Speaking of fun what do you think to the idea of a "Speak in Rebol day" for this room? We could quickly modify the bot to complain if the values used in chat were not valid rebol.
We would have to add an exception for invalid email! such as @johnk and smilies, but other than that it is would make an interesting testement to the readability of the language
An exciting array of announcements for Red is coming soon!
* Doc plans to be announcing the release of the next milestone version of Red * Bo and Kaj will be announcing the initial release of the first commercial product written entirely in Red * A donation-multiplying campaign to help fund Red development will be announced * Bo will be announcing some information on the next commercial product planned to be built with Red
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>> tomorrow: now + 1 print ["Goodbye @AstDerek maybe see you" tomorrow/date]
Goodbye @AstDerek maybe see you 10-Aug-2013
@WayneTsui Welcome to the Rebol and Red room. See our FAQ. Sadly you won't be able to talk to us at present. You need a few more reputation points on Stackoverflow to join these chat rooms. If you answer some questions, or ask some, we might be able to help by upvoting you. In the meantime, have a look at a Rebol introduction.
There is a function as blow, the purpose is when calling it, it would return a string having insert the arguement value between two stars.
star-name: func [name /local stars] [
stars: "**"
insert next stars name
stars
]
print star-name "test" ;*test*
print star-name "this" ;*thiste...
@GrahamChiu Of course it's not so good because it uses the temp folder. I should have asked: Is this the best free method we currently have to bundle a Rebol script in a single exe?
@SoleSoul It's generally used to hide source for commercial programs. The encapper AFAIK uses encryption on the source which is then attached to the rebol binary. At runtime it decompresses, and decrypts
Interesting, since the decryption happens at run time.
I'll read about that
Can you help me with an error message? I'm trying to use the tray.r lib for Rebol 2. The function add-tray expects a tooltip and an icon. I don't know what I'm supposed to supply as an icon. I tried to load an image but it says: Script Error: add-tray expected tray-icon argument of type: image integer
If you use a set-word on a series, then the default behavior is to allocate the memory for that series just the once. This allows you to use that as a static variable that persists between function calls as you have found.
If you won't want that behavior, then you need to explicitly copy the se...
In the case of the function there is just one "**" string definition. That definition is used by LOAD just once, since LOAD is run just once to translate the code to Rebol internal form - a block. It is true that the assignment occurs twice if you call the function twice, but the assignment does ...
@cyphre I understand that you wrote the tray.r script. It looks really useful, but as a beginner in Rebol it's a bit hard for me to understand how to use it from the source code. Is there any example of an application using it? Thank you!
@WayneTsui I know of Jerry, but I don't think he's made it to this chat yet! He wrote a book that actually sold an impressive number of copies in China...
@WayneTsui Did you read the book or just he personally convinced you to look into the language?
@WayneTsui Cool. Well you bumped into one of those kind of foundationally weird things about Rebol in your question... the modifies-by-default nature is a performance decision. It generally doesn't copy without you asking it.
The way I encourage people to look at Rebol, though, is not so much worrying about whether you like or don't like that kind of thing. Because it can change, and does. It's a language you can bend to your will, and dialects are where it's at. Seen Parse yet?
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>> parse #{FFFFFFDECAFBAD0000000000} [some #{FF} copy data to #{00} (print data)]
#{DECAFBAD}
== false
@WayneTsui Well don't hesitate to ask questions, the loyal bot lets us demo right here. And we have a JavaScript build of Rebol too, so that's about to take off... soon-ish. (For the moment, this is mostly a volunteer effort so our timescales aren't as fast as we might like them to be.)
And as the stars say on the right (if you're in the browser, if not here's the list)... Red is cutting its teeth on commercial applications now.
Does anyone know if Carl would still identify himself as "Rebol Technologies CTO"... for instance, if making a title card for him in a video at a Rebol conference? :-/
He works at Roku now but I assume he got them to sign some kind of thing saying that his work there is independent of RT.
