@giuliolunati That is actually intended behavior. Remember: return is not a keyword. It is not provided by MAKE FUNCTION!, rather it is provided by FUNC. So it doesn't exist until the function starts running.
ADAPT runs before the RETURN: MAKE FUNCTION!. (Technically this is not happening; but you are given the illusion it is; what happens is cheaper.)
If you want ADAPT to not run the code you're going to have to use EXIT.
Let's mod.reb:
REBOL[Type: module Name: mod]
export: add 1 2
Let's test.reb:
import 'mod
Running r3 test.reb,
got:
** Script error: add has no value
** Where: do module catch case load-module apply for-each case import do either either either --anonymous--
** Near: ...
@HostileFork funny thing, the same r3-make mold .5 to -N.aN on one machine, and to "2.1e-311" (truncated value) on my other machine. Currently I'm recompiling.
@ingo If you only have one instance of the problem and can tweak the source to be 1 divided by 2, or something, whatever it takes to get it to work...we can change it.
@ingo Let me know if there's anything specific I can do to help...debugging the HTTPS code is not the most fun thing in the world, but much of it is in user-space...
SORT is a special case as it never fails no matter how incompatible the data types are. Though it may fail to sort them "properly" - for fun, try this in various Rebol versions - you'll get a different, though consistent, result in each:
@Thackeray Hey there, noticed you doing some Q&A. Welcome.
I don't know what the right answer w.r.t. sorting is, but, I don't really favor the idea of there being natives with behavior a user could not write. I might want something that behaves like sort but just a little bit different... and so if there's not enough specification to make something that behaves exactly like sort, that's not good.
That's from a commented out test. And it's one of those bad-idea looking things. Why not be able to make a PORT! that creates a limited window of a view into a FILE! or something, and then you can load from that PORT!.
SORT's behavior is undefined / implementation specific for incompatible datatypes. As soon as you use a SORT/COMPARE then you (if you have unconstained key fields) have to write considerable datatype coercion code to ensure incompatible comparisons do exactly what you want....That is mainly a good thing: A bare SORT is enough for most default cases. When you have a complex scenario involving SORT/COMPARE, you'd better do the data analysis rather than rely on non-portable defaults.
Hm. BrianH seemed to think that would be <h1> "test" </h1>...wonder if that was specific to an HTML-loading codec? <-- @rgchris
@Thackeray All things being equal, it seems best to avoid non-portable defaults or ill-defined things. So if there's a really good reason to not define a sort order between types, I'd think we need an essay for why that's better (comparing it to the idea that, for instance, every type user-defined or otherwise gets a UUID and that's used to resolve contention...)
The problem is, that if you don't provide an exposure of the comparison, someone just winds up writing my-lesser: func [a b] [:a = first sort reduce [:a :b]] :-/
My-lessor would at least be consistent for any specific version of Rebol. Not sure there is much call for a complex set of rules that would be portable between Rebol variants. That would not help us when data is exported in, say, JSON, to an non-Rebol system. Sort order in those cases is a task for the application designer, not the language creator.
@HostileFork I don't think that should be. I believe loading markup in that way should be explicit: load/type "<h1>test</h1>" 'markup which incidentally doesn't seem to work in either Rebolsource R3 or Ren-C.
What we need at the moment is a way to have modules behaving well enough that they can be used to build isolated contexts that operate under r3-legacy rules...so that the whole system doesn't have to be running under r3-legacy.
And that is a good test of the general feature which modules should be able to let people do.
But there's a lot of code, and the code comes from an era of not-particularly-generalized design. Plus a lot of code about checksums, embedding, and things that are not core to the binding. The actual binding is very little of it.
@HostileFork My bad, I think it automatically selects the 'markup decoder when it loads a file with %.html extension. I was confusing it with your string example in the previous message.
I find LOAD/MARKUP to be a cheap and cheerful tool for scraping HTML content. It would likely be better to have something written in PARSE, however we still don't have a way of doing codecs in Rebol code.