Ok, at some point we made a big mistake.
Ok, at some point we made a big mistake.
Hacker News post about this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39309783 (source available)
I've written some magic templates that I assume are not easy to read by those who don't know.
But this is seemingly unmaintainable... terrifying... and kind of neat.
59 0 ReplyThis doesn't actually read as serious TypeScript, moreso as someone trying to showcase unhinged code.
I'd be happy to be proven wrong with a link to the source code so that I can look the beast in the eye.
54 1 ReplyTake a look at some typescript libraries and frameworks and you will see stuff like this. Completely unreadable mess.
16 2 ReplyI have seen image recognition or text RPGs with type script types, but
const ok:true = true as Grid< 4, 9, 2
Wtf19 0 ReplyStyled Components' type system is one of the most impressive and most fucked up things I've ever had to dive into.
6 0 ReplyFor example?
5 0 Reply
After 5 minutes of staring at it: Its typesystem sudoku. Each row and each col in the grid must add up to 15 (T<>), bit each number in the grid must be different (Df<>).
Grid will only be a type alias for the value true (google "Dependent types") only if all Type Parameters (wich are values) hold up to the Sudoku conditions).
The file would not compile with "true as Grid" when grid type-aliases to false.
Fun to understand.
EDIT: too late
31 0 ReplyI like to think I can usually look at code in languages I don't know and still get the gist of what it does but I am drawing a complete blank. Is this even slightly legible to anyone and if yes please explain
29 0 ReplyTL;DR:
Grid<A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H>
simplifies to true, if and only if it is a 3x3 magic square.full explanation
Fifteen
is an array of length 15T<A,B,C>
checks if an array of lengthA
+B
+C
is equivalent to an array of length 15, thus checking ifA
+B
+C
is equal to 15And<A,X>
is simplifies toX
ifA
is true, else it simplifies tofalse
Df<A,B,X>
checks ifA
andB
are Diffrent , simplifying toX
if they areGrid<A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H>
first checks if every row, column and diagonal is equal to 15, then checks if every item is unique.
44 0 Reply
Why tf
24 0 ReplyI think I can pinpoint the exact date things went sideways. It was a dark day on Monday, October 1, 2012.
11 0 ReplyYeah, and apparently type checking/inference is trivial, says the "CTO" of Xitter. /s
10 0 ReplyThis seems like a generic type of problem that could happen to anyone. Hopefully we can learn from this and avoid appending it to our already large grid of problems.
10 0 ReplyI see what you did there
2 1 Reply
I'm really trying to figure out what this is used for and why it was done this way.
I'm not having much success
10 0 ReplyLooks like something that checks that the rows in a grid att up to 15. Why? IDK, a game?
5 0 Reply
My soul hurts
7 0 ReplyI don't want to look at this anymore
7 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
6 1 ReplyCan confirm.
3 0 Reply
3 0 ReplyCould not find any images with text
7 0 ReplyMe neither bud, me neither...
10 0 Reply
That's why macro_rules!
3 0 ReplyThis is not rust :D Nothing will save typescript
5 0 Reply
If TypeScript didn’t have terrible type-level ergonomics, this wouldn’t look so bad—even if this toy example is largely just a brain exercise
3 0 ReplyMan these programmers are getting unhinged. Even I can't read this shit.
3 1 ReplyToo much focus on compile time.
1 0 ReplyBut C is worse than C++, because what if you have a pointer to a pointer?
7 19 ReplyYou can have a pointer to a pointer in c++ too tho?
16 0 ReplyCan you have two pointers pointing at each other?
3 0 ReplyYou don't say.
1 2 Reply
Also it is colder at night than it is outside.
3 1 ReplyEh?
3 1 Reply