1:04 PM
Ren/C++ patches to work with Ren/C are now in with tests passing, still have to figure out what's making Ren Garden unhappy.
And it seems HTTPS is broken in some way that the Atronix build is not broken, so with Ren/C++ changes in I will now make figuring out why that's happening the first order of business.
I wonder how much Rebol would be hurt if there were no lit-words or lit-paths, and you had to use quote like for everything else... then apostrophe were repurposed for something more interesting.
Just as a thought. Because while quote x and 'x are different in the sense that one requires the evaluator and one does not (so you can use the latter one in dialects and get the literalness gloss within one token), it might be that when push comes to shove a more interesting usage for apostrophe exists that a dialect would appreciate more.
I have no idea, but it just occurs to me in the space of "well why isn't there a LIT-SET-WORD!", and it becomes this very selectively used thing that probably reads better a lot of the time as the full word "quote". Certainly easier to see.
scheme: either secure [quote https:] [quote http:]
domain: "hostilefork"
tld: quote .com
read (scheme)//[domain tld]
Is that truly worse ? In a different universe, would this be better?
scheme: either secure 'https: 'http:
domain: "hostilefork"
tld: '.com
read (scheme)//[domain tld]
Language-wise, whether something is quoted or not could be a property of anything when you put an apostrophe on it. So it would still be whatever type it was, but you could ask "but is it literal" as a second question. quoted? plus word? would mean what we think of today as a LIT-WORD!, but you could test for the two properties independently.
Then give that property to all types to do with in the dialect as you wish, including to ignore it.
'{string} could mean something different from {string}. Hard to see with '"asdf" so never mold it out that way, even on short strings...
Or perhaps disallow quoting on non-word non-any-block types.
Literal blocks could override the evaluation on things like IF so you don't need to use IF/ONLY. code: if condition '[print "Hello"]
COMPOSE could do a mutation step so that it would evaluate non-literal parens, but turn any literal parens it found into ordinary parens.
compose [(1 + 2) '(3 + 4)] => [3 (3 + 4)]
I guess literal? is probably better than quoted?, because it would be confusing to say x: quote thing and then have quoted? x come back false.
Backwards-compatibility could be mitigated a bit with an operation for lit-word? that would check both literal? and word?. Other backwards compatibility could actually benefit from the switch from type? to type-of... e.g. type? would give you the word LIT-WORD!.
It wouldn't be a datatype! any longer, so if you really relied on that you'd be out of luck.
Seems a shame not to offer it on all types as a marker. Just because Rebol wouldn't have any particular cleverness to apply to a "Literal Integer" doesn't mean someone else might not think of a meaning for that which is interesting.
It may be the case that this should take double-quote, and strings single-quote. When jostling between single and double quoted strings in languages that permitted either, I found that I liked the look of the code better when single quotes were used. It seemed less 'noisy' somehow
code: if condition "[print 'Hello']
Eh. Double quotes also look too much like two single quotes in a row.
I'm feeling a little bit moved to seriousness by noting the compose trick above. That would be... very helpful. Composing parse rules is rather bad right now.
@MarkI feel free to throw in opinions from the lexer side