Reduce will also reset the name of the field which is also "contact-name".
So, this would be better
append/only saved-data-block reduce [ to-set-word contact-name get-face contact-name ]
If you aren't required to specifically use reduce, compose can be a better way of calling out the parts you want to be "left alone". Only things in parentheses will be evaluated, everything else untouched. So for instance:
append/only saved-data-block compose [contact-name: (get-face contact-n...
While the question originally asked why return/redo did not evaluate blocks, there were also formulations like: "is cool because you can do things like tail call optimization", "[can write] a wrapper for the return functionality", "it seems to be getting more and more useful the more we think abo...
Here there be dragons!
The reword function is a bit of an experiment to add shell-style string interpolation to Rebol in a way that works with the way we do things. Unlike a lot of Rebol's series functions, it really is optimized for working on just string types, and the design reflects that. Th...
remove-each can be fast as it is native
s: "1^/2^/3"
a: length? s
print a - length? remove-each v s [v = #"^/"]
; >> 2
or as a function
>> f: func [s] [print [(length? s) - (length? remove-each v s [v = #"^/"])]]
>> f "1^/2^/3"
== 2
@KK. It's so much easier to talk about it when they ask "is it open source", you say "yes" then "what's the license" and you say "Apache 2.0"...
You couldn't GIVE Rebol away before.
People would just laugh at you.
I think I might have to pretty much admit I was wrong by advocating the GPL. People seem to hate the GPL. There's a big anti-GPL movement right now, I didn't know until I started asking.
@KK. In India, do you think there is a perception that the GPL is important or is it considered a nuisance?
@KK. Hmm, interesting. I do not know if you have watched much of Richard Stallman's activism or talks in that vein, but this is one of my favorite recent talks from a famous writer that is very... important. The coming war on general computation. Well I think it is very important to hear what he is saying. He is less weird than Stallman... oh, well this will have to go in your queue then. :-)
@KK. Doc has new plans for Red's webserver...I'm not sure how many of the ideas he's keeping vs. throwing out...but he says it will be quite different.
@KK. To me this, is essay is a nice pure capture of Stallman's most basic insight: Why Software Should Be Free
"In the 1970s, there were articles on “computer addiction”: users were “onlining” and had hundred-dollar-a-week habits. It was generally understood that people frequently loved programming enough to break up their marriages. Today, it is generally understood that no one would program except for a high rate of pay. People have forgotten what they knew back then." :-)
Rebol is kind of like crack cocaine. Said Carl: "A friend of mine says it's like the movie 'Matrix' where you are offered either the red pill or the blue pill. Most programmers stick with the blue pill. The folks who take the REBOL red pill wake up and can never go back. I've had companies call me to complain that a few of their programmers started using REBOL and are now 'ruined' because they refuse to go back. REBOL is a highly disruptive technology." :-)
A little grandiose, but there's some truth in it.
I can still have some fun seeing things work in languages where the bindings are more mature, and it's honestly easier to get things done...but it's not really a fault of the Rebol language design...just its closed nature and ultra slow development timeline.
With some momentum and attention, I hope we can get the best of both worlds. But we have a LOT of catching up to do. So at least the handcuffs are off, it's a fair fight now.
@KK. Well AltME has people, the same ol' people it has had forever and ever. And I'm trying to get them to take interest in connecting, because it's really fun to share Rebol. But I think the future is going to be driven largely by new people like you and others...
Young programmers worldwide, India... China...
Jerry Tsai wrote a Rebol book, in Chinese, that sold (what was, to me) a shocking number of copies in China.
People in the US don't always use their heads, I think they are bigger suckers for advertising and gimmicks. This is just my impression. People in other countries seem to face "reality" more, and when they look at reality they will care more for what a language brings to the table than some marketing they heard...
(Well, I mean, no culture or country has a monopoly on being foolish...)
@HostileFork "KK" is just two letters combined, and your name is something you made yourself. There is a Hindi singer who goes by KK in India. I am sure there are KKs everywhere, be it celebrities or abbreviations.
