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1:12 AM
Haha, I just spent a while confusing myself on thread-safe reference counting with atomics...
I started wondering how the code inside an assignment operator or whatever in the counted class could be sure another thread wouldn't release the object before it could fully construct the new reference. And read up a bunch of stuff and couldn't figure out why no one explained that.
Until I began to write up a question and realized...you know you have at least one reference under control on your thread... the one you're copying. :-)
d'oh
 
 
10 hours later…
10:49 AM
posted on December 13, 2014 by draegtun

[Reddit] Signal Ports in R3 on Linux

 
 
3 hours later…
1:57 PM
@HostileFork Notwithstanding the linguistic dust seems to have settled a bit, I still feel the touch of it. So I have this idea of taking away the concepts synthetic and analytic from the level of word forming and pulling them into the realm of functionality building. This enables me to articulate my thougths about Rebol in a more concise way.
I can get along with the proposals in these tickets, to a certain extent. They would make things better, sure. But I'm not convinced they would make things good. So far I see your conversion criteria:
1. Semantical fit (1.23 and "1.23")
2. Morphological fit (as within the ANY-BLOCK! family)
3. Symmetry (1.23 can be converted to "1.23" and vice versa)
All three are problematic, and especially the combination of the criteria 1 and 2 within one function looks like a recipe for bad synthetics. There might be other criteria, that either make obvious how to proceed or complicate things even more. Where are my blind spots?
(I've discovered I'm not marked down when my message is too long or contains Shift-Enters.)
Lost this part in copying, deleting and pasting:
"Rebol's beauty lies in its analytic faculties. When the synthetic side shows up, you may see the beast, and some loose ends make it even pathetic." Not a cry of despair after having digested your tickets about TO, just the poised conclusion after some thinking and experimenting, I hope.
BTW, I didn't intend to state that the criteria above are all yours (I changed the wrong 'these' into 'yours' when editing). #2 and 3 maybe, but #1 seemed to be a rather obvious one. Oh, what a mess this is.
 
2:48 PM
posted on December 13, 2014 by Ashley

Munge 1.0.7     Compatibility patches         to-error        does not work in R3         remove-each     R3 returns integer         select         &nb

 
 
3 hours later…
6:10 PM
327
Q: What is the strict aliasing rule?

BenoitWhen asking about common undefined behavior in C, souls more enlightened than I referred to the strict aliasing rule. What are they talking about?

It seems most C programmers do not know what the strict aliasing rule is.
 
 
1 hour later…
7:30 PM
@Memophenon I look for symmetries and simplicities and then really good rules for breaking them. A lot of times reasonings come back as "because that's just the way it is..."...
Ah, no, but don't you believe them. :-)
 
 
2 hours later…
9:49 PM
I'll take that as:
4. Common sense, being pragmatic.
Plus:
5. Simplicity.
Both are generic design principles, not specific for TO.
Here's a sixth one, by Yukihiro Matsumoto:
6. The principle of the least surprise (i.e. Matsumoto's surprise).
 

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