<aeth> compute-effective-slot-definition is simply too complicated, but if I can take the end result of it and set the unbound check-type value then everything would work
<loke> aethUse :AROUND for that.
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<aeth> In my effective-slot-definition-class method, I was checking for checked-type. If checked-type was present, I returned (find-class 'effective-slot-with-checked-type) and otherwise I returned (call-next-method)
<aeth> checked-type is always nil
<aeth> This is because the initargs are (compute-effective-slot-definition-initargs class dslotds)
<aeth> They're hardcoded to be the standard initargs
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<beach> Good morning everyone!
<Colleen> beach: karlosz said 8 hours, 15 minutes ago: err, scratch that. the variable being assigned to is what we both mean. its not a terribly complex special case to add, but i fear that any manipulation with assignment instructions will end up having to test for something similar
<Colleen> beach: karlosz said 8 hours, 30 minutes ago: also, you surely must mean right hand side of the assignmnet
<Colleen> beach: karlosz said 8 hours, 52 minutes ago: yes, thats the special casing i am talking about
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<aeth> Using assert with typep instead of check-type is ugly, though
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<aeth> Apparently I can't use change-class with the MOP slot classes so the only way I could think of writing the implementation via :around is to make them all effective-slot-with-checked-type and use nil for the ones that don't actually have a type to check.
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<shka> hello
<shka> i have question regarding changelog of sbcl 1.4.3
<shka> "bug fix: fixed heap exhaustion bug when consing millions of small objects "
<shka> how this would manifest?
<shka> just heap exhausted game over?
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<jmercouris> can someone explain this? (REDUCE #'* NIL) -> 1 (REDUCE #'+ NIL)-> 0
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<jmercouris> it makes literally no sense to me
<jackdaniel> jmercouris: it is enough to look in the spec for definition of * and + functions
<jackdaniel> and how they behave if no numbers are supplied
<jmercouris> I see
<jmercouris> and why is * -> 1?
<trittweiler> shka: You can git blame NEWS in the sbcl git repository, to determine which commit the changelog entry is about. Usually, changes come with tests. See https://github.com/sbcl/sbcl/commit/dfddbc8ada - you could try that test in sbcl 1.4.2 to see exactly what happens. But yes, to me that reads like game over.
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<beach> jmercouris: It's the neutral element for multiplication.
<jackdaniel> because (*) is by definition = 1, part of the spec. it is only natural, because neutral element for multiplication is 1
<jackdaniel> heh, too late
<jmercouris> I understand it doesn't effect the value
<jmercouris> but why wouldn't it instead return an error?
<jmercouris> like insufficient number of parameters or something?
<LdBeth> It’s very natural from a math perspective
<jmercouris> is there some implementation reason? or is it just so defined?
<beach> jmercouris: It is defined that way in mathematics and in Common Lisp.
<trittweiler> jmercouris, it is defined so to play nicely with REDUCE :)
<jackdaniel> you would be suprised what happens, if you supply negative number of arguments, try it! :-)
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<jmercouris> so when I write 5 * 5 = 10, I'm really writing 5 1 5 = 10?
<beach> No.
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<beach> And it is 25.
<jmercouris> lol
<jmercouris> sorry
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<jmercouris> whoops :D
<jmercouris> okay, so to multiply something, we agree that you need at least two values, right?
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<jackdaniel> um, no?
<LdBeth> No
<trittweiler> shka, there should also be a mail on sbcl-devel around dec 4, 2017, about this problem - as per the commit message
<jmercouris> Okay, explain to me, how multiplication of a single value works?
<jackdaniel> (* n) === n
<jmercouris> as far as I am concerned, you need a source number, and a multiple
<jmercouris> you've still provided a multiple, but it is just a value of 1
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<beach> . The product of no factors at all is known as the empty product, and is equal to 1.
<beach> jmercouris: Under "Product of sequences" on that page.
<jackdaniel> do you have *any* practical purpose of these questions, or you just broadly share your amusement? (given you know [from the spec] how * and + functions work when supplied with 0 arguments)?
