@earl It's not a charset, it's a bitset! I know they're the same, but that means they have to serve the common purpose. And that's not what the documentation says about /case in parse. You're trying to make me mad before anything's even gone wrong. :-P
Interesting. Pierre also complained about that recently, making me realise that Rebol's words are probably just too short so I hardly ever used completion for them. I liked to use it for files, though.
Exactly. Well, a nice project in that direction would be to try and hook up libedit (a BSD-licensed readline clone/replacement). Should give us much better line (and history) editing in general, as well as fully customisable completion.
I think you've got it right by going straight for process; tests, CI. The most important thing to fix is the process/presentation/standards/documentation so that more people can be unblocked in attacking things and so that more bugs don't get introduced than taken out.
So I was trying the excerpted unicode segment in R2 and I couldn't figure out why it wasn't working. Ran my test and I got a different pattern...anomalies at most of #{01} - #{20}, #{7F} and #{A0}...
I haven't really used R2 so I haven't really internalized PARSE/ALL, but even if your input is binary it will ignore certain bytes unless you say /ALL.
I remember hating /ALL from a few years ago, but only because people were talking about not having it in R3. And I said "yes, that sounds bad, nix that."
@earl Yup. I'm going to reward myself with another for figuring out the PARSE/ALL thing. The more I drink, my criteria for deserving a reward drop. "Didn't spill beer on the keyboard? You deserve another beer!" :-)
I do not have at this moment a very clear estimate of how long it will take me to get Red running on some future-integrated build of R3 (there's going to be merges at some point, right?). But I do feel that there are a few distinct advantages if it did.
First of all, in terms of active Rebol codebases that stress the system, it's one of few.
Well, I'll wait until I have it working and not crashing the r2 version. Right now the R3 one errors out, the r2 one runs to completion but generates a messed-up output that won't run.
I'm starting with getting the R3 to run to completion and then working backward from there.
Well, I may get it to a point and say "um, there's this one part that isn't working" but at the moment it is kind of my introduction to the whole thing, so I can talk about what's going on reasonably.
A bit of a ways to go with that, and I'd like to see the fixes that are needed in...so far there's clear map and the casing on parse. We also know that case-sensitivity in maps has to have some kind of story; I favor a second index of some kind on the first use of /case. That should be in line with the Rebol philosophy. Probably other things.
(Just to be clear: I would vastly prefer the more consistent behaviour achieved by your current fix.)
In R2 you could write charset [#"a" - #"z"] and have it only match a-z even when doing case-insensitive parsing without /case. This was probably deemed to match user expectations more closely: if they are already spelling out the valid characters explicitly, why meddle?
In fact, I feel the sooner an "R3-Backward" is made, the better. If people have R2 or older R3 codebases and really don't feel like fixing function and funct then give them something to load to make R3 act like they expect.
If orthogonality favors letting go of to-integer and to-string and rather teaching people the more general to integer! and to string!, I feel like the decision should be open.
All options should be open now, we're getting the first chance to look at things from the inside and the time window may be short...but I don't feel like it's a very good prize to be told "you were given a spec from on high from an invisible codebase" then "now the codebase is public but the spec was laid out, go finish it"
I look at this current phase of build farms and bugfixing as the educational "well-it-would have-to-be-done-anyway" work, something to do while thinking is done, but it's not intended of a sign of me thinking "it's perfect how it is, just needs an exclamation point here and there..."
Well, if a bitset! can represent a collection of char!, and if one can ever test for membership in such a set in a case-insensitive way, then I don't see why PARSE without /CASE wouldn't make use of that.
The simple "solution" in any way is: don't mention this in the pull at all, hope that no one thinks too hard about it before it gets merged, and PARSE will be more consistent that way :)
You can write charset [#"A" #"b"] as charset "ab" by the way.
I think that Rebol's weird choice to default to case-insensitivity is certainly a bit of a thorn in the side of the typical programmer, who prefers canonization and only answers to case-sensitivity
But Rebol bucks a lot of trends, choosing spaces and a kind of language instinct a la X-bar theory to try and excuse the fact that we often are supposed to "just know" or "just learn" the arity of functions and parse it out in our heads.
i meant to say that we are speaking of a word equivalence specified by case. if you believe it, then why use uppercase and lowercase together when writing in chat? isn't a word most properly given a set form?
Rebol tries, in its way, to impedance match human writing to computer programs. With similar fluidity, ambiguity, and resulting madness. But that's--to me--part of what makes it interesting.
I don't think Rebol users have really "explored the space" yet. There's so much code that doesn't invent dialects...just using the core, uncommented...long tracts of code only one person could ever maintain.
I think that when dialects catch on (they never particularly did), then people will play with case more. [Send mail to (xxx)] might look better than [send mail to (xxx)]
Charles Simonyi (the inventor of Hungarian Notation) had Hungarian Notation as his Ph.D. thesis. The goal was that two programmers solving the same problem in two different rooms could write the exact same code, down to the naming of the variables.
His idea was that if they would both write the same code (under convention, if separate) then that was desirable, as they would be able to read and comprehend each other's code.
Of course, a lot of people missed the point, and made a lot of bad APIs...but...oh well.
@earl No problems with timeouts here. :-/ Sorry to hear, I will check in with you later. I did see that it uses a polling approach... there are some more modern ways
@HostileFork I don't think this conflicts at all with my point. I would well encourage such experimentation, but I think making the core language and all related to it case-insensitive (case-preserving, really) by default is the wrong approach to that.
@earl It should definitely be analyzed in a rigorous way, and if it makes a point that point should be laid out as a guiding philosophy that does not seem random or arbitrary.
It's kind of like with the desire to make "first" consistent with "pick series 1". Makes sense given current cultural norms. But I hate that the ground floor of a building is "1" and not "0". So if Rebol is truly revolutionary, it might push zeroth and pick series 0 for getting the item at the beginning. It all depends on where you start in terms of where you end up...
The first floor of a building would then be the level above the one you are standing on--ground level. "What's the first element of [a b c]?""Well, that would be b of course. It's the first element after the zeroth...which is a."
It's easy to convert a char to a binary:
>> c: #"^(52)"
== #"R"
>> type? c
== char!
>> b: to-binary c
== #{52}
But what if I want to go the other way?
>> c: to-char b
** Script Error: Invalid argument: #{52}
** Where: to-char
** Near: to char! :value
I'd like to co...
After much gnashing of teeth, the r2 variant of Red now builds the unicode Hello, World example correctly again. The r3 variant slogs along and gets an error before it gets to red/system, but I am more optimistic than I was yesterday.
Sigh. Okay, as a follow-on to last night... do you mean to tell me that Rebol 2 and Rebol 3 do indexing differently for values less than one?
Crimony.
I am just going to have to disagree. The zeroth element of [a b c] is a. The first element of [a b c] is b. As wacky as Rebol is, this would have been a drop in the bucket. Dijkstra explained why zero-based indexing is correct, it shouldn't even be a debate. This unnatural fear of zero...
I only see one instance of pc/-1 in Red, and first back pc is compatible. Still retraining to zeroth would be ideal, but I don't run the world. If I did then the circular constant would be 6.28...