This is referencing Philip Wadler’s 1989 paper “Theorems for Free”, which is fairly well known in the Haskell community: https://home.ttic.edu/~dreyer/course/papers/wadler.pdf
This is referencing Philip Wadler’s 1989 paper “Theorems for Free”, which is fairly well known in the Haskell community: https://home.ttic.edu/~dreyer/course/papers/wadler.pdf
Just use parser combinators
I’m not too familiar with the state of research but I’ve seen a lot of papers that use Haskell
End of an era
smbc robot comics, true classic genre
What a coincidence
Maybe we should pull a Hacker News and start a culture of putting the year of articles in the title
It’s so much more expressive and looks like it has so much more creative energy than the New smb series. Excited to play this
Yes! Splatoon is so underrated outside of Japan. I’ve really been enjoying the game and would love to have a big contentful dlc to work through
Wow haven’t heard those names in ages
You could always get a 4k video from one source and a dubbed video from the other and remux it yourself. Audio quality won’t be as high probably but at least you’ll get good video
Wow I’m not sure how they would adapt this to television
You’d probably have much better success searching the internet in that language instead of English. My in-laws use a lot of Chinese sources to source their Chinese sub/dubbed shows, but English sources don’t really offer that in my opinion
Thanks for the info! No clue which one I have, the Amazon listing got removed unfortunately
Federation is absolutely amazing. So many communities can come together here
My wife is a big fan, drawn in by the songs she recognizes and the promise of exercise. But ever since we visited Japan and tried the rhythm games in the arcades there we’ve both felt Just Dance to be a bit lacking – the tracking isn’t very sensitive and has a huge tolerance for accepting wrong/mistimed moves
This is referencing Philip Wadler’s 1989 paper “Theorems for Free”, which is fairly well known in the Haskell community: https://home.ttic.edu/~dreyer/course/papers/wadler.pdf