alphacyberranger@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.devEnglish · 1 year agoJavalemmy.worldimagemessage-square77fedilinkarrow-up1585arrow-down148
arrow-up1537arrow-down1imageJavalemmy.worldalphacyberranger@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.devEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square77fedilink
minus-squarebaseless_discourse@mander.xyzlinkfedilinkarrow-up2·edit-21 year ago“predictable” in the sense that people know how it works regardless what language they know. I guess I mean “no surprise for the reader”, which is more “readability” than “predictability”
minus-squareBorgDrone@lemmy.onelinkfedilinkarrow-up3·1 year agoIs there any language that doesn’t just truncate when casting from a float to an int?
minus-squarebaseless_discourse@mander.xyzlinkfedilinkarrow-up4·edit-21 year agoAs far as I know, haskell do not allow coresion of float to int without specifying a method (floor, ceil, round, etc): https://hoogle.haskell.org/?hoogle=Float±%3E+Integer&scope=set%3Astackage Agda seems to do the same: https://agda.github.io/agda-stdlib/Data.Float.Base.html
“predictable” in the sense that people know how it works regardless what language they know.
I guess I mean “no surprise for the reader”, which is more “readability” than “predictability”
Is there any language that doesn’t just truncate when casting from a float to an int?
As far as I know, haskell do not allow coresion of float to int without specifying a method (floor, ceil, round, etc): https://hoogle.haskell.org/?hoogle=Float±%3E+Integer&scope=set%3Astackage
Agda seems to do the same: https://agda.github.io/agda-stdlib/Data.Float.Base.html