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archivesAlgebraic vs. Coalgebraic methodsAs I started learning category methods, I noticed that my prior attitude dismissing it as "abstract nonsense" was based upon ignorance. As somebody with physics background I begin to appreciate shifting emphasis from objects onto symmetry, invariance (err morphisms). So in order to understand structure one has to master morphisms. Fine. Let's compare this with algebraic perspective. There we study objects and operations between them. When we constrain those operations with some axioms we get an algebraic system. A significant part of studying a concrete algebra would be discovering its axiom system. For example, Relation Algebra has been discovered by Pierce, but hasn't been fully axiomatized until Tarski. Now, how would I study Relation Algebra with methods of category theory? As discovery is significant element of algebraic method and category theory is in a sense dual perspective, I'd guess drawing arrows wouldn't advance me too much, and I would have to discover some important morphisms... Perhaps, a helpful analogy would be how is it done in other categories (preferably, from elementary mathematical fields:-)? By Tegiri Nenashi at 2010-02-04 00:01 | LtU Forum | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 4942 reads
Lunascript (Industrial FRPish PL for web apps)Lunascript, our in-house language for writing great web apps:
I'll have to wait for more info on this definitely interesting project, but right now I'm a bit sceptical, as this seems to throw REST out the window. By Manuel J. Simoni at 2010-02-04 15:46 | LtU Forum | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 5241 reads
Continuity Analysis of ProgramsContinuity Analysis of Programs, Swarat Chaudhuri, Sumit Galwani, and Roberto Lublinerman. POPL 2010.
Another fun paper from POPL this year. I've seen metric spaces used to solve domain equations before, but the idea of actually considering a metric on the outputs was a new one to me. Computational complexity of cascading stylesheets?I am looking for any papers that analyze the design of cascading stylesheets with respect to bounded times. I could derive this myself, but it would be nice to have a peer reviewed authority. It would also be cool if anyone ever bothered to do this for Hakon Wum-Lie's original CHSS (Cascading HTML Style Sheets) and Bert Bos's original SSP (Stream-based Style Sheet Proposal) prior to them being merged into CSS 1.0. Also, Dynamic Properties that were in Internet Explorer from 5.0 through 7.0, but deprecated in 8.0. The only thing I found so far was a webpage: CSS, selectors and computational complexity. However, this doesn't communicate the complexity on how selectors place solving constraints on the layout engine to update each widget's CSS box model. I'm also interested in knowing if anybody has done anything to model compatibilities across browsers. All I found was this (mindblowing) Comparison of layout engines and their support for CSS. I don't think anyone has actually done anything to formally investigate the most widely used DSL in the world and the affect it has on clockcycles as well as programmer man-hours... Thanks. |
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