At one point, explaining Rebol was that it was kind of a "new assembly" and so the more important goal was consistency and fitting various factors together vs. the idea of making the language all that ergonomically usable for the average programmer... because "dialects"
Which makes us ask if that argument spirals outward to the point where PARSE missing a characteristic that can say parse is such a core dialect that it can miss the mark on basic usability issues for common tasks because "dialects"
So when I call out something like asking why one cannot literately extract "abc$$def" and get the "abc" and "def" out, then one can either consider that a failure needing attention or just that you are using an imperative machine with a certain shape and the tool either does or does not fit that shape.
Hello @TristanDube ... Rebol and Red had a conference in Montreal of all places. :-)
My statements above should not be taken out of context. Rebol and Red can certainly get "abc" and "def" out of "abc$$def" :-P
I am just talking about syntax design
And saying it should require N fewer characters in the domain specific language for extracting information from series data (strings, blocks, etc) than it currently does.
@RebolBot
parse "In [Rebol] and [Red] the Parse dialect is how we extract data, not RegEx" [
some [
thru "["
copy name to "]"
(print name)
]
]
print "You kind of have to know what we're working on to get it."
@kealist That did cross my mind, I thought about REMATCH
But I don't really see it adding to clarity of what is happening
COPY VAR TO REMATCH "$$" => COPY VAR TO "$$" "$$"
It's less comprehensible
It's really too bad because COPY VAR UNTIL "$$" seemed like a nice way of saying it, and it reads well as a literal, but it just doesn't work as COPY VAR UNTIL RULE.
A supernova is a stellar explosion that briefly outshines an entire galaxy, radiating as much energy as the Sun is expected to emit over its entire life span, before fading from view over several weeks or months. The extremely luminous burst of radiation expels much or all of a star's material at a velocity of up to 30,000 km/s (10% of the speed of light), driving a shock wave into the surrounding interstellar medium. This shock wave sweeps up an expanding shell of gas and dust called a supernova remnant. A great proportion of primary cosmic rays comes from supernovae.
Supernovae are more energetic...
Funny, I knew a guy in LA who was really earnestly trying to come up with a business for running light through buildings via mirrors...effectively so you could be on the first floor of a tall building and have a skylight channeled through conduit from the outside