Red by default, handles series the same way Rebol does, they are immutable. It will be possible to make them immutable using PROTECT, but I'm not sure yet to what extent it will be required by the concurrency handling framework. Currently, I plan to handle shared states in concurrency cases using Actors (as in Scala and Erlang).
Clojure is a purely functional language, no? So its concurrency model will greatly differ from Red.
That's why I was thinking that some of their ideas might be useful. The approach, when I saw Rich describe it in a video, it seemed quite interesting.
The collections are immutable, but mutability appears to exist by sharing parts of the collection that is being added to, or removed from, for example. You end up with a tree linking the various immutable parts. The link above goes over some of this.
So performance is decent and the memory requirements are lowered - obviously, since a collection doesn't need to be copied in whole.
I would like to ask that whomever is looking at the concurrency aspects of Rebol also consider this technique for working with data structures, but I'm not sure who the appropriate people are on the Rebol side. @earl, @HostileFork, @BrianH, no?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Can't sleep, arrgh, and the computer beeped. But yeah he's been here before. If you look at that example about "help" and "source" it's something I kind of forget to mention but is pretty important
@Adrian My advice is to leave concurrency to Red and focus Rebol on being the bootstrap/portability layer. We don't want to invest any more in C than we need to, Doc is right...let's stay focused, only so many dev cycles.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's Rebol 2, but you can still learn something from it.
I predict in 2 years or a little longer, Red will be the new "main" Rebol... I just ask for stability, design consensus, and common sense in the interim. We're all on the same team here.
And Rebol will still be useful even when it's not the "main Rebol" so to speak, it will have applications.
It will be able to insinuate itself onto and into different kinds of systems and its source understood by different kinds of people.
But most of us won't want to work on it anymore. :-)
All things being equal, why would a Rebol programmer want to work with a codebase where you write if (x == 10) { blah blah } when you can write if x = 10 [blah blah ] Nicer if you can LOAD the system-level code, isn't it? :-)
Although in that fake case you could "load" it, obviously not getting what you meant. :-)
Don't question my methods. Why, I remember when this room was just earl, Graham, me, and a cardboard box.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm biased but you might find my writing about Rebol to be grounding. I do little things like proving how many Dudeney numbers there are with it... note the parentheses being used as "training wheels", we don't do that once we learn to read and write.
Heh, that demo program in Nick's tutorial is sort of prior art for Rebmu. Rebmu works in Rebol 2, I could cut 40% off the character count :-P
Then people really wouldn't understand it. :-)
Has anyone tested to see if that "works" as a sales pitch? Just because it's short and incomprehensible and "does a lot of stuff" doesn't necessarily make it a good first look.
I read the page and I see a bunch of "REBOL (all caps) is great because..." and makes it sound pretty good, then there's gibberish and some old-school screenshots. We might think that's funny, but I don't think most people will understand what they're looking at.
I wish I could search and replace "REBOL" on the Internet with "Rebol". :-/
@graph Well, it's the hot new thing. That's really old. :-) But it got open-sourced and isn't proprietary anymore which is why we care all of a sudden.
shit right now I have something, and were I less focused on trying to make it nice, learn things I don't know, and instead just finish this, I would have a fun website out in no time.
@graph Well even if you don't want to be a nerd it's useful. It's got a rich parser, so you don't have to put URLs in strings (for instance)... you can just have a variable of type url and be like my-site: http://hostilefork.com It just works.
@graph I'm more of an evangelist, I write little things. I advocate its use currently for small tasks like what other people might use awk or sed or curl or whatever.
The people doing the big projects are those like @GrahamChiu
Or @DocKimbel with things like webservers and in fact a whole language which is a "competitor" (friendly competition) to Rebol.
@graph Those kinds of guys wore out on Rebol enthusiasm a long time ago, it made a splash and people used to be hyped in the day (probably before your time)... but was closed source and lots of empty promises... they've stopped paying attention. But that wasn't the fault of the people in this room, who are working on repairing the damage... :-)
@graph Trying! Lots of hacking on the source, trying to get some drive-by enthusiasm started... it'll happen. The thing is too good to be ignored for long now that the main blockade is ripped out. It's apache 2, you can use it however you want more or less...integrate it into products...
Question is are we talking one year, two years, three years? I say you'll be reading those hackernews articles about the latest Rebol craze in about... a year.
Sooner than that would be tough. Possible, but unlikely.
@pekr yea but inside the matrix there are fancy new js frameworks and I can make a web-based solution for the software my old employer has, need a quick prototype for that up and running.....must stay productive, must stay on target....
@graph I predicted server side JavaScript would win years ago, before node showed up, now it's looking more and more relevant every day.
But that's just for today. Rebol is the future. Well, Red. But hey, it's all evolution.
There's the medium and the message. I hate the Rebol chat system, I like StackOverflow. What it's written in isn't always the most important thing. But all things being equal, you want the implementation to be clean.
I want a site that works like StackOverflow, but better, but written in Rebol. In the meantime I'm not going to use something that's bad "just because it's written in Rebol"
ok so I got some dignity. got SQL-Server, Entity Framework into C#, Asp.net serving basic pages full of javascript. Over there, helping out with Angular.js to make it convenient. Man just some more practice and I could be super rpoductive with it
@graph We're working to try and make it possible for people to get paid to do Rebol. The Apache 2 instead of GPL license greased the wheels a little bit on that. But what's really great is how productive it can be, it's like a secret weapon when you need to do various data processing...like a swiss army knife you carry around with you.
Some folks are working paid on Rebol, just not a whole lot...most people are using it as part of what they do but really in this swiss-army knife sense.
