; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
** Syntax error: invalid "word-lit" -- "'"
** Where: to case load do either either either -apply-
** Near: (line 1) '/0/a/b
>>
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
** Syntax error: invalid "word-lit" -- "'"
** Where: to case load do either either either -apply-
** Near: (line 1) '/0/a/b
>>
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
** Syntax error: invalid "word-lit" -- "'"
** Where: to case load do either either either -apply-
** Near: (line 1) ['/0/a/b]
>>
@HostileFork Thanks for the support, I agree with your choice as well, but in my case it's just too hard to talk about the other bugs without fixing that first.
And after that, there will be part of the continuation integration as a test that ensures the source has no tabs in it.
@MarkI In the source, work with it how you need to...then just run a conversion before checkin.
In terms of the non-standards-ness... Rebol exceeds the string literal length with the generated Native_Specs. It's 41954 on my machine, while ANSI C only guarantees 509 bytes for string literals.
Seems to me that would be nice to print out ab and then cd.
@kealist I'm not sure what the timeline is exactly, nor if it will really be a pull request. Logistics are up in the air. I'm currently going ahead and getting Rebol to build under a C++ compiler to throw in a bit more lockdown with stronger type checks under #ifdef __cplusplus.
And making other changes that just need to happen. REBYTE is misguided as a signed char; it offers no benefit to second guess and a lot of hassles. char in C is signed, and of all the battles to be picking that's not one with any benefit. All it does is trip up the codebase so that if you try to get stronger type checking you wind up casting everywhere for no benefit.
Oh, oops, the above does work... if you use foreach instead of mistyping and getting forall! What did I say about those names?!
@MarkI While all strings should be legal, as in word forms, only some will have "natural" forms.
Not being able to make an empty tag "easily" is a little sad, if you're going to construct one. It would kind of suck if you couldn't make empty strings. And with @earl's proposed change of copying literals we really are looking at a situation where block: [] is a fine substitute for block: make block! 10 (or whatever other random number you have to pick to "work around" the literal-isn't-copied debacle")
Which to me, points to the desirability of <> as "empty tag". But that can be a long term goal, and it can just be an error for a while until people get cured of using it for not-equal
While consistency can be fine and good, if a TAG! was in every way like a string with no unique character at all, it might be less useful than it could be. It can be hard to tell. I think this wave of "auditing" over some of the interesting use cases can help make it all less random and the deviations in service of clear purpose.
@HostileFork While I would appreciate tools for easier ŧag! manipulation, I'm not convinced that tag! shouldn't be any-string!. I feel that it would limit its functionality.
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
Found these related words:
decloak native! Decodes a binary string scrambled previously ...
encloak native! Scrambles a binary string based on a key.
lib object! [end! unset! none! logic! integer! decimal! p...
Are you kidding? Triiiiing!! Wake up Carl! The giant is asleep and there is no telling when he will awake again. So community, this is YOUR wake-up call; time to wake up and take over control!!!
@rebolek Tentative version 3.3 of AltJSON—merges the reb4.me version and Scripts version. Assumes a block containing some [tag! any-type!] or some [set-word! any-type!] is an object. Only creates map! from JSON object.
@iArnold I've mentioned my plan. But it involves doing stuff I didn't want to do, and needs to be handled tactically. I want to build on and integrate with the "success" of RenCpp to tie together a total solution, and one that will hopefully be one that people can get behind.
Right now I'm re-working through the C++ build and the const-correctness, and that is particularly important to RenCpp to be able to build with a C++ compiler. Between being able to do that and use TCC, we should be pretty good...though it would be nice to declare another classic target to keep working.
If it's Amiga, then so be it. But it's not serving anyone to put handcuffs on based on the abstract belief of maintaining a build that doesn't actually work. Forget the question of whether anyone uses it or not--if it doesn't even WORK then you're not even having fun in a puzzle/thought-experiment way.
@rgchris I made simple custom converter for the entities, so that's not really problem for me :) But I'm going to add JSON support to Lest, so I need some tool that works (REN support would be nicer, but there's no REN loader/emitter in JS and I don't have time to write one).
