Personally, constraining myself to purity and never trusting blindly. With the function A => A there should only be one.
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See, Fast & Loose Reasoning is Morally Correct.
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I worry that anything found from pragmatism may buckle under the weight of a moral imperative.
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Where does pragmatism come into it?
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The second sentence it does not. In the first self constraints arnt binding, some libraries are ok.
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Lots of modification is A => B => A with constraints on A and B which then silently hides the transformation.
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What about when you minimise those constraints, such that the candidate answers are very small, with an associated probability?
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Is that not just a lens codiagonal coalgebra? Pardon if my terms are incorrect, we're working at my fringes.
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Looks like the type of const (K combinator) to me, without any constraints. Twitter is terrible for this.
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Agreed. I guess my concern is that Scala is written impure a lot. So to deal with that I manage my code so that my principles hold within.
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It is true that Scala is typically written poorly.
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