Note: change to 10 according practice experience. Some math function may produce different result on different arch. For example. On x86 platform, exp 123 -> 2.6195173187490456e53 On x86_64 platform, exp 123 -> 2.61951731874905e53
[Bug] If you write the following: foo: function [a b] [ c: 10 d: 20 return [print "Hello" c print "Cruel" d print "World"] ] reduce foo 1 2 You'll not get any print output, and you instead get: *** Error: undefined context for word 'c Likely the story is that `print` has been resolved as a function with one argument, and it is attempting to fulfill that argument. Then `"Hello"…
[Wish] The result of a TAKE/PART is a series, and not a single value. However, the result of all TAKEs, regardless of input series, is a BLOCK!. So if you TAKE/PART from a PAREN! for instance, you get a block: >> take/part quote (1 2 3 4) 2 == [1 2] The type of the series you are taking from should be preserved, e.g. >> take/part quote (1 2 3 4) 2 == (1 2)
There are 421 instances of the rebol tag on SO questions. Beating it out by one, at 422, is the C function sscanf and the concept mutable. Tying at 421 are the likes of battery and fbconnect. Losing out by one at 420 are system-tray and android-cursor.
Another case for an error. If this were done, it would mean that the "safe" loadable objects would have a nice clean standard -AND- it would mean that all safe-loadable objects would produce the same thing if you loaded them "unsafely".
[Comment] Good catch! Note, TAKE does not coalesce all series into block!s: >> take/part "foobar" 2 == "fo" >> take/part #{cafebeef} 2 == #{CAFE} >> take/part <foobar> 2 == <fo> It definitely should preserve the actual type for ANY-BLOCK! instances as well: >> take/part quote (a b c) 2 == [a b] ;; Expected: (a b) >> take/part quote a/b/c 2 == [a b] ;; Expected: a/b >> take…
@earl since you said "definitely" I'll promote it to "bug" :-)
I was tinkering on a code golf problem and found that. But in the time I was tinkering with it, someone solved it with an equation vs. performing the algorithm.
I really like the 2-argument UNTIL and the /AFTER refinement available on both WHILE and UNTIL. Way more sensible than trying to balance the puzzle with WHILST.
(wh, ut, wha, uta in Rebmu.)
I'm torn over the single letter assignments. w makes sense for WHILE, i for IF, e for EITHER, but u could be either UNTIL or UNLESS.
The single character space is something you can overwrite quickly if you want; I just don't know what the best initial condition is. Are you more likely to need UNLESS or UNTIL given that IF and WHILE are available?
The best argument for UNLESS is the refinement of UO instead of ULO, which is probably going to be more useful than WA for WHILE/AFTER. So I guess I'll stick with u as UNLESS.
@ShixinZeng Off the record (or as off the record as one can be on a completely public chat room) have you thought, while working on tasks with Rebol, that another tool would be easier if it was what you were using and working on/with? Has any particular choice come to mind?
Atronix went VB6 => Delphi => Rebol2 => Rebol3
I am wondering if there is something you might suggest besides Rebol3, and if so, what the motivating factors would be. No one will beat you up for saying it. :-)
@HostileFork If I had the choice, I would have gone to Python, which is open source, has a better documentation, larger community and more feature complete. But the advantage of rebol, in our case, is that the builtin cross-platform GUI is better than Python's builtin GUI, TK, I think.
@ShixinZeng The consensus in Rebol3 is that QUIT means QUIT and there is no QUIT/NOW, but if you call a script and want to catch it quitting you use CATCH/QUIT
Another one is that on windows, we need to deploy our non-GUI applications as services, as REBOL doesn't support "callback" from a C function, the mechanism to manage the service is, I would say, ugly.
Patrick Stewart is wanting to fund Rebol3. We need a console with history and editing etc. Anyone have any idea of what work it would take, and what would a fair bounty be worth?
@ShixinZeng Well I empathize; I'm fortunate enough to consider the language from theory mostly. It definitely can be a hindrance in practice. But the malleability really can offer new ways of looking at things; if you try and write C or Python code in Rebol it will be terrible. To really reshape it to get your code down you "think different".
@ShixinZeng Well questions are answered in near-real-time :-)
If they are easy.
But if they are about "why does this port not wake up after sending an HTTP post" it's probably just "because it's broken and no one knows how it works and you have to ask the one guy who did that once"
Well you don't have to suffer in silence, you can write a complaint every time it happens to you. As a ticket or here in chat so someone writes the ticket for you.
Well, Python would fit you then, as an interpreted language kind of the one that the C/C++ crowd embraces due to valuing formalism over trying to be "cool" as I sense it
A lot of C++ programmers I know use Python as their "go to" scripting language
I've enjoyed the little bit of Haskell I've done although I find it very mathy and it is just a different way of thinking about it. I like how Rebol can feel sort of like English writing, using the same part of the brain as when I'm typing in this chat box.
It's a weird way to program but has a certain literacy in this medium that I think, when you start casting solutions into it, starts to "make sense" in a different way.
I have tinkered with things like it in the past, but it's a bigger library and more established community, and it's nearly mainstream now. Starting it feels a bit like being at the foot of a mountain of knowledge... I had a bit of a hard time motivating myself to really learn about the C++ evolutions, and got my head around most of that... so now I can troubleshoot fairly complicated C++ questions on SO.
(Although there are some serious addicts on here who have been doing it for way longer and are usually faster to answer a question if it's actually interesting.)
But at least, I can understand pretty much any answer on here, even if I can't answer myself at that rate.
Tackling Haskell is something where I'm very much a beginner, and it doesn't matter that I get the "foundations"...there's so much more to the programming than the foundations. You can understand the grammar but there's vocabulary, idioms, huge libraries and one vs. the other... it's a universe unto itself.
I like the design but I still have to say... I just don't like the programs.
It's an aesthetic thing. If we are to be using text to express computational intent (questionable idea) then some of the basic problems we might solve, expressed as Haskell, may be salient and well-formalized...but I just don't like to read the way they're written for some set of common data-in data-out tasks.
FP is quite enjoyable. The first language I really used was PLT Scheme and I think in my Programming Language course the only thing I remember was the FP article from Backus. I think that was one of the first articles I just hunkered down and tried to figure out
Well, practically speaking, there's a lot of delegation.
There's no cost model (as of yet), so you are trusting the system with a somewhat declarative specification of "this should happen" and having it figure out how...
And you can really muck up performance by writing your Haskell one way or another and it's just a sort of "you need to know not to do that" vs. having that exist at a formal level; they've formalized side effects but not performance
Anyway, I was an EE not a CS student. I took three 400 level CS courses and that was it; was exempted from prerequisites. Compilers, Databases, Operating Systems.
Hardness scale: Compilers > Operating Systems > Databases