@graph Well I think, that when you stand from a bird's eye view, you would imagine that the number 3 would figure in the real specification of the problem... you've wound up with jumbling the details of how with the what.
Ok, here's the code and I will give an explanation: ` chars: complement charset "" match?: false parse string [some [set char chars char some char (match?: true) | skip]] `
@rebolek you need to break that out. Don't put multi-line code in the same chat message as your text. Make it a separate one, and use the "fixed font" button that appears when you Shift-Enter or paste multiline text.
Multiline text won't run markup. No links, no bold, etc.
I can't say I like either of them. I'd probably parse the sorted string, or something.
I declare no winner, they're both terrible. It's not a problem meant for pattern matchers of this nature, it's just uniquely weird that you can do it briefly in RegEx.
That's like saying "my language has a primitive h which prints 'Hello World'. So if you just say h it prints 'Hello World'. How many characters in your language?"
And you go "um, we have to say print {Hello World}"
And they say "hahahaha! WE WIN!"
Well, won what, exactly?
The problem here @graph is that you created this not from a practical problem but from the point of view of (apparently) teaching RegEx. which means the examples will be biased to what's easy to do in RegEx. Do you have anything PRACTICAL that was motivated by something that didn't start with RegEx?
Hullo @Jina ! Our apologies for the 20 rep requirement and the gag so you can't talk. It's very easy to get rep and easier if you let us look at your profile and upvote you. :-) But read our FAQ
I can say parse "aaabb" [some "a" 2 "b"] and get back true, because some non-zero number of a's were followed by precisely two b's. And I get false with parse "aaabbb" [some "a" 2 "b"] because the parse position didn't reach the end of the input with that set of instructions.
@graph And I can, if I so desire, say a-or-b-rule: ["a" | "b"] and then go parse "abababccc" [some a-or-b-rule 3 "c"] and get back true, because some number of instances of the rule a-or-b-rule was matched followed by precisely 3 c's.
@graph I'm speaking in mechanical terms, you know it could just look at your IP address and show you a picture of a big monster or something but show everyone else an alcoholic white cartoon dog.
This is what learning programming and" the Matrix" (as metaphor) is about. But if you want to know what I look like, I am not a black R&B music manager. That is someone else. :-)
I know, they personalize, but have no reason to show me somethign different based on my preferences unless there's a lets say singer with your name and google knows I'm a big fan of him
@graph Previous organizer thought I'd be good for the job, it's been around for 6-7 years or whatever. Now I'm leaving so I have to pick my replacement(s), I've got ideas... it's a tough call.
@graph Well, make a meetup account I guess. It costs money to make a group, which is annoying and there are free alternatives, but in some sense it does keep the riffraff out. Sort of.
@graph But the last time I went to a F'in industry thing, it was the holiday party, and admission was like 3 canned goods or whatever and it was an open bar, so free drinks.
And after a few drinks I was like "okay, forget it" and when people asked me what I did I said I was from a company called "coupeduppp.com"
My pitch was that there are those websites which track how reliable the coupon codes are for discounts on websites, and how often they work...
But at coupeduppp, we help you sort out the ambiguity by rating those sites for accuracy.
@graph And the programmers, and everyone, because I get so tired of their BS. I'd made $800K by the time I was 25 and then went to the next levels and didn't care about money anymore. I want to see the world fixed, I'm out of the matrix, and this is one of the nice things about much of the Rebol community is we all feel a bit "woken up"
for that I would have to look up the exact specs anyway, and find the regex in some forum @DocKimbel but in general this is a good example where regexes get difficult, true
@graph wrt your questions with PARSE, many examples given which make regExp seem better are actually useless "academic" patterns. in the real life, I currently make a living off of PARSE 50% of the time and I can say that I'd NEVER want to have to maintain a 100MB regExp rule. I actually have such a PARSE rule and it can extract stuctured grammar text at a rate of 20000 words a second on a 500% laptop, using a single thread. :-)
I tell you the names of people given in any text, create automatic resumes, extract the list of all concepts (at multiple levels) and even automatically categorize a text, based solely on its content, with no reference taxonomy :-)
@graph I think it's a really fine line to get your head around, because of the stage Rebol is at, where it's just weirdly hyper-intelligent and mature, but hasn't been bound up to the practical needs of what people are doing every day. It's not far from being bound thusly. It's just that the people working on it have been so lost in the ether that they haven't come down to Earth very often.
funny, I've been living off of REBOL for several years, I only do real commercial work with it... so I can say that it is a great "real world" practical language.