@rebolek Actually, I think the bigger problem with that particular sample is that map! keys are not strict on case. The code points otherwise seem fine.
Another reason to stick with my custom parser for this particular case, as I generate parse rule block directly and don't have to deal with map! case problem.
I guess it's still best to go with MAP! for the R3 version of AltJSON despite this limitation, for common cases this isn't so much of a problem. In this case for converting reference data, it's a big fail.
@MarkI In the ever-evolving train of thought, I am finding myself not liking ^| as the newline escape, especially as I try to push | to expression-barrier status.
If anything, that might be a better replacement for tab, with ^- taking space.
At the end of the day, I'm still liking foo^-bar better than foo^_bar when you need a word with a space in it.
But that's negotiable. I'm finding ^| as newline isn't feeling as negotiable. I'd nearly go for `^\` sooner.
But backslash sure is a pain in MarkDown :-/
Anyway, the benefit of trying out new ideas is to look at them for a while and go "okay, no, that isn't so great". And I don't like ^| as newline.
In the world of punctuation, there are other options. ^. with a period being like "end of line". ^; as a more general to-be-continued.
The visual distinctness of ^/ made it a good choice except for the fact that it took newline in a space where slash had a "higher calling"
Anyway, just messing with boot code and so it's an interesting body of meta-programming source to study and look at for what is good and literate about it, and what is bad and clunky about it. I grapple with the parts that "might be pretty good showcases, except..."
@MarkI I'm "pleased enough" with it working as it does, by being an unset...but that's imperfect and reacts with quotes and such. But introducing an actual expression barrier as a new type is like swallowing the spider to catch the fly, now you have something that doesn't interact with anything that still is "a thing"
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-expect-arg.html
*** ERROR
** Script error: if does not allow unset! for its true-branch argument
** Where:
** Near: try load/all join %/users/try-REBOL/data/ system/script/args...
I'm pleased with it and also pleased with it taking alternative meanings in PARSE
I'm not pleased as much about incomplete quote expressions grabbing the word.
And I don't want to sell-out the pipe character to be some kind of new-UNSET!-ish literal type, because there's enough trouble with NONE! and UNSET! and knowing the difference or defining and explaining that
But the gimmicks like Graham's for double spacing expressions like if any [a? b c d e f g] [...] don't work for me
For more reasons than just "markdown and HTML collapse space", but that's another reason
I did manage to convince @BrianH that was bad. But it speaks to the larger question of sorting out the "real story" on UNSET! and NONE!, because COMPOSE is willing to gloss unsets
@MarkI Maybe. I'll have to get back to you on if it's ANY and ALL's responsibility or not.
There is some blind-men-and-the-elephant stuff going on and a missing understanding of how much a dialect is responsible for vs. leveraging the interpreter, and I guess some of the critique I'd offer is that dialects haven't been pushed on enough to be as cool as they should be.
In other news, I realized that although I delved into it slightly in the past, I've never actually come close to linking a C++-built Rebol
I guess I thought I was closer than I was just by virtue of being able to get through compilation.
I now have the first-ever, I think, Rebol that can be built and linked with both C and C++
@MarkI I simplified the decompression. Just weird stuff in there, like "oh, we can just #define a constant"... but "well, we CAN put any number in the header...but forget that, let's slipstream the size into the compressed data for some reason and then tease it out". Why not just...avoid all that?
@MarkI In the "is it just me?" department could you look at your reb-lib.h? How many functions are in there. Is it like... 3 functions (RL_Version, RL_Init, RL_Start), or do you have things like RL_Print_TOS and RL_Protect_GC in that header?
(generated file)
AFAICT there's a bug that is scraping only 3 functions out of a-lib.c
@MarkI Well, I'm discussing specifically the question of how well the sniffing of a-lib.c to make the RL_* header works. Perhaps it's just something I've done in throwing a space where it shouldn't be or whatever that explains why I only get 3 functions identified to make reb-lib.h
@rebolek Hm, it's for counting? Is that a frequent need?
Rebol as-implemented is quite a grab bag of "artistic literate paradigm shift in imperative-style-programming" with "this is a mess of archaic coding methodology, KILL IT WITH FIRE!" :-/