5:28 AM
Paths are still throwing a wrench into things. :-/ If you say quote + and + enfix quotes backwards, it's easy enough to say that quote wins. But foo: func [/quotey :q] [either quotey [:q] ["what about this guy?"]... foo/quotey +
The problem is the general case of GROUP! in path, where you can't tell if that's a function call or not without performing an evaluation.
What if you evaluate, find out it's not a function call after all, so you want to quote it? But it's too late--you can't just quote it because you ran code.
DocKimbel spoke ill of GROUP! in path as an afterthought which might should be eliminated, and looked for reasons to delegitimize them...including that too many spaces wound up in them e.g. foo/(this is too many spaces for a)/path I never found that argument all that compelling, but this is another in a long list of mechanical problems from having an "atomic" item that can't be predicted, but may have side effects before knowing what it would do.
One possibility would be to say that you have to do this another way. eval compose 'foo/(baz + bar)/mumble .... e.g. the paths are lexically legal, but must be composed before evaluation.
@Brett @rgchris ^-- How bad would it be if do [foo/(baz + bar)/mumble] was an error but do [eval compose 'foo/(baz + bar)/mumble] were permitted?