@KK. I know, joking. :-) I didn't come up with the term, I just saw it was getting popular and bought the domain and drew a cartoon fork. The rest is... just what happened after that.
My website for my so-called "real name" is rather simple. :-) briandickens.com
I use "KK" in chat as an abreviation for "okay". Like "okie dokie" => kk
Hey, so here is a question for you. If I asked you the difference between when someone said "I have work to do" and "I have work work to do" would you assume typo or are you aware of a distinction in meaning?
@KK. Interesting. It actually means something in English, when intoned. When you say "I have work work to do"... you are saying not just something you have to do, but something that you get paid for.
Like REAL work. you know. work work...
Not just fixing the gutters, which is a challenge and in a sense work, but you mean your boss is on the phone and if you don't do the work you don't get paid. work work.
I bring this up because Doc assumed Carl made a typo here, and was surprised that he would make such an obviously weird typo... but I had to explain it's an idiom.
Delegation is interesting. The C/C++ group I run has had a lot of growth and enthusiasm relative to where it was before...we even had Bjarne Stroustrup which was a big deal to me personally and also for some others... and I sort of am having a bit of a hard time handing it off. Trusting people is difficult.
In r2, using append to add something to the end of a block returns the block with the thing appended to it, but why does the same not happen with insert ?
>> members: [karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl] == [karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl] >> append members 'brianH == [karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl brianH] >> insert members 'petr == [karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl brianH] >> probe members [petr karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl brianH]
Here, it did not return members with 'petr inserted at the front when I inserted it.
Don't know why, but I thought using the same functionality in a function would have different results, but it does not.
>> add-member: func [series addition] [ insert series addition ] >> add-member members 'dockimbel == [petr karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl brianH] >> probe members [dockimbel petr karunesh hostilefork rgchris graham-chiu adrian earl brianH]
(I actually meant to write pekr, but wrote petr. Sorry, @pekr :-) )
Series can have different indexes, they are not always pointing at first position.
INSERT returns the series pointing after the inserted value, in your case above, it will point at index position 2.
Every series value is like a "view" of the series in memory, so each "view" can have its own different starting offset.
So, you can have as much "views" of a given series as you need, each one with its own starting position, but all refering to the same underlying collection in memory.
Ok. Thanks to your quick pointing to help rebol-function (had forgotton it :-) ), I am reading help for insert , append and change , and am noticing that append is a function value, while insert and change are action values. Does it matter what kind of value a function is?
@GrahamChiu It's very cool... it's like those panoramic photo stitching algorithms... 'cept you can drop a unit into a few places in a building and then play Quake in it...
(I assume everyone has figured out that you can click on the little reply arrow and get to the message someone is replying to...)
KKs question would have made a good actual question, I think it's time for him to start asking there instead of chat.
and I've also wondered how it could look like in rebol, since its not regular parsing (highligting has to work even on unterminated expressions and even in a totally crippled input)
@HostileFork no specific platform, but probably PHP since its most complicated I could imagine
@KamilTomšík @rgchris is kind of the master of syntax highlighting around here, not only did he write the thing to query the answers on stackoverflow to questions tagged Rebol (they don't offer this as a default feed) but he also wrote the highlighter he used to share the source code: reb4.me/r3/altxml
I think his highlighter is great.
Hello @Ellipsis ... I see you have just enough points to chat! 20 is the magic number... check out our FAQ to know a bit about us and also how to set your avatar to something other than a weirdo pattern. :-)
Given a string string, what is the fastest/most-efficient way to count lines therein? Will accept best answers for any flavour of Rebol. I've been working under the assumption that the parse [some [thru]] combination was the fastest way to traverse a string, but then I don't know that for certain...