I don't get paid, I just drink wine and chat and try and make the TENS OF THOUSANDS OF REGRESSION TESTS ON RED WORK FOR THE R3 PORT AAAARGH WHY ARE THERE SO MANY OF THEM!? :-) j/k, I love regression tests, just not when they are killing me.
so uh do you work on the actual language implementation?
that's kinda badass
yea I an imagine people working on jobs and getting their way with which tools they use and they say "boss I want to use §H$%H" and boss says "lol whatever you like"
@graph Well Red was always open source. I really only got involved in working on it once Rebol became open source too, so December. We're all badasses here :-) but the real badasses in terms of language implementation are @DocKimbel and @BrianH (in terms of steering and being involved in the Red/Rebol languages).
@graph I'm living off what's left of my savings, but I used to work for Microsoft. I worked on SQL Server, the product itself...as well as Microsoft Access, the product itself, as well as then doing compiler design for Microsoft Research.
Most recently I consulted for Evernote, I also worked with the people who did the interface design for the computer stuff in Minority Report and Iron Man.
@graph Right now I'm worrying about Rebol and Red and trying to deal with a very annoying and abstract health problem which is this weird constant "pressure" in my head. It's driving me nuts and interfering with my ability to work. I'm not sure what's wrong with me or how to fix it. So I might fling myself off a cliff to make it stop, I dunno. In the meantime, Rebol and Red are cool so I like to talk about it with people.
@graph That's a weird story, actually. I used to keep all those on LiveJournal, which maybe you've heard of. It's been bought and sold a couple times, and now I think some Russian company still owns it. Anyway, it began sucking and I realized I needed to scrape all my hundreds of dream log entries out of it so i could put them on a site that didn't put giant full screen overlay ads for Best Buy on my pages...
@graph So I had to write a scraper, it was one of my first Rebol projects of any size, and I created a "dialect" so in the "source code" I can say things like [weird-alien: (laughing) "You know you're asleep, right?"] and it gets built out to HTML
@graph Well, I look at it very much in a circumspect way. I have had cases where I have been in a convenience store and a song is playing on the speaker and I am really convinced I know what song it is, but then I find out my mind was just projecting onto some commonality of the beat and filling in the gaps.
But that doesn't mean radio stations don't transmit songs. It's about "intention". There's signal, there's noise. You have to learn to filter, this is existence and it's how it works.
Anyway, the website is actually a bunch of built-out templates for Django. They're made by a build process in Rebol. There's no database.
thing is, during most of human history, people didnt have much information to process. a lifetime for a newspaper-worth of data I think. So now the brain is maybe a bit overtaxed at times. Correlation suicides and too much troublesome thoughts...
But the thing you have to know about relational databases and situations like the tags is that you don't grow tables "wider"... the number of columns in any given table gets set. So you either fix how many tags you have, or you squish them into a string in one column, or you buy into the SQL metaphor and break it out so that there's a table listing tags by ID... a table listing images by ID... and a table of tuples that just rattle off image ID and tag pairs and you trust the Database.
It sounds "nutty" but that's what query optimization is for.
Still, it's not a good fit for most web things, the reason I don't like using SQL behind most web projects I do.
I am not into databases for quite some time, but I wonder, if tags/xml databases are still mostly a trick, how to get stuff into blob and pretend, it is pure new design :-)
@graph Oh, thanks. You mean the avatar? I think pekr was referring to the Rebol logo although lately I'm a bit more enthusiastic for the Red one, but partially because I didn't come up with it 3 years ago :-)
@graph He's making a joke, just saying he likes the flexibility of Rebol's list type...but like in any language, there's limits to what you would do with the built-in memory stuctures...you need a binding to MySQL or whatever... Rebol has it
I vote we don't make jokes over newbies heads without saying "j/k". :-)
The challenge with profiling in REBOL (R2 & R3) is three-fold. timing, looping & Memory use.
Timing:
on some OSes the default timing is not precise (like windows). this can be largely alleviated by creating bigger loops which basically scale the test to acceptable timing margins. You...
@graph You'd be surprised, hang around with us we might solve large parts of your problem for you just on a lark. :-) I posted a question about JSON in Rebol and had barely walked away from the computer when I got back and rgchris had written the code I needed
@graph Note also my answer to this, which totally surprised that guy. :-)
My program opens a wxFrame-based window and multiple modeless and parentless wxDialog-based windows. It all works beautifully, except that the wxDialog-based windows insist on always being on top of the wxFrame-based one.
I know about wxDIALOG_NO_PARENT, and I'm using it. The dialogs stay open w...
so you're in a science fiction setting, some aliens shoot string-torpedoes at you and you have to match those strings with regex (basic regex), or decipher an alien language with hints (to make use of lookaheads, lookbehinds)
my current project works in a similar way, but I'm simulating real business-school topics instead (you know, to be less nerdy and all)
And when people are fighting and flagging and warring it makes little blue icons and things and I'm supposed to decide if "your language is so gay" is something that should be deleted off the chat, or whatever, and they've gone all mental flagging each other for fun.
Except this isn't the usual nonsense, it's full on total nonsense
Like everyone is on crack or pixie sticks at the same time
If I get drunk and ramble and say weird things here, that's not so surprising because I do that, but if all of us were... that would be weird.
@graph I was told once (in a dream, yes) the following: "There is something you need to understand about showing people Future Things. You have to be careful. It's a lot like if you are dealing with someone who has never had a grape before. When you give them their first grape you must be 100% sure it's not a sour one...because if it is sour, then every time they're asked if they want a grape after that they will say no."