@WayneTsui Moving along at a good clip, I think it represents the future of Rebol-like languages... though I encourage coherence in the community. The goals and beliefs have too much overlap to allow fragmentation, for instance incompatible data format decisions... we have little examples like that Red needs a way of expressing a hexadecimal literal INTEGER! value and Rebol doesn't do that yet. Letting things like that make a data file not loadable by both languages would be a shame.
JSON was strongly inspired by Rebol, but we can do better. e.g. Ren
@WayneTsui Yep, there's a page on Red in the book, Jerry sent me a copy. There's a lot of graphics, so I can at least understand something. :) The book itself is great, I wish we had an english version of it.
@WayneTsui There was a French book that was translated to English by @PeterWAWood, so perhaps a market for it... although things are getting a bit shaken up. People aren't sure whether to retreat to the known-quantity that is Rebol 2, the evolution and open source Rebol 3, or Red. I myself try to pretend Rebol 2 does not exist.
@WayneTsui If you're into experimenting, you might try Rebmu. Heard of it? Dr. Rebmu is quite the character. :-) The Reversible Reverser ... Hourglass ... etc. :-)
So I don't really like the PRINT and PRIN distinction. I think PRIN should be PRINT/ONLY. Hahaha, just kidding. But I do think maybe a refinement on the literate word PRINT should come into play instead of using a "word" like PRIN.
How about PRIN => PRINT and PRINT => PRINT/LINE ? It's as readable as print-line, same number of characters. Then perhaps "blocks are treated as lines" so if you pass print a block it has to process, it assumes you want a line ending... but a raw string is just printed with no line ending.
That way you could write PRINT ["Hi"] if you don't like PRINT/LINE "Hi"
But plain old PRINT "Hi" wouldn't throw in the line ending.
@HostileFork Interesting proposition. I would replace the /LINE refinement with a /NO-LINE one instead, to be used with block arguments when you don't want the newline.
I was trying to avoid an "/ONLY" but "/NO-LINE" isn't bad
It's not used that often, which is probably why people don't notice how ugly PRIN is
I would say that if my campaign to eliminate /ONLY didn't succeed, we should use /ONLY there. But failure is not an option. :-)
It's actually a good example of something that /only starts to seem like a good idea if you've gone completely Rebol-psychotic, because I actually thought of it first before I caught myself. :-)
So I'm going to kind of have to abandon perfectionism and just post the video of Carl's talk. I could tweak it forever, but instead it's going to have to just be good enough as is, so I can do other things. Maybe next conference can be rigged so it doesn't need as much post work.
I think it's important for symbolic reasons in terms of him coming back to Rebol, but also as he says, it's a real world solution to a problem. Power management using stuff that's off-the-shelf on the market, Rebol webserver... tune your water heater from an iPad... useful stuff and the existing software is probably based on dinosaur methodology
@DocKimbel I'll get to your talks next, should be easier I hope.
@RebolBot print {"Also," noted {@RebolBot}, "Curly braces are pretty good string delimiters because matched pairs are still held inside the string constant."}
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>> print {"Also," noted {@RebolBot}, "Curly braces are pretty good string delimiters because matched pairs are still held inside the string constant."}
"Also," noted {@RebolBot}, "Curly braces are pretty good string delimiters because matched pairs are still held inside the string constant."
But in Rebol, the functions can introspect the types they get and do different things. If PRINT gets a "block" of data (think lisp-style symbolics in a series) then it interjects the spaces, but if it sniffs the type and finds it's a string it just takes it literally.
@AstDerek Being able to act differently based on the types is a big strength of Rebol and it has a lot of types. It's a dense lexical space. Check this out.
So it notices things of patterns like foo://blah.blah/blahblah and says "oh that's a 'URL!'" Then READ can detect that when it gets called, and do something. It's extensible.
In this case, the first 64 characters of the source of my homepage.