@HostileFork yeap, we can agree on that, however I am not going to do that :) if I change one character, and language is (usually) left-to-right, theres no need to re-parse everything
@KamilTomšík If you see what they did there, it's kind of mind blowing. They used Clang (as opposed to GCC) to compile the interpreters for popular languages, then someone made a LLVM backend to... Javascript. You're running interpreters written in C in your browser. Write an infinite loop in said interpreter? You just hang your own browser. :-)
@KamilTomšík The progress bar you get when you pick a language is downloading the executable of compiled C code for popular interpreters... on a JavaScript VM. We are going to do this for Rebol too.
@KamilTomšík I got invited by one of our influential local hacker groups to give a talk in March on Rebol, they wouldn't have invited me if it were closed-source...they might not have invited me had it been GPL either...there's an anti-GPL sentiment right now.
I'm one of the "Stallman is right!" people but it looks like, for now, the short-term reality is GPL is not popular.
I argued for Rebol being GPL3 and was shot down, hence Apache 2.
@KamilTomšík One of the Apache people, Larry Rosen, actually was probably the main person who made the license go the way it did. He's pretty sharp, so I guess I'll defer to his more realistic while perhaps less idealistic vision.
Hello @Lele, I see you have enough reputation to chat. How's your day?
@KamilTomšík Edited for context, it's perhaps a little idiomatic.
The idea that it's best if people are allowed to make their own choices vs. being told what is right and wrong.
I'm an engineer so when things don't work my reflex is: "no, you shouldn't be allowed to do something that won't work"
@KamilTomšík While chatting abstractly is fun, I will say that even more fun is Rebol programming. Got any questions related to that? Want to be shown fun stuff?
@KamilTomšík You can look at what has historically passed for documentation (cough) in the Rebol world here: Parse Project. The main organizer of that is here, sometimes: @BrianH
@KamilTomšík Remember that parse is general purpose. So parse "aaabb" [some "a" 2 "b"] matches some (non-zero) number of a's, then precisely two b's. If it reaches the end of the input successfully, you get true. That's why parse "aaabbb" [some "a" 2 "b"] returns false...
But on the general purpose note, it doesn't have to be textual. parse [apple apple apple banana banana] [some 'apple 2 'banana] for instance, it's the same logic.
And if you want zero or more (instead of one or more) then instead of some you use the word any. That document opens doors to all the power and flexibility of the dialect.
@KamilTomšík It's also optimized C, and symbolic. So that parse [apple apple ...] stuff isn't doing string comparisons, just pointer comparisons. Fast.
@KamilTomšík Appreciate you coming back, hope you return and eventually you'll appreciate that we kept you coming back, because you won't want to go back :-)
Here there be dragons!
The reword function is a bit of an experiment to add shell-style string interpolation to Rebol in a way that works with the way we do things. Unlike a lot of Rebol's series functions, it really is optimized for working on just string types, and the design reflects that. Th...
That did come out very interesting. Good call, @Adrian
I figured out how to add case-sensitivity and trailing delimiters to reword, so once those are done I think that we can declare this experiment a success. Then, it can be my first attempt at a complex from-scratch native :)
Never needed to use GDB before. The last time I had to debug other people's C code was before GDB existed, when I was the one who ported Little Smalltalk to DOS so I could use my local machine for one of my beginner's programming classes. For my own code I just never made those kinds of bugs. And lately I seem to use VC more for debugging, since I mostly have to do Windows builds.
@HostileFork not sad, when you consider who they had to hire to do so, and that they had to pay around $112 million in a court settlement to even be allowed to hire those people. MS may be bad on many levels, but their dev tools group is extremely competent and even morally upstanding.
Those fixability ratings for the thin-and-light stuff is more of a rating of the lack of ability of the people doing the testing to fix stuff. To make those kinds of things small, sturdy and leave enough room for batteries, they just have to use glue sometimes. The only time I thought that was a legit criticism was for the new iMac, which actually lost features in order to become thinner for no damn reason.
My iMac is a G5 :) Oh, the new iMac isn't actually much thinner, it just has a thinner edge for no good reason at all. It bulges in the back. And the thinner edge loses the optical drive, and makes it harder to repair, but isn't necessary to make it lighter because it sits on a desk and runs plugged into the mains. It's just dumb.