@giuliolunati I should be settled in one place for a little bit now; have some Rebol and non-Rebol stuff to do. But now is a good time to start filing other blocking issues!
@MarkI I think I have hardened my heart and my stance on the matters such for why it's okay for blk: [] and first blk to come back with a void, while it's not okay for blk/1 to come back with a void, but it's okay for :blk/1 to come back with a void. There is a reasoning to it. And @johnk, I think the reasoning implies that TAKE [] should be an error, with you needing to do something like TAKE/OPT [] to get the void.
This is the difference. We know first blk isn't "live"; the presence or absence of a value won't affect a dispatch. But when you talk about blk/1, you may be talking about a dispatch and you need to know if it fails.
first blk is being piped to some destination or it's a no-op; it's kind of your business whether you got it to that destination and whether it worked out. But blk/1 may not be a no-op regardless of destination. So that's where I see a difference.
The first complete Red Enhancement Proposal has been submitted by Gregg Irwin. It is REP 0101 - For Loop. If you have any comments or suggestions relating to the proposal, please make them via the Red Mailing List/Group on in the Red Gitter Channel. Regards Peter
Hmmm. for [ [i: 1] [i <= 1000] [i: i + i] ] [print i]... I think Ren-C's BAR! offers a nicer look. for [i: 1 | i <= 1000 | i: i + 1] [print i] if you're going to go that way.
(not weighing in completely on the matter, just not caring much for the three blocks in a block dialecting on immediate impression...)
I hadn't really thought of "positional BAR!" but it's a legitimate dialecting application. People dialect SET-WORD! and TAG!, why not decide position matters. If you use BAR! for the common case it might make you have to play a little for separation if you want to do something weird... for [(i: 1) (j: 2) | (i <= 1000) (j <= 2000) | (i: i + 1) (j: j + 2)] [...] but you can also omit the parentheses and it would still work if you were using BAR! to separate.
@pekr BAR! is a real lexical datatype, yes. It does not interfere with the use of the symbol in things like a|b|c in that it really has to be | spaced. I don't know if that's a good idea or not, but there are many other cases of Rebol making this kind of distinction (think of /)
It cannot be defined in the "DO dialect" (pardon my loose language for that) as anything besides itself, just as a SET-WORD! cannot, or a GET-WORD! cannot, etc.
It acts as what I have labeled an "expression barrier" in the DO dialect, it cannot be taken as a literal parameter to anything. It's like hitting an end block or end paren.
Again, yes, it's a unique datatype. This actually in a minor way contributes to performance, I don't think that's so relevant.
You cannot override the meaning of | in "DO", just as you cannot override SET-WORD!
But in your own dialect, you can do whatever you wish. It's a datatype.
This is why it is called BAR! and not, say, BARRIER! for example.
I think it is a success story, generally, because I think Rebol needed this thing...and it was hard for me to give up the idea that it would be a "barrier" in parse, e.g. a 'comma' or visual separator, instead an "OR" rule.
But when I realized these concepts were not at odds it was a bit like realizing a SET-WORD! could be dialected, or a TAG! could be dialected.
So, I thought "ok, in PARSE, if you need to break up your rules, you use BLOCK! because that's the dialect, and BAR! means what it means there."
You have to use it a bit to like it. A few people have experience with it, but there aren't a whole lot of day-to-day Ren-C users. But I am more confident about it than other things.
@rgchris seems warmer to | than to _.
And I am more confident of the former as well, but I think it just might be a matter of time and perception for the latter.
_ has typographic problems, especially in URL bars where it's invisible (hence a usual preference for dash, also preferred in Rebol). It is dodgy in fonts and a bit weak in general, e.g. might disappear in the URL bar of your browser into the textedit box. Whereas you can do something like all [ a + b | c + d ] and it's solid.
I like the barred version of for better than the blocked one. But I have no need for for. It is an ugly thing and I would hate it when I finally can get a Rebol/Red job in the end that the code I have to work on is for filled ugly. And only to please the 'for addicted C and Java guys that will come in and clutter and go the way of complexity anyway. And either will be replaced by a if/then/else. So if the 'for implementation can wait until after Red 2.0 release I would not mind at all.
@iArnold You changed your icon, and the mouth is very small, it's uncanny. Maybe even more intimidating than the fork's eyebrows. :-) But the precedent in Lisp is for the loop dialect, as pointed out a while ago by @JacobGood1.
I think that FOR isn't a particularly good word in a language priding itself on words, when picking a dialect that is loop based. One does not want Lisp to seem more literate out of the box.
But Gregg has good ideas in general; it's good they are making a proposal process.
But Red is making mistakes left and right, e.g. (x: 1) (for-each x [4 5 6] [print x]) (print x) and saying for efficiency's sake that should print "4 5 6 6".
I propose x: 1 | for-each 'x [4 5 6] [print x] | print x to get 4 5 6 6.
Or maybe for-each :x but I kind of prefer the lit-word!
Ren-C has what's called specific binding to dodge the copy, and it's technically sophisticated, although it hasn't quite finessed FOR-EACH yet. But it's close.
I think that Rebol's dynamic is words in context; to accept you build small virtual worlds in each function or what-not, and that's the name of the game.
Not that I am super happy about parse/case when there's a CASE or set/any when there's an ANY as a big function, it gets confusing, yet at the same time I think the balance in these matters is part of the "game" of it.
Anyway, it's a mistake to emulate JavaScript's VAR semantics as a default. Step backwards for Rebol semantics.
An avoidable one: if you need efficiency just use lit-word! or set-word! to say so in the control variables.
But also, the efficiency can be finessed...sort of. I've got a variant of how recursions use identities that could theoretically be applied to FOR-EACH or other binding constructs as well.
It's not quite as turnkey and harmonious as recursion... but not as bad as today's copy-and-rebind
Funny for me to be arguing to keep history compatible, and such, but I don't see why this "optimized" mode where the enclosing values are overwritten can't be dialected.
@HostileFork Will a RenCBot someday make an appearance in this chat room? To compare and contrast against RebolBot's always timely responses? Yesterday, it would have been very useful.
@HostileFork FYI the ren-c bots are stable so far with no discernable memory leaks
@DaviddenHaring ^-- RebolBot itself ran on a Ren-C build as of October 2015, but it would be unsafe to have the bot run any arbitrary request itself. The requests are outsourced to http://tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl/ which covers things like stopping the request from deleting files or tying things up with infinite loops etc. That service is not likely to add support for a nightly Ren-C build or anything like it.
It wouldn't necessarily be that difficult to set up such a service in this day and age; I think sandboxing and killing rogue processes and such is more turnkey than it was years ago. But it's not my area of expertise.
There's a sort of implicit sandboxing you get from running the JavaScript build, which could be an option. @giuliolunati might have ideas about a service based on that.