This rich vocabulary of types is sort of a set of tinkertoys for what we call "dialecting"
@AstDerek Hm? Well, Rebol is Turing complete when you fire it up, but dialects don't have to be. "Dialect" just means that anything... an integer or symbolic term... can be ascribed meaning in the context of the expression. Take parse, for instance.
@RebolBot parse "aaaabbbbbccc" [4 "a" some "b" any "c"]
@AstDerek So parse is this operation that took two parameters. One was a string to process, and the other a block of symbols. In that block of symbols we see an integer, followed by a string, followed by a word, followed by a string, another word, and another string.
@AstDerek You're sharp, I see. :-) Perhaps I'll have to raise the bar, by pointing out (a) that's illegible and (b) it doesn't have a good expansion model.
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>> a-or-b-rule: ["a" (print "Found an A!") | "b" (print "Found a B!")] parse "ababaaqabdba" [some [a-or-b-rule | "q" (print "rules they be a changin'" append a-or-b-rule [| "d"])]]
Found an A!
Found a B!
Found an A!
Found a B!
Found an A!
Found an A!
rules they be a changin'
Found an A!
Found a B!
Found a B!
Found an A!
== true
@AstDerek Rebol is one of those things that takes a while to absorb. It's not really like... anything else. And it's insanely tiny. Under half a meg, zero install
@AstDerek As for whether you can do something practical or not, we only just found out about a company with like 7 Rebol programmers and they do factory automation for like... Dannon yogurt. There's a small number of people using it in the field, but it does have a bit of a hobbyist/tinkerer/ex-Amiga-developer history... people who look at it for the sake of programming itself. Perhaps pigeonholed as a thought experiment, but it can be used to solve problems.
@AstDerek Changed the rule by appending new symbols to it to accept "d". The | is a symbol for alternates in parse rules, and then it just said "allow Ds". Once you hit a "q" it allows ds.
@AstDerek Well, Rebol was late to the open source party, just got released in December and a competing open source rival headed up by @DocKimbel had already gained a fair amount of momentum. We live in interesting times, for these languages.
@HostileFork got that part about "q" working as a conditional, so when you expanded the expression, you expanded the rule, how do you expand the actions?
@AstDerek Do tell. :-) Well, so the thing is that Lisp is one of the best known "homoiconic" languages, in which the data structure that holds the program itself is also a data structure in the language. It's good for metaprogramming, etc.
But in Lisp, a "series" of symbols/etc. is always in parentheses. Rebol rejected the parentheses as the foundational block type in part because you don't have to hit shift to get a square bracket, so you might notice the logo using the square brackets... lots of nice little touches in Rebol where things like that have been thought out.
@AstDerek I visited Mexico City for a month a couple years ago... had a good time...
I used to work for Microsoft, made a modest amount of money, and now live simply and pursue the general improvement of technology. Everyone here has some reason for being involved, but the time any one person can allocate or not fluctuates. The chat room has been a little quiet after our last conference a couple months ago.
Hm, maybe it was just a month ago. Seems like longer. :-)
@AstDerek I will make the enigmatic statement "Rebol has no keywords"... but do you want the length of the letters composing the word, or do you want to apply the operation?
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>> help second
USAGE:
SECOND value
DESCRIPTION:
Returns the second value of a series.
SECOND is a native value.
ARGUMENTS:
value
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>> help
Use HELP or ? to see built-in info:
help insert
? insert
To search within the system, use quotes:
? "insert"
To browse online web documents:
help/doc insert
To view words and values of a context or object:
? lib - the runtime library
? self - your user context
? system - the system object
? system/options - special settings
To see all words of a specific datatype:
? native!
? function!
@RebolBot
foo: func [
{The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description}
value [integer! string!] {A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value}
] [
print value + 1
]
help foo
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>> ? native!
native! is a datatype
It is defined as a direct CPU evaluated function
It is of the general type function
Found these related words:
! native! Returns the logic complement.
++ native! Increment an integer or series index. Return ...
