@HostileFork best workaround for binary conversions being portable between R2 and R3 is to write conversion functions for each platform that have the same external behavior but completely different internal implementations. Then use the conversion functions instead.
Is there any known bug in R2 which would cause something like rejoin ["^^(" to-hex-string/size byte 2 ")"] to produce things like "^^(FF" without the closing paren? :-/
That's not going to change. But we will be putting the dev discussion on developing the interpreters/compilers themselves and the bug reports in another channel.
also, you all seem like ...quite experienced veterans who are, at the height of your careers and after many successful projects and products, putting the icing on the cake by indulging in such an idealistic, progressive project like Rebol
while someone like me had to struggle to get his JSON in shape so that the javascript component would deal with it somehow. Project of my dreams half-finished.
@rgchris wouldn't mind getting a head start if this is actually the next big thing, but I am not hearing much hype about it on hackernews
actually however ,after reading up on the language creator sassenrath, I am actually inclined to believe that this is something "better" or more advanced than what I've seen before
Anyway, it's not so much world domination that we want (ok, won't speak for everyone), but a development experience that doesn't suck—and one that scales the problems we face.
I work with a JS framework and a graphics library that are both new and ....rough too. the actual creators answering forum questions using explanations never heard before in any documentation
@graph Recently I tried adding a location picker to an HTML form—integrating the map API was frustratingly verbose and inelegant, yet it's supposed to be modern and expressive. I wish JS API developers had a grounding in Rebol, I'd think they'd come up with much better solutions.
@rgchris nice, I love those kinds of projects. How difficult do you find the whole process, all the work that has to go into it? Programming, design, ..finding out how the thing is actually supposed to be used and what the users' needs are?
@graph Carl (the original architect behind Rebol) has a lot of similar short essays that help shed light on the principles underlying Rebol. Another good one: rebol.net/r3blogs/0018.html
so let's say you do a project and realize that somethign that used to be hard is now easy for you since you've done it before. Do you a) opt to just finish faster or b) keep the difficulty level the same by using different, new, more sophisticated solutions instead?
The second-system effect refers to the tendency of small, elegant, and successful systems to have elephantine, feature-laden monstrosities as their successors. The term was first used by Fred Brooks in his classic The Mythical Man-Month. It described the jump from a set of simple operating systems on the IBM 700/7000 series to OS/360 on the 360 series.
Explanation
Although expressed as a problem of software design, the second-system effect is observable throughout all human design effort. It is somewhat akin to the idea of "fighting the last battle."
People who have designed something ...
@Sunanda y'all have your conceptual foundation for building a better system, I like that.
I love this chat for representing an ideal programming buddy. Not that I ask him all the time, but I can glance over and see him working next to me, friendly experienced, wise, making all those abstract concepts real.....