2023/05/22

2023-05-22 01:45:12 +0000hightower3(~hightower@168-4.dsl.iskon.hr)
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2023-05-22 05:08:25 +0000Ou42(~Ou4242a@2600:1700:e930:41b0:30c2:cdef:fcd:1a6)
2023-05-22 05:09:40 +0000 <Ou42> msg lambdabot @help
2023-05-22 05:09:50 +0000 <Ou42> hmmm
2023-05-22 05:09:55 +0000liskin[m](~liskinmat@2001:470:69fc:105::768)
2023-05-22 05:10:01 +0000 <Ou42> tell lambdabot @help
2023-05-22 05:10:05 +0000 <Ou42> hmm x 2
2023-05-22 05:10:09 +0000unclechu(~unclechu@2001:470:69fc:105::354)
2023-05-22 05:12:27 +0000 <Ou42> hello
2023-05-22 05:24:40 +0000 <[Leary]> Ou42: You want /msg.
2023-05-22 05:25:38 +0000 <Ou42> ah-ha! forgot the slash!
2023-05-22 05:26:08 +0000 <Ou42> lambdabot uses @ though, right?
2023-05-22 05:26:55 +0000 <[Leary]> Yes.
2023-05-22 05:27:11 +0000 <Ou42> but it only beats me up inside a DM
2023-05-22 05:27:34 +0000 <Ou42> "/msg @slap Ou42" doesn't echo here. Only in a DM.
2023-05-22 05:27:48 +0000 <Ou42> err "/msg LambdaBot @slap Ou42"
2023-05-22 05:28:05 +0000 <[Leary]> Yes, that's the point of DMing it?
2023-05-22 05:28:25 +0000 <Ou42> I thought LB would broadcast the violence... for giggles.
2023-05-22 06:50:30 +0000mncheckm(~mncheck@193.224.205.254)
2023-05-22 07:26:04 +0000cfricke(~cfricke@user/cfricke)
2023-05-22 07:34:26 +0000 <Ou42> @slap lambdabot
2023-05-22 07:34:26 +0000 <lambdabot> stop telling me what to do
2023-05-22 07:34:34 +0000 <Ou42> @slap Ou42
2023-05-22 07:34:34 +0000 <lambdabot> stop telling me what to do
2023-05-22 07:46:59 +0000mncheckm(~mncheck@193.224.205.254) (Remote host closed the connection)
2023-05-22 08:21:39 +0000mncheck(~mncheck@193.224.205.254)
2023-05-22 08:30:23 +0000 <Ou42> re: <https://github.com/xmonad/xmonad-contrib/issues/815> does "good first issue" mean something "easy"?!
2023-05-22 08:30:40 +0000 <Ou42> err rather something a noob could do ?
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2023-05-22 09:52:58 +0000alternateved(~user@77-253-195-69.adsl.inetia.pl)
2023-05-22 10:00:07 +0000 <liskin> probably more of a "good learning opportunity" :-)
2023-05-22 10:00:20 +0000liskin[m](~liskinmat@2001:470:69fc:105::768)
2023-05-22 10:00:34 +0000unclechu(~unclechu@2001:470:69fc:105::354)
2023-05-22 10:01:57 +0000 <liskin> #815 could be considered "easy" considering there're other layouts (or PRs with proposed layouts) that do it correctly so one can just take that code and adapt it
2023-05-22 10:02:13 +0000 <liskin> but it's also not really "easy" because one needs to understand the problem first
2023-05-22 10:02:42 +0000 <liskin> oh and also they're gone :-(
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2023-05-22 19:01:03 +0000skaggi(~skaggi@2600:387:1:811::bb)
2023-05-22 19:03:23 +0000 <skaggi> So I recently started using xmonad with xmobar but can't really find any good source material to work from is there any good material to learn Haskell or more in depth tutorials on xmonad besides type this for this more explanation I guess is what I'm asking
2023-05-22 19:03:41 +0000unclechu(~unclechu@2001:470:69fc:105::354)
2023-05-22 19:05:08 +0000 <skaggi> I prefer something to read instead of YouTube videos if anyone has any suggestions
2023-05-22 19:05:42 +0000 <geekosaur> for free stuff I'd look into the Haskell Wikibook
2023-05-22 19:05:50 +0000 <geekosaur> @where wikibook
2023-05-22 19:05:50 +0000 <lambdabot> http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Haskell
2023-05-22 19:06:25 +0000 <skaggi> Thank you so much :) will look into it today
2023-05-22 19:06:30 +0000 <geekosaur> I don't know of any good tutorials based around xmonad
2023-05-22 19:06:56 +0000 <geekosaur> even the stuff on youtube is less "here's how ti program it" as "here's something cool I did"
2023-05-22 19:07:08 +0000 <geekosaur> canned recipes rather than how to cook 🙂
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2023-05-22 22:03:56 +0000mncheck(~mncheck@193.224.205.254)
2023-05-22 22:19:30 +0000 <YuuYin[m]> skaggi: https://haskell-docs.netlify.app/
2023-05-22 22:20:54 +0000 <geekosaur> they left
2023-05-22 22:21:55 +0000 <YuuYin[m]> for me it is hard to believe haskell.org still didn't officially create an official documentation, and when people trying to get the idea going on, people say (some already with vested interest): "look, there's all these book you can buy, it's losing time doing it..."
2023-05-22 22:23:28 +0000 <geekosaur> there is the so-called Gentle Introduction, it's just not generally foudn to be that gentle
2023-05-22 22:23:45 +0000 <geekosaur> that said, the Haskell Foundation is working on stuff like that
2023-05-22 22:29:41 +0000 <YuuYin[m]> At least there is some hope. For me, I think will not invest more time in Haskell unfortunately. I think what Rust and Kind/HVM (hopefully someday with Rust interop) is the way forward. There is some interview in which #simplex-chat:matrix.org founder said they would have written it in Rust instead if they had not already done it in Haskell... Xmonad, SimpleX, and Pandoc are the only useful apps that I use which I know are written in Haskell. This
2023-05-22 22:29:41 +0000 <YuuYin[m]> is not a critic to the language, but to the governance, ecosystem, ....
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