« first day (1043 days earlier)      last day (1908 days later) » 

00:02
@Bubbler did you see mine? (needs adding APL as a language, couldn't be bothered to default it)
 
7 hours later…
07:14
I finally made a Docker image with Dyalog APL + RIDE + Acre installed
Didn't try out writing actual Acre package on it yet, but looks promising
07:43
@Bubbler Sounds amazing. Forgive me for being uneducated, but how do I use it? I.e. step-by-step until I see RIDE?
@Adám For Gitpod usage (as I'm doing right now), install Gitpod browser extension, go to the GitHub repo and click Gitpod button.
And then, inside the Gitpod IDE, "Open Ports" tab - 4502 - "Open Browser" opens the zero-footprint RIDE running in the cloud.
For other usage, a "docker run" command similar to the official one will do (I guess).
One caveat is that mine extends from Gitpod's official image, which contains support for other languages e.g. clang, java, python, php...
 
2 hours later…
09:26
@Bubbler This is really cool. I've told my colleagues about it.
 
7 hours later…
16:51
@user9058217 Hi Bruno Costa. If you want to participate here, just send an email to adam@ with the same domain as www.dyalog.com
 
1 hour later…
18:01
is there some error in dfns.subvec? These expressions return the 1 singleton:
(⍬,2) subvec (⍬,3)
1 1 subvec 1 2
adding some more base cases fixes it: 0x0.st/zlty.txt
and also, it isn't a dfn anymore
18:49
@ZhengqunKoo Are you sure you mean (⍬,2) and not (⍬ 2)? The first is [2] in JSON and the second is [[],2].
19:12
@Adám is [2] in JSON a singleton vector in Dyalog?
anyways, looking at the recursive call in dfns.subvec, 1↓1 2 is equivalent to ⍬,2 , so I'm pretty sure I said what I meant
19:28
@ZhengqunKoo (⍬,2) is equivalent to just (,2), the latter of which is way more idiomatic
also why does 5 7 subvec 5 6 give 1? judging by the implementation, it assumes that ∧/⍺∊⍵ or something like that..
seems there should also be a ~(1↑⍺)∊⍵:0 check before the recursive call @Adám
(an example where erroring on ⍺>≢⍵ or erroring on non-existent items would be helpful, but this is what you get with a limited amount of builtins)

« first day (1043 days earlier)      last day (1908 days later) »