<jmercouris> okay
<jmercouris> so I knew it was just bullshit
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<jmercouris> "It is by convention equal to the multiplicative identity 1 "
<shka> trittweiler: i will try to dig this out
<jmercouris> I need to know all the way down why something is the way it is
<beach> Why is that "bullshit"?
<scymtym> jmercouris: (*) emulates a syntactic convention from mathematics that is convenient for associative operations with a neutral element. consider (list (* 1 2 3 4) (* (* 1 2) (* 3 4)) (* (* 1) (* 2 3 4)) (* (*) (* 1 2 3 4)))
<jmercouris> because it is just convention
<jmercouris> there is not a reason behind it
<beach> It's a very practical convention.
<jmercouris> practical it may be, but it is still arbitrary
<beach> No, it is not arbitrary.
<_death> conventions aren't necessarily arbitrary..
<beach> Having it be 0 or 32 by convention would not work.
<jmercouris> okay, fine, it is not arbitrary, but it is still not grounded in something that satisfies me
<beach> jmercouris: That's VERY DIFFERENT.
<jmercouris> at least I now understand though, kind of
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<LdBeth> Because I math it’s even valid for 0/0
<beach> jmercouris: You may want to try (AND) and (OR) in addition to (+) and (*)
<jmercouris> beach: what do you mean?
<beach> I mean, you might want to type those forms as well.
<jackdaniel> jmercouris: since you want to dig from the groud up to computing, start here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abelian_group
<jackdaniel> and see you in 10y when you finish with studying math basics ;-)
<scymtym> jackdaniel: commutativity is not needed, though
<jmercouris> jackdaniel: I'm okay without :D, perhaps my curiousity is not as strong as I thought
<beach> Apparently.
<beach> It ought to be though.
<jmercouris> beach: I like computer science, but I don't like math
<beach> Intellectual curiosity is the basis of much learning.
<loke> However... The single-argument version of ‘/’ _is_ arbitrary though (but useful)
<loke> Yes?
<jmercouris> I hve a deep distaste for math
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<jmercouris> s/hve/have
<beach> jmercouris: I am sorry to hear that.
<jackdaniel> it is not something to brag about
<jmercouris> jackdaniel: am I bragging?
<jackdaniel> scymtym: you mean operations on floats?
<jmercouris> I am simply being honest
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<jackdaniel> (and such:)
<jmercouris> it's not like I am proud or anything, I don't think I've ever brought it up on this channel before
<LdBeth> I should look at J’s introductory, i remember there’s a section gives a explain about that
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<LdBeth> See you in few minutes
<jmercouris> beach: Yeah, it is because math is quite difficult for me, at least certain types of math, I'm very good at geometry, physics, but not so good with discrete mathematics and algebra
<scymtym> jackdaniel: an Abelian group is a group plus commutativity if i recall correctly, but the commutativity is not relevant to this discussion (i completely agree with pointing out the concept of a group as the underlying reason, though)
<jackdaniel> ah, OK
<jackdaniel> I misunderstood
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<LdBeth> Well, then, J just tells 0 = +/ 0$0, 1 = */ 0$0,and I have to explain what’s identity and rank to make it more clean. So i give up.
<jmercouris> I guess the real problem with languages like python is primitive operators change the function order
<jmercouris> so normally you might say in python function_call(x, y z)
<jmercouris> but of course for the + operator you nest it between two numbers
<jmercouris> so the order is now different, which makes it impossible to express nil * nil
<jmercouris> of course removing "nil" and replacing it with nothing
<shka> python has multiple problems
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<heisig> Which are, luckily, off-topic :)
<shka> well, cl also has problems
<beach> Nah!
<jmercouris> I think it has a few
<jmercouris> but I haven't really mastered the language enough to truly criticize it
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<jmercouris> I can only say that the naming conventions, and the argument order are very confusing frequently
<shka> but at least cl seems to be more solidly designed
<shka> probabbly, one extra standard version would fix everything that is suboptimal
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<jmercouris> I would be very much in favor of this, but I understand it would take a lot of work from many people
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<LdBeth> A superset language is easier than new specification
<jmercouris> Yes, this argument comes up every time, and it is valid, but it would feel nice to have a new specification
<beach> There are SO many more important things to do than to update the standard this way.
