So in the great pool of thought, challenges are now coming out that suggest context replace object-as-we-know-it, and the type be called context!
Then object be retaken for some kind of abstraction that tried to implement more traditional object-ness. Constructors, destructors, methods, what-have-you
I'd like that to be mixed up with the idea of it being a two-parameter entity by default, and have a spec block. So context [... spec ...] [... body ...]
The spec block would control properties of the context, like what module! does. If you leave it empty you'd get what we have today
Then has [... body ...] would be the analogue to does [... body ...], an abbreviated form which assumes an empty spec.
x: has [y: 10 z: 20]
f: does [1 + 2]
Under this model, object could be dialected in a way that assumed a single block parameter, using keywords like method and other higher-order levels of control
If we're going to talk about introducing more traditional objects, I'd like to hear more discussion about what Rebol is lacking and not lacking by not having them.
What do people want and not want from traditional objects?
@JacobGood1 Kewl news forthcoming, several announcements, not sure how many
@WiseGenius Well, the first thing that comes to mind for me are constructors and destructors.
There is a whole big unknown of the behavior of user-defined-types, and trying to make it possible to hook new types in to respond to the likes of +... some kind of operator overloading
Of course it's not wise to try and take on C++ or Haskell or any other system on its turf
But that's not to say that there might not be some low hanging fruit
@JacobGood1 Right now, still wrestling with template metaprogramming to get a nice implementation of this for extension... the reverse... calling from Reb/Red into C++ github.com/hostilefork/rencpp/blob/develop/examples/…
Well, there are some dark corners. Some questions. But I think what we know is that unchecked growth of out of control systems is not the right answer. So it is really trying to bring to light the ideas of Rebol that were good, but somehow (not too surprising given poor marketing) never took hold.
It is sad that Douglas Crockford came knocking and said "let's do this, this is a good language, let's open it up and..." and got cold reception from Carl
So he said "Well I'd rather have an effect on the world than stay in a culture that is self defeating" and went on to JSON and JSLint and giving talks and writing books about...JavaScript
That's a lot of energy that could have been put into Rebol, and it seems there has been a history of refusing because "it's not ready" or fear of corruption or whatever other excuse.
Hopefully, Red will not make the same mistakes, and hopefully also, Rebol will turn around and adapt. We're not really waiting on it, but I do keep writing Carl and ask him to delegate the stewardship of the github
Given the map of things and how it worked out, HTML was the turf. XML was on the rise but is now almost dead, AFAICT
So, given HTML being a sort of immovable object... for Rebol to have enjoyed the widespread success of JavaScript, it would have had to be in the browser.
Yet web browsers, large OS-sized artifacts, are kind of the enemy of Rebol philosophy
The project is the study of ensuring they don't explode.
If they do, thesis crushed
PARSE is a very nice success story, and DocKimbel is very obsessed with it, and figuring out how to make it as efficient as possible because Red's parse can be faster than Rebol's
Although, parse in Rebol is often a faster way of solving some problems you might try writing imperatively
In any case, if you look at RegEx and look at PARSE, we will lose if there's something implicitly true about that ugly expression that makes it better or faster.
I believe there is nothing implicitly true about ugliness being the price one must pay
@WiseGenius Sometimes it does feel like those stories of anthropologists who find a weird isolated village that hasn't had contact...and then you find they're like, cancer resistant or something.
I've always thought that there was a big need to pull mathematical formalism and "pure functional" techniques into programming, because some problems demand it. Without that you're always worrying about how tweaking one part of the system might affect another... it's just too hard to keep a formal system running properly.
Your intern working on some tendril of one module can break everything
But really, it does come down to wanting to "Say What You Mean"... and Haskell, sure, you can get into the mindset where "to a man with a hammer every problem looks like a nail"
And C++ people get that way too, and any other language
And you say "well of course we do it that way, because it is Right"
Right tool for the job. And my argument is largely that, as English (or similar) speaking primate things with ASCII input devices, there's a certain way we like to talk
And it's a question of how much you take that natural way you frame problems, and those natural tools, vs. how much you say "I am robot from future I will solve all with equations"
@HostileFork I've never tried the language, but from the lots I've heard about it's paradigm, and just the sound of it's name, when I first saw the logo, I thought "That's a perfect match!" for some reason.
Haven't gotten a grid out for it, but it's too wide for its height, and it reminds me of other things like the Adidas logo which I can complain about for other reasons.
@JacobGood1 Well, I did have a bit of a time even with my little dungeon game, things are still very much in the "needs more hands on deck". But it moves along, and yes; the theory here is that binding will become vastly easier.
Rebol has a bad time of giving you meaningful errors and debugging as it is, and Red keeps mapping out "let's prove what we can do" vs. anything user friendly.
