There are now two forms of infix treatment of left arguments (well, actually, generic to any argument, but most notable on the left of infix)
Well, four forms really, but two evaluative forms
So it either completes the left expression before running, or doesn't
Because there is now the option to complete vs not, you can get (if condition [block]) else [other-thing], e.g. your only option is not if condition ([block] else [other-thing])
The gooey and bizarre game of how a: 10 | foo: function [a] [print a] | foo 20 works mechanically, under the hood, is Rebol's wild illusion. It looks so obvious and simple, like any scripting language, yet mechanically the underpinnings are nothing like the languages you think it is. You're using something that is capable of looking conventional, but you can throw twists and customizations into it no one would expect.
Since you don't hold it all in your head, a CASE statement is case [some expression [some code] some other expression [some code]], basically an N-ary IF statement
So the trick is, only return void (a non-reifiable value, can't be put in a block) if no match. If you match and the expression returns void, reify it to the reified void (that you can put in a block)
Hence, failure is void
So in this system THEN is simply () then 10 => void, 20 then 10 => 10
() else 10 => 10, 20 else 10 => 20
So look at the case, then, else chain
And how it fixed the intention, done poorly, without it.
Isn't it crazy to try and push all these features to userspace in a turing machine? :-)
Startup code for the host should be in the startup function, not at "global scope" (yeah, wrong words, but you know what I mean) before the startup function has run.
I am glad, that this can be seen, fairly what I think of as "obviously" today.
Speaking of course relatively, because R3-Alpha wasn't doing anything like this
@HostileFork Thanks. However i need this LOAD to just update the REPL (ie. cat out of the bag now, my plan is for this to allow user customisation of the repl). Can that be done?
@GeekyI I appreciate you being a crossover curious cat, who doesn't believe it's good for Rebol and Red to fight. But challenge DocKimbel, and you will see. I guess everyone has to learn the hard way.
He only wants yes men.
And when he doesn't get his way, he sues on trademarks he doesn't own. I admire several aspects of his work, I used to be a supporter, and I still admire aspects. But this guy should not be getting a free pass.
The only way I will let up on Red is a formal truce from DocKimbel.
He has to say something, roughly approximating: "I think it's great you're doing what you're doing, we don't see eye to eye, it seems the best way for us to move forward is to develop with our different points of view. I will not ban anyone for talking about ideas which came from your work, and you won't do the same either regarding my designs. We all win when the best ideas get a chance to have their day in the sun and see if they work."
If he can't say that, I might not be able to sleep at night with people going "oh, great work Red team!" because, I feel if he can't say something like that it's not great work and it's not a team.
If no one can get DocKimbel to say something approximating the above, that is a warning sign
@HostileFork Sorry, I am new to thiis chat system. Yes, you cannot because the site is not up these days. Had some issues with the hosting provider which are not getting resolved. What used to be be on dancingbison.com is now on vasudevram.github.io . Not decided yet whether to continue trying to resolve hosting issues and get domain and site working again, or get a new one. Hence this temp site.
@HostileFork Where did you see my site URL ? on my SO profile? I thought I hand changed it in most places where I have a presence - to the new one. Will check.
@VasudevRam We used to be more evangelistic about the language(s) here, lately it's kind of an insiders group, but if you'd like to learn a little about why we do what we do, we can talk about it.
Sure. I am actually interested in REBOL and Red, that's why I came here just now. Came from a few threads about Red that I saw on HN recently - the new one about Red 6.2. I had played around with REBOL years ago when it was somewhat new. But did not use it a lot, for whatever reason. Now I feel that I should have (not because of Red per se, but because of the good features of both of them. Also some because of Red, because now it has a compiler and the goals are to be more cross-platform etc.
@VasudevRam We're having a little Rebol/Red fight, but not of any concern to anyone--the languages themselves have no personality, just the developers. You shouldn't let it influence you.
@VasudevRam For me, the question of "why" we would think of development along these lines, is a very artistic question. My biases as an engineer are very much for formal systems, so you'd think my vision of 10, 20, 1000 years in the future would be functional programming, equations, perfection...