You are doing nothing wrong; unfortunately you are tripped up by a known bug in R3. Basically, the also incorrectly "eats up" the return. Fortunately, we have a fix for this forthcoming. (If you want to help with testing, have a look at my fix-unwind-passing I hope we'll have this fix done and in...
Greetings @user2097452 -- as I always must, I speak for the room when I apologize for the little "20 points to chat" barrier. Not our policy, blame StackOverflow! Anyway, here's our FAQ... do some questions or answers and "help us help you"
I'm sort of a rare Reboler in this regard... its actually my daily bread and butter. Lately, I've been interfacing managed code using R2 with C++/CLI. its extremely stable.
@Jina You're in! Except... there's a delay usually, caching and such... the chat servers are a different subdomain. :-/ You will also find that setting your avatar has a delay. Again, see the FAQ
@graph Well, I think it's a fine question, and I think they're abusing us by not letting us bring people into the fold. I bountied a bunch of points on the meta question of allowing room owners to whitelist sub 20 rep users.
And they didn't... do... anything... despite the fifty-some-odd upvotes on that question asked by someone else that I bountied... because...
They've got this little idea that if someone won't push the "ask question" or "answer question" button and play ball they don't want to let them chat. I see what they're getting at.
Was following earlier conversation on RegEx vs PARSE. Wanted to say that PARSE is unlikely ever to win a brevity competition. Not sure if speed is easily measurable between (say) Perl RegExs and REBOL PARSEs.
@Ladislav Use double asterisks **foo** for code as in foo, you can edit. (for two minutes, up arrow for most recent message, hover and use triangle at left for earlier)
Also skimmed some of the parse vs. regex discussion, it's tricky to compare them—regex is very succinct in what it does, but can get cryptic awful quickly. It's certainly hard to build anything of structure in and of itself—it'd need a lot of help.
@Jina there is no point in being brief when what you're looking at is so obscure it can't even be understood two hours after its been written. I've done a fair share of regExp in python (cause I had too) and it was painfully not fun. and It was just menial stupid stuff like matching file patterns. I woudn't dare do real text analysis using regExp... I think I'd commit suicide.
@pekr "Technology is a word that means 'magic'. It's basically anything really cool that you don't understand how it works, and when it breaks, you have to buy a new one..."
In Changes to high resolution time in R3, Carl Sassenrath described the improved (over Rebol 2) timer in Rebol 3. You can obtain a timestamp through stats/timer that has a resolution of a few microseconds. To measure a time delta, use delta-time as shown below, but see the blog post about accurac...
@Jina I'd agree here: I wrote a parse rule for matching URLs in text based on a regex script. For brevity, they don't compare, but note how awful Regex looks when you try to break it down to explain it.
I very much like coming back to my English keyboard layouts whenever I had to work in non-customisable settings with German ones (AltGr necessary for []). Coding so much is actually one of the reasons I prefer the US layout :)
@earl I feel like the Red tests could work for lots of Rebol too.
(not that they have parse tests, I'm just saying, why don't we... unify the test frameworks?)
@BrianH is all about "these tests were handcrafted" and that's nice and whatever, but I vote for more fuzz, because fuzz catches things you didn't know you didn't know.
@earl Well I'm not getting on your case, or anything, but I am saying fuzz testing needs to be part of the equation and I think Rebol and Red should have a common test structure. I don't think that means I have a cabbage for a head and need to get looked at all sideways.
@HostileFork also, how would your "sitting with us" help preventing such a situation to occur? I can tell you what would help: if you wrote some tests that are missing (for example traversing the CureCode database) or using any other strategy
@Ladislav Well I've got a bit of a straw man argument because I'm proposing using Red's framework and strategy, but they don't even have parse, so... yeah... ummm I'm trying to make a point in the moment about something that doesn't even exist, kind of untenable.
But my gist is saying we pull the whole thing together, in a hybrid, and this thing that does not currently exist would have stopped that kind of problem.
If you accept that this thing that does not exist should exist.
@HostileFork "proposing using Red's framework" - can you summarize the reasons why do you find it so much better to require us to throw away the framework design actually outlined by Carl?
But rebol-test's format is pretty easy to generate. Someone could certainly try to hack up Peter's/Red's Quick-Test to, instead of running the tests, emit a rebol-test compatible test suite.
@Ladislav I don't know if you've followed the gruelling details of the things like the hashing symbol name bug, or the tag equality comparison, or whatever that I can only decipher through hexdumps and stupid amounts of time. It's no wonder I prefer to drink and chat, because that stuff SUCKS.
And I actually have fun ideas for what to do with Rebol.
I'm refusing to let myself do it.
Because I know there is no one else who's going to do what I'm doing.