7:11 AM
Decisions in this embeddable definition are trickier even than the ripple effects of making decisions in Rebol. Because where Rebol has a lot of tricks up its sleeve for adapting to changes in the guts by redefining things, a documented C API or C++ classes reflecting the evaluator itself do not have this luxury.
I am now satisfied with things being pinned down that were pretty large questions. Is there more than one type of FUNCTION!, and hence a need for a menagerie with concerns like ANY-FUNCTION!? Does Ren-Cpp need a ren::AnyFunction, ren::Closure, ren::Function? Is there such a thing as a ren::Unset and how does it work in the guts? There is no longer, there is just optional<ren::AnyValue>.
What I have called the "life support" for Rebol...the host kit, how it implements ports and the networking, those things I have kept around in order to still have a working system to try changes on. A lot of code I didn't like I reluctantly kept patching along because trying out ideas in a vacuum means you might think something works, but you don't see a good failure case. It can be subtle and thought provoking, as has building the hello.red under the old R3-Alpha port.
But the time is shortly coming, I think, to break Ren-C and Ren-C++ off from the life support so that it can actually thrive as a library. And this means basically starting from scratch on what one might call the "host kit"...so what is there goes away.
I will snapshot a branch at the current state with the <r3-legacy>
support, prior to specific binding changes. I'll call this pre-specific-binding. This would be an executable that people with old Rebol2 or R3-Alpha code could use to shore it up for basic portability questions, with the legacy switches tunable one at a time. It should run most R3-Alpha code that isn't explicitly impossibly illegal.
Then the specific-binding branch will continue for a short time. I will make changes of it based on consideration of what is convenient for me, and not worry very much about what impacts it might have on usage at Atronix. I will not deliberately sabotage their interests by gutting it, but there will be known ways in which features like the FFI will break and I will either not fix them or patch them in ways that could be considered inefficient/bad.
In other words I will still be trying to glean information from the "life support" but I will stop being worried about it if I can't keep it working and feel I've learned all there is to learn.
To give a sample of the kind of decision this codebase would have, it may well eliminate the current word symbol table in favor of using the code for string series to store words, getting garbage collected symbols/etc. Prior to a
"utf-8 everywhere" situation, this could mean typical ASCII words use two bytes per character for storage instead of one--for instance.
In general, I'd be switching over to full-on changes which may break things...turning COPY to COPY/DEEP by default, changing PRINT, etc. So big changes.
From my point of view, Ren Garden and taking Qt for granted would then become the new console, with the current console--as well as the rest of the hostkit--no longer part of the project. With the evaluator still using the discipline of being a C core but with host kit dead, a new bridge would be made to supply services to language constructs like PRINT or READ, where the canon implementation is done with Qt C++ code but could also be re-done with C by an interested party if they wanted.
Ren Garden would then have a very simple console mode where it didn't start the GUI. It would still require Qt DLLs to be loaded for the networking, interprocess, and other stuff.
So attn: to @rgchris and @Brett ... --^-- this would mean that the main track of development would be Ren Garden, and it's code like the Trello, S3, Etsy, altjson/altxml that I'd be moving toward for this to be supporting for starters.
To summarize: I've been blocked by knowing that the specific binding changes were code-disruptive to usage by Atronix, and have been reticent to push them to master as well as to keep pushing forward with what I knew. I will freeze the current branch prior to specific binding, but not deliberately make it the end of the line for Ren-C versions they may wish to integrate. It's just the end of the line for 'me being super careful about how life support is affected'
Focus will shift to Ren Garden as the principal Ren-C console. This means that those wishing to build a working console will need to have CMake and at least the Qt libs installed. For those who don't care about controlling their toolchain much, you should be able to use Qt Creator and have it be turnkey. The recent work on being able to use MSVC means that basically, if one is a software developer on windows you probably already have it...so it's less prescriptive than before.
A minimal C-based build may exist as a new console, but it would likely have a radically simplified I/O model...as the idea of the host kit would be built from scratch. Basically this would be putting Ren-C in some of the same situation that Red has been in with file I/O. Any new emerging I/O and port model for Ren-C would either be based on what Red did or something simpler.
re-summarizing: Ren-C and Ren-Cpp are shifting to a focus on the library form of the interpreter being the "product", with the main demo as Ren Garden where that Ren Garden needs to be able to do a list of "key apps": PARSE plus Json/HTML5, interacting with Trello, building hostilefork.com, running Rebmu, and debugging. Ren Garden may become a kind of "PARSE Studio", even. The current r3 and r3-legacy mode would be saved to help people wanting to migrate to this new world.
attn: to @giuliolunati ^-- this means the emscripten build would become much lighter and thinner, so probably a lot more useful.
attn: to @GrahamChiu ^-- this means that Ren Garden could, if it wanted to, go ahead and add some simple UI features based on Qt. I'm not interested in doing something like cloning Red's GUI right now, until it has a formal finished definition...and even then I cringe at it doing things like using the word RETURN for doing line breaks in controls (the kind of nonsense that BAR! would help with)
But if you wanted obj: simple-dialog [name: string! 100 | age: integer! 18 99 | favorite: word! [rebol r3-alpha ren red]] it would be easy to make pickers and layouts for something like that, which would look nice and run well on Windows, Linux, and OS/X.