But what keeps me engaged is a sort of "game", which if you understand what's happening, you are getting your hands dirty with a pliable medium
@VasudevRam In any case, I don't want to bias you one way or another, if you have more to say about why you'd be interested in Rebol or Red I might be able to help more. I actually think the best place to start as a new user is talking to Red people, because it's a good place for newbies. We aren't as newbie friendly here, too busy :-)
@HostileFork Sure, I can say that. I'm interested in Rebol and Red for a few reasons:
1. I am a programming language fan - as a user, that is. I don't have skills in designing or implementing languages). I periodically check out and try some new languages a bit - new meaning new to me, not only new in time. In the past I've sometimes checked out older languages too, that I was not familiar with, e.g. Icon and Forth.
(contd.) Also new ones now and then, like Pike and ElastiC and some others I may not remember right now. Got into Ruby when it was fairly new (outside Japan), is another example, and then did some commercial work with it and Rails for a while. So that is actually another reason too - to explore whether I can do some projects in some new language - for which there is demand.
2. I like lightweight languages, tools, etc. And know that both REBOL and Red are light.
3. Like and have used both interpreted (BASIC, Ruby, Python) and compiled (Java, C, Pascal) languages. Been working on interpreted languages most, for some years, and feeling like getting back to compiled ones. Saw that Red can be compiled. That's another reason. In this context (compiled languages) I tried out D and FreePascal too (a little), recently.
@VasudevRam Well, you will see in what I am doing (let us call that Ren-C, for lack of a better name, derived from open source Rebol3) a very big difference in philosophy and implementation from Red.
I am an engineer, I believe in rigor, I use assert statements in my code.
@VasudevRam Rebol2 is the last more or less stable Rebol. When you ask "why a Rebol3", e.g. what didn't Rebol2 do that necessitated a new design, it is because a lot of questions came up...and Rebol3 was a more community engaged project
@HostileFork If you thought I was implying anything, I was not. I just mentioned that I saw that page - via HN - via someone's comment there, nothing more. Anyway, interesting that you believe in rigor and use asserts. I like to use asserts too and once used them pretty heavily in a product I worked on.
@VasudevRam Well, I like type safety, bounds checking, functional programming, anything we can use to help make up for being silly animals with keyboards.
I know I'm a moron, and that is why I'm smart. :-)
@HostileFork Ha ha, good points. I tend to think similarly - except not much knowledge of FP, though interested in it too. I like your last sentence :)
@HostileFork While we are speaking of asserts, do you have an opinion on this:
@VasudevRam Well if you're looking into new languages, do look at Haskell, I know its flaws to the point that I can tell you it might be a bit of a dead end... just a different dead end... but it's worth the time. You will come to like Hoogle...
@HostileFork - whether it is good to keep asserts enabled in production / deployed code (like to customers)? I used to think that it should be kept in there too, so that when an assert triggers (in the real use env, that is prod) we can get that info from the customer - like what assert message triggered, which will help debug and fix the error. A team member on that product I mentioned didn't agree - said it is
@HostileFork ... better to keep the product running even in degraded mode, which an assert will prevent - because it will terminate the app.
To put it bluntly, if you know the inputs and outputs of something that is a function only of its inputs, it means if you're looking for a transformation you can often "google it" just based on the types...how many solutions of taking certain types in and putting other types out there can there be when they're pure functions of input? You don't even need to remember the name, just think what kinds of things are going in and out.
@VasudevRam Your question is known in the industry as "test what you ship". I designed this: hoist
@HostileFork I had tried Haskell some years ago but did not get it well then - maybe didn't try enough or had not so good docs to learn from. This was over 8 or more years ago.
@VasudevRam Every situation is different, but if you've not used something like callgrind, it's really easy to get started.
@rgchris I know I'm not supposed to comment, but I feel like if Red wants a truce, the magnanimity can't be all one sided. I'd like a declaration of good intent, which you'd think wouldn't be hard to get, and the fact that it is hard to get is why this is an issue.