<jmercouris> something about a new, unified, super squeaky clean spec sounds nice to me
<tfb> I think the diffference is that, if you feel that CL is creaky (which I do slightly, now), you can, in almost all cases, make your own variant which is not and which will run on top of the existing language. You can't do that in Python without serious pain
<LdBeth> jmercouris: schemers wrong door : P
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<tfb> beach: yes, agree -- if you want a new better (for you) CL implement one on top of the old CL, which is what we all do.
<jmercouris> yes, but if everyone is doing that, wouldn't it be nice to have a unified set of improvements?
<jmercouris> I don't mean to beat a dead horse, so I'll stop now
<LdBeth> Out of curiosity, has anyone implemented Scheme on top of CL?
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<LdBeth> I’m looking for a more recent one which implements pattern match based macro
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<jmercouris> what does "D" in "DTRACE" stand for?
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<Posterdati> D = Deadful
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<jackdaniel> CL lacks semantics for efficient (i.e without emulation) implementation of call/cc
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<jackdaniel> so it would by hard I think to implement non-toy scheme in CL
<tfb> jmercouris: dynamic
<tfb> assuming you mean the thing that originated in solaris
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<beach> jackdaniel: Only if you insist on a fairly direct translation from Scheme to Common Lisp.
<beach> jackdaniel: OK, I guess that's what you meant by "without emulation".
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<tfb> beach: I think it's only interesting if the shim is fairly thin (so, say, you could call into and out of Schemy things) as otherwise you might as well just use one of the 9 billion existing schemes
<beach> Yes, I see.
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<jackdaniel> right, I'm not claiming that you can't write Scheme compiler in CL (vice versa is possible too) - both are general purpose programming languages after all
<beach> Right.
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<jmercouris> tfb: I was thinking in the context of gentle introduction to symbolic computation
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<tfb> jmercouris: I certainly think implementing little Lisps in CL is interesting.
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<jmercouris> tfb: I didn't say anything about little lisps in cl?
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<jackdaniel> why do you ask that? shouldn't you know what you did say?
<jackdaniel> (or didn't)
<tfb> Oh sorry, I was getting confused between the dtrace thing and the scheme-in-CL thing
<tfb> jmercouris: sorry, see prev msg
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<jmercouris> I see
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<jmercouris> whoops :)
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<tfb> jmercouris: and I guess 'detailed'?
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<jmercouris> could be, that would make sense
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<jeosol_> morning guys
<beach> Hello jeosol_.
<jeosol_> anyone following AWS summit in NY. It will be nice to see how CL plays into most of these. As a single developer, I am trying to see how I get my apps to scale if I get to that step
<jeosol_> morning beach
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<jeosol_> jmercouris: thanks for your input about running my remote jobs. I saw it but could not respond back. My use case is a bit crazy, something between running in slime and running jobs on LINUX command line after launching SBCL
<jeosol_> So what I do normally, I have a monitor on one side with code, and some linux terminals. Since I am testing different configs, I usually create a new defun, and just run it on the a linux terminal.
<JuanDaugherty> somehow it doesn't seem like AWS can be amazon web services
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<JuanDaugherty> except for the scaling part
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<jeosol_> JuanDuagherty: Sorry I didn't make that clear enough, but yes, AWS -> Amazon Web Services
<jeosol_> I have been interested in the AI/ML/DS capabilities
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<jeosol_> the->their
<JuanDaugherty> most 'apps' don't even have parallelization opportunities other than serving many users and that's highly routinized by such places and various pkgs now
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<JuanDaugherty> DS?
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<jeosol_> ah my bad Jaun. ..
<JuanDaugherty> deep search?
