Do some thought experiments with your source, but what this adds up to is that FORM replaces REJOIN for ANY-STRING! types, and in a much more coherent way
And think about the axes of both "new user surprise" and general safety.
The same FORMing engine is to be reusable and I'm thinking about a form-each which would let you loop over something and each thing you process you could return something that would contribute to the "gathering" form buffer.
e.g. str: form-each x ["blah" #instruction "blah"] [if issue? x [(do some processing) continue] x] ... where remembering that continue will pretend the loop exited with void, then imagine that means "don't add anything to the forming buffer"...
So FORM eats COMBINE here, and ties in as the PRINT engine, saving the masses from REJOIN and its weirdness and weird name, all at the low low cost of having to say where your spaces are (and putting expressions you want evaluated, that aren't simple refs or paths, in parentheses)
The one remaining "hmm" is whether or not it's worth it to have the nesting groups and transclusion... e.g. form/with [["a" "b"] ["c" "d"]] "+" => "ab+cd"...which is a feature of the current NewPrint and combine
Various features like /with [":" "*" "-"] for different delimiters at the levels, etc.
I just got increasingly tired of default spacing, it's not what you want...and when you don't default space you also get the advantage that you can do "Multi-line-strings" where the indent doesn't get in the way just by letting it merge the sequential strings.
unset?: does [
fail [
{UNSET? is reserved in Ren-C for future use}
| {(Will mean VOID? GET, like R3-Alpha VALUE?, only for WORDs/PATHs}
| {Use VOID? for a similar test, but be aware there is no UNSET! type}
| {If running in <r3-legacy> mode, old UNSET? meaning is available}
]
]
FAIL being FORM-powered, but intending to add other things like meanings for what a URL is supposed to mean by putting the link in the ERROR! object, for instance.
Anyway, one technical conclusion to all the above being I've definitely turned against /ONLY being the way of saying "don't automatically space". To me that has to mean "don't treat the block as a dialect if you are passed a block", and I think that removing the newline from that also is sensible if you think of the dialected block as the place where the notion of a line grouping came from in the first place
Ren-C makes it very easy to specialize functions, so sprint: specialize :print [with: true | delimiter: space] and now you have a spacing print, with proper help strings and everything. Boom.
@rgchris The other possibility is to still go with auto-spaced defaults and NewPrint's suggestion, hence if you didn't want spacing you could do a double block... print [["this" "stuff" "would" "not" "get "spaced"]] but print ["this" "stuff" "would"] It's on the table.
In the scheme of things, though, I think it makes less sense.