I, strangely enough, can make a deal and promise good intent.
I'd like to see good things happen vs. bad things.
But... well... who is going to help? Gregg was not sincere.
@VasudevRam I'm really very much a fan of static analysis, I like the idea of using every tool you can to check anything you might miss. There are some nice modern tools, like clang-analyzer.llvm.org
It's not hard to use, just as valgrind's callgrind tool is not hard to use (generates graphs like the above)
When it comes to asserts, I think you should be pound-wise and not penny-foolish; which means, instrument your debug build.
@HostileFork Thanks, had heard of valgrind but not checked it out, so also did not know of callgrind. And didn't know about clang-analyzer. Will take a look at them. I too like to use tools to check what we may miss.
@VasudevRam Yes; I lived in Seattle, Walter Bright was there at the meetups. Opinion is, there was a time when, it looked like D might be relevant, because C++ was seeming to flounder a bit, in the standards process. But though it took a while, C++ ultimately got a huge injection from C++11 and hasn't lost momentum since.
Had C++ not had its renaissance like it did, D might have legs, but it doesn't because C++ knocked the ball out of the park, in a way.
It just took a really, really, really long time to hit the ball.
Bjarne said they were going to do sprints from then on, no more marathons in the standards process.
Didn't know you were talking to someone who's talked with Bjarne Stroustrup personally did you? :-P
I've met several "rock stars" in my time, I guess.
@HostileFork Unfortunately, I don't really have enough time to get involved in a new project at present - too much work going on and the remaining time I have, is already dedicated to a side project I'm working on. Sorry. Anyway, which project are you talking about? ren-c? or rebol3?
So, a recent controversy is, whether this gives anyone the right to claim that the sole remaining development effort of Rebol3 is "legitimate" and can be called " a rebol"
But the controversy is just crap because I like to insult the leader of Red.
Anyway, like some other people have said, if we programmers can't pull it together no wonder countries go around pointing missiles at each other and fighting for centuries.
In this case, pretty simple, work on your own language and leave us alone.
Apparently too much to ask.
Don't lie through your stupid teeth pretending you are the guardian of the trademark of a language that you yourself insisted shouldn't be tied to yours when we were talking about it because you thought it had the stink of failure.
So when it starts to have a few good, promising developments, you act terribly because your yes men have made you feel puffy and think you can get away with that.
In essence i have it working :) However its just the same as rebol.r (except it would be in users HOME direction). So means it runs everytime Rebol is run. What I'm really after (and what you would also like!) is it just to inject the changes into REPL only
@draegtun Trying to use less and less C, especially in things that are not performance-critical, and what is less performance-critical than a REPL? You spend 1000% of your time waiting for the user to do something. :-P
@draegtun It's very different, but I'm glad you're feeling curious to the point you think you can muck with it! Like you say, the C wasn't going to really get anyone involved.
Memory buffers, expanding, it was, uh, not going anywhere.
I want to push a lot more into userspace with the console, the history, etc.
Well, I'm trying to avoid the chaos that occurred when some well meaning person made wholesale changes to the rebol wiki that needed to be laboriously reverted
Took me years to learn the nuances of Rebol 2. Has taken a while to learn the nuances of Rebol 3. Ren-C is different still and is in (albeit well-documented) flux. Rebol 2 had a much larger community/ecosystem with more people willing to try code/scripts at the time I was learning. It'll take some dedication and determination to get to the same level of maturity.
@GrahamChiu I'd suggest pointing to help.rebol.info—I can either redirect or link to your github pages in the interim.
Yes. If we build the same pages as Carl, then we can point back to rebol.com still.
Which I'm doing at present for those pages where an equivalent still exists
so you'll see 'https://github.com/gchiu/reboldocs/blob/master/-plu-plu.MD` which does not show a link to rebol.com since 'http://www.rebol.com/r3/docs/functions/-plu-plu.html` is a 404
An idea I'd wrt Trello was to use lists to organise word categories—kind of like the Rebol 2 dictionary albeit it'd be limited to one category per word.
Not quite sure where you'd store that in the autogenerated system.