<jeosol_> I meant Data Science
<JuanDaugherty> ah
<jeosol_> oh really sorry about that
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<JuanDaugherty> they do have some offerings in those categories, i'd be surprised if they use lisp though
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<jeosol_> I have had interests in Gabor Melis AI/ML library and the CLML library, and wanted to pick these up. Latter still have issues with license. For Gabor's code, I made small changes to work in a recent SBCL license,
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<jeosol_> I trained the model on my linux box, it was taking over two days to train and I killed the job. I think Gabor said he used GPU machines
* JuanDaugherty checks if AWS offers GPUs
<jeosol_> Yes, Juan, they have several offerings. I think it is mostly C++, Python and Java based on the low-level frameworks
<jeosol_> JuanDuagherty: Yes, that is the plan eventually, take up the code there and if I can things to improve
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<JuanDaugherty> confirmed
<JuanDaugherty> they even have EC2 GPUs
<JuanDaugherty> just to see what it was like I tried a 99 thread EC2 a couple months ago
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<JuanDaugherty> lparallel is the likely suspect here i presume
<jeosol_> thanks for that info. I will try to get back to this soon.
<jeosol_> You mean you used the lparallel library?
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<JuanDaugherty> i meant it is a way of getting back on topic
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<jeosol_> Oh ok.
<JuanDaugherty> doesn't look like it's been updated in 3 y
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<JuanDaugherty> ql shows two more recent pkgs though
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<JuanDaugherty> only one of which is general lisp parallelization
<JuanDaugherty> igess it's only newer in ql,(cl-parallel)
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<jeosol_> JuanD ...: I didn't get your lparallel comment, it was probably from a different conversation
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<JuanDaugherty> disregard
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<jeosol_> hmmm,
<jeosol_> I will like to discuss with folks running lisp related applications on the web. Even when using other language frameworks around the core engine in lisp.
<JuanDaugherty> you'll get pushback here if you don't limit yourself to common lisp
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<jeosol_> Ok, thanks for the info Juan...
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<jeosol_> sorry about that.
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<jeosol_> The intent was to connect and not discuss that here. I do understand the focus of this forum.
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<beach> jeosol_: I think the topic says what it is.
<JuanDaugherty> based on what I've looked at since we started talking, as far as common lisp is concerned lparallel still seems the default choice, imo anyway
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<jeosol_> apologies to you guys, I didn't intend to cause any problems
<jeosol_> Like I said, I am just looking for users with similar issues as I am facing so we can share ideas. Intent was not to discuss that here ..
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<jmercouris> jeosol_: no problem
<JuanDaugherty> no worries. Are you in Korea?
<jmercouris> jeosol_: I'm running lisp applications on the web
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<jeosol_> JaunD...: no, not in Korea.
<JuanDaugherty> ah. I wonder how well the CLIM web stuff works, in remote browsers
<JuanDaugherty> (or if it even does (as opposed to some other client))
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<beach> Here is an idea: When I compile SICL code to HIR on SBCL, the functions created would be subclasses of STANDARD-FUNCALLABLE-OBJECT. I would have a slot in that subclass that contains a "code object".
<beach> The code object would have information about mappings from source locations to values of the "program counter" in the form of a place in the HIR code. It would also have tables that map HIR locations to other HIR locations for various debugger stepping functions.
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<beach> At strategic points in the HIR code, I generate code to interrogate a hash table to determine whether the current thread runs under the control of the debugger. If so, it further interrogates to determine whether it is at a breakpoint.
<beach> If so, it waits on a semaphore that is associated with the thread. The debugger uses the code object to find source location for the breakpoint. The debugger can set more breakpoints, and it then signals on the semaphore to make the application thread continue its execution.
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<beach> er, I think the class name is FUNCALLABLE-STANDARD-OBJECT.
<serghey> list
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<beach> mop funcallable-standard-object
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<dlowe> the standard object that makes calling fun
<beach> Heh.
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<jackdaniel> funny :)
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<TMA> beach: ordinary debuggers use hardware breakpoints (interrupt when program counter is equal to this value) or just modify the code to "interrupt now"; I think you might achieve the one-thread debuggee, other thread runs the same code with duplicating the debugged code with breakpoints (so as the HW not to triger and to have modifiable copy)
<TMA> beach: the only caveat is that (funcall (symbol-function XXX) ...) equivalent machinery needs to use the debugee code if one is available
<beach> TMA: Not sure I follow. But I can't use hardware breakpoints here, because I don't want to dig deep into SBCL to find out low-level details.