But, you watch it eerily coming in with nice parts that are more complete emerging in various spots. The console, for instance. Nice and apparently about to get things like autocomplete
@HostileFork check out how you can manipulate your code(you are in the ast after all) because it has parens everywhere... youtube.com/watch?v=D6h5dFyyUX0
Not really the problem space, though there is a map-each
If someone with functional programming leanings comes in to attack it and the terminology, they will be bringing a different set of concerns and offerings. It hasn't really happened much yet.
well, back to the c++ binding,without even having looked at it, does one need to write c++ glue code or could one just consume a lib that was written in c++ with red code
@HostileFork At a first glance, the complement word to NEXT for me, is PREVIOUS, both implying 1. The complement of BACK to me is FORWARD which seems closer to REST and CDR than to NEXT.
String is a type derived from Series derived from Value
Logic is derived from Value
@WiseGenius Yes, but I think ergonomics of typing influenced that, PREVIOUS being seen as too long, and as there's no FORWARD the shorter word was taken
And PREV being abbreviated, in a system that wants whole words written out
Unfortunately in English REST has other meanings (eg. take a rest) so it seems too weak a word to immediately invoke the meaning we have in mind anyway. :(
And... I have a proof of concept now done. Type correct and everything. That took some learnin'
There is probably a special place in hell where people are forced to do Functional Programming on large scale systems... but required to do it all in C++ templates. I'm not sure what kind of crimes you have to have committed in earthly life to be sent there.
@Morwenn Ah, I was just thinking I'd appreciate a couple of educated eyeballs on this... I am having trouble with passing the tuple values by reference...
And really, any other improvements because I'm already a bit grumpy about the extra function layer of indirection, and the table lookup, but I see no way around it.
You can't pass the body of functions as a parameter in C++, unless you use macros
Error is weird, /home/hostilefork/Projects/rencpp/include/rencpp/extension.hpp:104: error: expression list treated as compound expression in functional cast [-fpermissive] std::forward_as_tuple(A (engine, cells[0])), ^
/home/hostilefork/Projects/rencpp/include/rencpp/extension.hpp:104: error: invalid cast of an rvalue expression of type 'ren::Block' to type 'ren::Block&' std::forward_as_tuple(A {engine, cells[0]}), ^
What I was kind of hoping abstractly
Was that some combo of forwarding and thinking would mean there was a single construction, no copy construction, of those Value wrapping objects
Now, they have to have construction somewhere, so maybe that forward at the creation level isn't needed. But it's hard for me to (without adding some debug code) tell how many copies or whatever are being made
No, then it says "/home/hostilefork/Projects/rencpp/include/rencpp/extension.hpp:86: error: cannot bind 'ren::Block' lvalue to 'ren::Block&&' return fun(std::get<S>(params) ...); ^"
And whenever you've not seen anyone do something, and you do it, you might feel clever but you should also put on your maybe there's a reason no one does this hat
I'm hoping what I've done is not insanely broken somehow, but honestly, I was surprised it seemed to work.
I've looked at semi-related questions in the past, and things like the memory model and when statics are initialized... you have a guarantee in C++11 that C++98 didn't have on that
And again I would go "why?"
"How... do they guarantee that?"
Had a facepalm moment the other day looking into shared pointer implementations, and I couldn't figure out how the copy and assign operators couldn't guarantee the source wasn't going to have its destructor called while running...
"What if the last reference goes away while you're making the copy...?"
In your code, the problem with handling references seems to be linked to the fact that we are "storing" types and not just forwarding them from one function to another. Everytime we try to store references types, it gets messy.
My current philosophical quest is just trying to lower the overhead of these extensions and figure out what to tell DocKimbel about the hook he needs to give for the binding to work
He asked "hey, could you think about designing a C++ binding" and I said "ok"
And so I'm trying to be sensitive to both the concerns of C++ programmers and Rebol/Red programmers with it
One thing that Rebol/Red people panic about is instruction counts, and stack pushes, and bit copies, and branch prediction fails...
Which I try to explain is not antithetical to C++, in fact C++ programmers care about these exact things
But there is an impression in not just the Rebol/Red community, but the C programming community, that C++ programmers are indifferent to this
Having drunk the C++ Kool Aid I say "we can match C performance but be type-safe and prettier". Unfortunately things like this do get in the middle and make you question.
The people who have 24 hours a day have some kind of screw loose. I've got a few screws missing but none of them are "be mean to kids trying to learn to program"
@pekr Well that was a little bit obvious. Although I do think that perl being inspired by line noise on a modem is fairly believable. One day Larry Wall looked at line noise translated into characters and said like the guy with mashed potatoes in Close Encounters of the Third Kind: "This... this means something..."
@Morwenn I got uncomfortably intimate with Git creating the historical archive for this bridge solver: github.com/dds-bridge/dds/network