@earl If Red is going to be drawing out the parse rules and trying to treat code as two-dimensional graph paper, then they definitely need to move to spaces instead of tabs.
Some C++ application compiled and run seamlessly in OS X Snow Leopard, but I changed recently to OS X Lion, and here, although there is no compilation error, when I try to run it I get the error "Illegal instruction: 4", I have no clue, what could be the reason?
PS:
These are the linking flags...
Guess we should look at what kind of changes that makes to file size or performance. If it's enough of a difference then offering binaries for individual versions may make sense.
i just looked into its source and i dont completely understand why is it doing string parsing instead of block parsing. any idea?
i can see that the test suite is not loadable, but doesnt understand the location where it fails: >> load %core-tests.r ** Syntax error: invalid constructor: [function! [] []] ** Where: to case load ** Near: to block! data
reb4.me/x/forklogo-long.png this IMHO. After seeing this, i would understand where the [o] comes from. Can you emphasize the o somehow? Bigger, or different grayscale? parens and o blacker?
@onetom I have Corel Painter and Adobe CS6. Though really, I still work quickest in an old program called Real Draw. Most similar to Fireworks. Does some things better, does many things worse, but I'm just fast with it.
im getting such emails every few months from him too...
btw, i tried to draw a rebol logo with touchpad in the above mentioned tool. here is the result: dl.dropbox.com/u/586471/Pictures/… just for the lolz ;)
@onetom Well, it's recognizable! :-) That style is totally passable for a webcomic...it could be funny to have a comic strip with icons of all the languages making jokes at each other. And so far, I think the icon is distinctive, meaningful, and one of the best I've seen, I don't know of any language using anything similar.
Lua's is interesting, they did create a motif that can be applied elsewhere
I see. So with R3, now, the same thing is happening that happened when people tried to use old JavaScript written for the web with Node.JS, in terms of defaulting everything to global to having to be explicitly exported.
Depends on how you load the script. If you use the newfangled and undocumented module system along with IMPORT, then yes, each script (module) has its own namespace and nothing is exported from that namespace and imported into the caller's namespace unless it is marked as "to be exported".
When you use REDUCE, PAREN! groups are used for precedence on items that can be run through the DO dialect:
>> reduce ["Hello" (3 + 4) * 5]
== ["Hello" 35]
While in the COMPOSE dialect, PAREN! is used to call out which parts of the block you want to evaluate with the DO dialect, leaving ...
More institutional knowledge. I had a bug where I was using parens in a parse rule that was being reduced, and I was like "wait, why is it hitting that on the first parse... that rule shouldn't be firing..."
Then I thought: "wait, what do I do here? I'd need to make a dummy function that took a block and returned a paren..." (Oh. Wait. That exists.)
Hello @Patryk, welcome to the Rebol room. An odd language followed by odd people. :-) Recently it became open source after 15 years of relative obscurity. So we're working on things like logos and build farms for it. Not to mention trying to get longstanding pet-peeves fixed in the code...
Therein lies the smoking gun, I think: internally if you are parsing along in a binary and try to match against a character, it will nab the next byte...convert it into a character...and use the find test. But the find only looks at the first byte.
@earl So I wrote a little test that only sets one byte as being in a bitset, and then loops through to find any discrepancies between what FIND and PARSE against that bitset produce. Results here
It's clearly equating upper/lowercase, even though it's a binary parse. Telling it to do PARSE/CASE doesn't make it any better. Not sure what the equivalences in the high-bit set range are for, those are weirder
@HostileFork Seems like a glaring bug. I'm have a strong recollection that there are quite a few other bugs in bitsets (and charsets) at the moment, but I don't remember what they were.
Making it run on R3 is not...the most gratifying way to be introduced to the codebase. But it certainly has me reading a lot of it (kind of like making Rebol compile in C++ w/const-correct literals, etc)
Btw, you'll may see the full fun of Rebolish madness soon. I'd give it 1:1 odds that the parse for bitsets behaviour you discovered is actually "by design".
Well, if the standard answer for not having casing in maps is "use a binary" then I'd say that when you're parsing a BINARY! and not a CHAR! then I don't see how that would be true. It looks like a plain old typo (well, brain-o)
Well, it could well be that charsets are case-sensitive in parse by default (even without /case), and that someone then decided that /case just toggles this behaviour, for charsets.