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6:06 PM
@giuliolunati Let me get a few things together and we can touch base on it. I don't want it to be an inconvenience for you to do development and be breaking things you're doing that would be easily fixed in a sweep with other things (forcing you to maintain a fork when you may not know the thrust of the changes as well as I). I guess it depends on the object timing.
I'm back working again now, so some things hopefully to happen.
 
 
3 hours later…
9:11 PM
@HostileFork I'm happy to ear that! Thank you for your attention and your time.
 
9:29 PM
So I've devised an interesting hybridization scheme for "frameless" natives.
There has been a historic micro-optimization complaint that a function which has a large number of refinements costs more, to the extent that you should worry when you add a lot of refinements, as even if they are not used you wind up with a sort of scanning cost.
Which sounded like nonsense to me when I heard it, but as I got interested in questions like "how fast could the evaluator be" I started to care, because I like these kinds of games and exercises, given my interest in SpaceChem and the like, speaking of which I should write Zachtronics if I can get this a little further to see if there'd be any interest in a Ren-C puzzle game.
So as I became interested in it I noticed that indeed it was true, there was a cost, which got me interested in ways of speeding it up, and my most recent idea of pursuing the need-for-speed was "framelessness", which led me to kill /only off of IF and EITHER and UNLESS because even though I thought they could be useful, I wasn't sure if they were "worth it" if they sabotaged a core performance hack because it was a refinement.
...but... turns out I don't think I had to. I think a hybridized frameless-and-framed native can be made that makes you pay for refinements only if you use at least one of them
 

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