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"Welcome elderly Spanish relative with breakfast cereal." (7)
Nice and easy as I'm away on my hollibobs tomorrow.
Andy B
modified 12-Oct-17 6:26am.
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GRANOLA
Gran = elderly relative
Ola = Spanish welcome
Granola - a substance that, if you feed it to pigs and chickens, can be part of breakfast
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... is of course the correct answer. Well done Duncan - your turn tomorrow.
Andy B
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Hate to quibble, but ...
"Welcome elderly Spanish relative" != "Elderly relative Spanish welcome"
Either way, my answer of "Abuelo-Os" was never really going to work ...
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Did I mention I'm on holiday tomorrow?
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I think you might have mentioned it in passing ...
Hope you have a good one!
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Herself finds granola to a be a perfectly acceptable breakfast.
I also have to eat it, and can report it is excellent is fortified correctly, and in the correct proportions.
The addition of sausage, bacon, mushrooms, tomato, beans, toast, and saute potatoes improves it greatly, but for some reason there is always a small pile of seeds left over on the side of the plate that I lack the space for.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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@LabVIEWStuff - before Griff gets his lady underwear in a twist, isn't it your turn for the CCC?
This space for rent
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Yup, gimme 2 min
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Plenty of time before my thong gets knotted!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Just a quick one; How many CPeople are using F# these days, and if so what for?
Like many others, I found it very interesting when it first came out, but never really found a compelling application for it, and there don't seem to be many F# jobs around so...
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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Well, I use it everyday in many situations.
To express frustration: oh, for F# sake!
To express incredulity: the F# do you want me to do?
To express disappointment in something: this F#ing car is pure undiluted junk;
To express surprise: F# me sideways!
And many other uses, these are off the top of my head...
Note: there are a whole lot of F# jobs out there. It's hard to find one thet is not.
* CALL APOGEE, SAY AARDWOLF
* GCS d--- s-/++ a- C++++ U+++ P- L- E-- W++ N++ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE- Y+ PGP t++ 5? X R++ tv-- b+ DI+++ D++ G e++>+++ h--- ++>+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
* Never pay more than 20 bucks for a computer game.
* I'm a puny punmaker.
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Ahh, you went down that road. Haha. Well, that reminds me of something I heard long ago that is F#-ing hilarious and lo-and-behold I found it on youtube: The "F"word - YouTube[^]
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Professional Sports.
While I was looking for a new employer over the last year, twice I was pitched jobs for Major League Baseball teams that needed F# developers. I did some research on it and found troves of data sets available spanning decades of time.
Now I know where all those worthless statistics come from when announcers are trying to find something interesting to say when there is a lull in the game.
Director of Transmogrification Services
Shinobi of Query Language
Master of Yoda Conditional
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MadMyche wrote: Major League Baseball teams that needed F# developers.
Why F# though, versus C#? What does F# give MLB that C#/Java could not?
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Well it's the functional aspect of it that, supposedly, makes it more useful for working with extremely large datasets.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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In addition to Slacker007's post, there's this interesting (academically speaking, I suppose) article I wrote recently.
Mel Padden wrote: Like many others, I found it very interesting when it first came out, but never really found a compelling application for it, and there don't seem to be many F# jobs around so...
Along with Scala and Haskell, I've heard it's used in the financial industry. It's a good language to learn because I found it influences, in a positive way, my C# coding, particularly looking at how mutability is handled.
The company I left a while back was re-implementing all their ATM code in F#, mainly because the new kids on the block (spurred on by the CTO that hated C# because he didn't understand it) thought what I'd done in C# was too complicated. Funny they chose F#. Well, they would have chosen Python (because the CTO loved Python) but they couldn't use Python because the Chromium support sucked.
At the end of the day, to repeat stuff I've written about F# previously, the world is mutable, so programming in pure immutable FP is a real PITA. Tail recursion, monads, etc. Ugh.
Given that, what you end up with in F# often looks like an imperative code square that's been shoved into a declarative code circle. That's certainly what the new kids ended up with, from what I saw before I left. OK, so they implemented communication streams in F#. Big whoop.
Plus, getting anyone (like your teammates) educated in any FP syntax is daunting, nay, impossible.
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Marc Clifton wrote: an imperative code square that's been shoved into a declarative code circle. Wonderful !
«While I complain of being able to see only a shadow of the past, I may be insensitive to reality as it is now, since I'm not at a stage of development where I'm capable of seeing it. A few hundred years later another traveler despairing as myself, may mourn the disappearance of what I may have seen, but failed to see.» Claude Levi-Strauss (Tristes Tropiques, 1955)
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I've been using F# almost since it came out. Initially, I was using it to simulate performance of large government pension funds. Lately, I've been building an infrastructure to allow me to build simulations of adaptive social systems.
In terms of coding style, I find myself combining object-oriented and functional styles in the same programs, the object-oriented for interfacing with .NET/WPF types, and the functional where it seems natural.
There are several things I really like about F#. First, it allows me to fit a lot of computation into just a few lines of code: No pages of curly brackets and semicolons. Second, I don't feel straight-jacketed into a particular coding style; I can use what is appropriate in the circumstances. Third, it is relatively free of arcana like annotations. Fourth, you don't have to know everything to do anything. And fifth, the combination of Visual Studio and the F# interpreter rocks!
I hope this is helpful.
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I use F# for everything I can without getting in trouble. (I'm supposed to be using C#.)
It has many features that make common programming operations easier, but that are not available in many mainstream languages (including C#), for example:
- Automatic type elision (C# has this with var keyword, but in F# it's somewhat more powerful and can identify function types, etc)
- Discriminated union types (i.e. a value that can be either THIS or THAT, but not both)
type GameResult =
| Winner of playerName: string
| Stalemate
- Record types - easy copy-and-update syntax and automatic structural comparison
let youngBiff = { Name = "Biff Tannen"; Age = 18 }
let oldBiff = { youngBiff with Age = 73 }
youngBiff = oldBiff
It's also great for scripting. You can easily run and test individual code lines, functions, etc. in F# interactive.
It is definitely multi-paradigm -- it's "functional first", but I also prefer writing OO and imperative code in F# because of features such as the ones mentioned above.
I wish F# would supplant C# (or at least gain parity) as the premier .NET language. I don't think there's anything C# does better (except this). But alas, it seems like we're more likely to see C# slowly turn into F# with curly brackets, semicolons, and superfluous type definitions.
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xkcd: Logical[^] - I say nothing. Especially after a visit to QA.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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QA, where logic beg....ends
Rules for the FOSW ![ ^]
if(this.signature != "")
{
MessageBox.Show("This is my signature: " + Environment.NewLine + signature);
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("404-Signature not found");
}
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QA: where knowledge goes to die.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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