kronicmage

joined 1 year ago
[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 26 points 11 months ago (1 children)

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

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 2 points 11 months ago

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

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Wow this really feels like reddit again. High quality comment followed by low effort award post. All we need now is an award speech edit

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

This joke is out of this world

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 year ago

smbc robot comics, true classic genre

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We thought about that, but this was our honeymoon trip and we really didn't want to mess with our schedule when we have the full day wedding to take care of as well. Maybe next time!

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago

Maybe we should pull a Hacker News and start a culture of putting the year of articles in the title

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

A lot of these jokes are literally older than some of the people in my computer science program

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

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

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

I'll give that a shot!

[–] kronicmage@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

Inspiring! My wife and I are too tied down in the west to move to Japan anytime soon unfortunately, but it's reassuring to see that even people who live there have a hard time lol

 

Hey all, I barely passed the December 2022 N3 and last month, I went to Japan for the first time and spent two weeks there.

Overall, I was both disappointed and pleased with how far the N3 got me (note I'm talking purely about my skill level -- at no point did I ever show anyone in Japan my N3 certificate lol).

On the one hand, some might say that N3 is enough for anime and conversations with normal people. As someone with a 31/60 on the listening section, this is categorically not true. I never got the chance to, nor do I likely have the ability to, hold a long everyday conversation with anyone in Japan. It's not like I was surprised at my lack of skill by the time I was on the ground in Japan and talking to people, but I did expect to have been able to do so by the time I got an N3 back when I first started studying. So I am a bit sad that that expectation was off.

On the other hand, wow does real immersion make a huge, gigantic difference. When I first landed I had to ask people to repeat themselves slowly two or three times for me to get what they said, and people would often switch to English before I put together what Japanese words (that I already knew) actually corresponded to the sounds I was hearing when they were speaking Japanese earlier. But by the end of the first week, my conversation skill was enough for dining in restaurants, shopping in malls, speaking to hotel staff, and small talk with tour guides 100% in Japanese. It was incredible how comfortable I felt talking about non-trivial upgrade options or specific observation site locations, and it was also incredible how much nicer people treated me when I was speaking Japanese with them vs when my wife would talk first in English. It was absolutely 100% worth it for me to get to this level of skill, and it really made me feel like my work has finally paid off.

To conclude, if you're like me and you grinded almost nothing but Anki all the way to around N3 level, you probably have the same mix of okay vocab/grammar but extremely shitty listening comprehension. If so, I highly recommend greatly increasing the amount of listening practice you do on a daily basis. I'm still not sure what's the best way to study that, but I definitely could have used more of it before my trip. But at the same time, don't despair if you're going on a trip without that. You'll be fine -- trust your subconscious brain and enjoy the huge comprehension gains!

 

My first language was Racket and so naturally I gravitated to the lispy untyped functional programming style even when I was using languages like Python or Java, but when I tried Haskell for the first time my mind was absolutely blown and I was a convert ever since. What are your thoughts?

 

I'd love to hear more about it. I'm a new grad who's done a bunch of internships using functional programming languages but didn't find a new grad position that does

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