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<jeosol_> jmercouris: thanks for the info. It seems my recent issues are out of focus for this forum. I'll need to follow up later.
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<beach> TMA: I also don't want to modify the code, even though it might be possible to not break in some situations.
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<TMA> beach: I see. With those two additional conditions other debuggers are not subjected to, you do not have much options except to instrument the code heavily as per your design.
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<beach> Yes, that decision was already made. This suggestion was about actually running and debugging SICL code inside SBCL.
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<beach> TMA: By instrumenting the code this way, in the final system I can trivially debug system code like SYMBOL-VALUE without having the system die on me. And I can debug the debugger.
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<beach> Hardware breakpoints may work in the final system. But I need to figure out how to avoid stopping when the thread is not debugged.
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<beach> What's the name of that library that provides a uniform way of examining backtraces across implementation?
<beach> across implementations.
<Xach> beach: trivial-backtrace is one way
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<beach> I think that's the one I was thinking of. Thanks.
<Xach> beach: i believe there is another, less trivial, but the name escapes me
<beach> I see.
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<Bike> shinmera's dissect?
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<kingcons> shinmera's output is pretty amazing
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<Xach> output? is that part of quicklisp?
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<kingcons> Sorry, I meant his volume of production.
<kingcons> I don't generate much lisp these days. :)
<Xach> on the internet, it can be difficult to distinguish ironic stupidity from legitimate stupidity
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<beach> What I would need for my suggested debugging interface is to get to the function object that is executing in a particular stack frame.
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<pfdietz2> I read this paper on mutation testing at Google. I was surprised to see one of the 7 languages involved was Common Lisp. https://ai.google/research/pubs/pub46584
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<cgay> oh neat, hadn't seen that. The Lisp is due to the acquisition of ITA Software.
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<JuanDaugherty> pfdietz, it looks tacked on, only occurs in the two charts
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<Posterdati> pfdietz2: not at all since Peter Norvig is working at Google
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<Xach> peter norvig is not especially known for current CL hacking
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<whartung> I dunno if he’s hacking anything right now, but he apparently drifted over to Python a long time ago.
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<drduck> He recently said, at a 2017 LispNYC talk, that lisp is mostly dead. :(
<drduck> Starting at 4:05
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<drduck> Also that there's a big difference between mostly dead and dead, though.
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<drduck> Am I able to get the latest version of SBCL on macOS?
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<Xach> drduck: yes, if you build it yourself from a not-latest version.
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<drduck> Can anyone speak on if there are any differences in the hot reload capabilities SLIME provides lisp compared to that of which an IDE provides java?
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<whartung> sure gimme a minute
<drduck> Okydoke. Trying to get a grip on the differences. Very interested to hear. :)
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<whartung> Ok, so.
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<whartung> I don’t know exactly what slime does, but we know what CL can do. Basically the REPL, “LOAD”, and “COMPILE”. All of those impact the environment in subtle, different ways (which I can’t detail, only knowing that there’s differences.)
<whartung> but, fundamentally
<whartung> what’s happening
<whartung> is Lisp has a global Symbol table.
<whartung> and through load/compile/repl, those symbols get reassigned
<whartung> and the symbol table is simply one aspect of the global environment, but an important one.
<whartung> the SYMBOLS remain (unless they’re specifically unintern’ed), but what they reference changes.
<whartung> much like reassigning the value in a hash table.
<whartung> no, since (normally), Lisp continues do dereference stuff through symbols (when they have global scope), then you have dynamic changes to a running system. This can clearly be adjusted trhough efficiency hints and stuff like that, but at the high level, if you have (defun x () (print “hello world”)), and something calls (x), if you later do (defun x () (print “goodbye world”)), that existing reference x will now say “goodbye” instead of “hello
<whartung> without recompiling that reference.
<whartung> and, as I mentioned there are exceptions (like inlining code and what not).
<whartung> So, that’s what SLIME does, is it “simply” updates the global environment, and then the chips fall where they may.