-- native! Decrement an integer or series index. Return ...
--- native! Ignores the argument value and returns nothin...
action native! Creates datatype action (for internal usage o...
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>> foo: func [{The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description} value [integer! string!] {A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value}] [print value + 1] help foo
USAGE:
FOO value
DESCRIPTION:
The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description
FOO is a function value.
ARGUMENTS:
value -- A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value (integer! string!)
@RebolBot
foo: func [
{The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description}
value [integer! string!] {A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value}
] [
print value + 1
]
source foo
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>> foo: func [{The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description} value [integer! string!] {A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value}] [print value + 1] source foo
foo: make function! [[{The first string inside a function specification is where you put your description} value [integer! string!] {A string after a parameter lets us describe it, like value}][print value + 1]]
@AstDerek If you've not worked with a "code-is-data" language before, it's pretty trippy, and Rebol really is an evolution of Lisp. It's... much more advanced.
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>> oldprint: :print print: func [value] [oldprint reverse value] print "hello"
olleh
** Script error: reverse does not allow integer! for its series argument
** Where: print do either either either -apply-
** Near: print length? do-commands print do-error prin "OK"
>>
RebolBot is not doing what my interpreter is doing. But the point is, you have functions like PROTECT to stop overwriting things if you don't want them overwritten... it can be layered..
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>> help protect
USAGE:
PROTECT value /deep /words /values /hide
DESCRIPTION:
Protect a series or a variable from being modified.
PROTECT is a native value.
ARGUMENTS:
value (word! series! bitset! map! object! module!)
REFINEMENTS:
/deep -- Protect all sub-series/objects as well
/words -- Process list as words (and path words)
/values -- Process list of values (implied GET)
/hide -- Hide variables (avoid binding and lookup)
@AstDerek Yup, and I'm a big believer in checking everything ahead of time, I love compilers and not having to wait until code happens to incidentally fail to know it's not working. But Rebol is the first interpreted language I think has enough to offer where you can really argue it can be made okay because there's some other benefits that emerge prominently.
While there are certainly bugs in Rebol, if we're doing off the cuff examples here, it's usually Rebol that's right. :-)
@AstDerek But the apostrophe is what distinguishes a "literal word" from a "word". By default it's the use-mention distinction... but again, it's really just another tinker-toy. It can mean what you want if you are a function getting a block of symbols, and you can interpret it how you wish.
@AstDerek Good examples, and I actually feel like string conversions of symbols should not include their symbol class specifiers... there's more than literal words, there's also set-words and get-words, and this is part of the whole weirdness. Colon isn't an assignment operator, at all in fact.
If you give a function an insufficient number of arguments, it usually complains, there's an exception for things like HELP which allow it to come back with an answer even if you don't ask it what you want help about.
QUOTE is a general purpose way of stopping the evaluator...
@AstDerek Do note that braces are a string delimiter. So that's just a string. In my case, I used pick to get the first element out of a block series containing only one element... a parenthetical series... it contained 5 components. Three of them were integers and two of them were words.
You're going to beeline for some contentious issues. :-) But we have an impending compromise. It's tough because we wanted FIRST FOO to equate with PICK FOO 1 just because of natural numbering.
1st and FIRST seem to go together, while they might not be the "computery" way
@AstDerek None is just a four letter word. :-) This is a trick in Rebol, to realize that there is the "word" none and then there is the datatype none!... and only one value of type none!...
@RebolBot none: :print none "Hi there @AstDerek, as you can see this might get confusing quickly."
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>> none: :print none {Hi there @AstDerek, as you can see this might get confusing quickly.}
Hi there @AstDerek, as you can see this might get confusing quickly.
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>> none!: :print none! "I told you this might take some getting used to..."
I told you this might take some getting used to...
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>> help
Use HELP or ? to see built-in info:
help insert
? insert
To search within the system, use quotes:
? "insert"
To browse online web documents:
help/doc insert
To view words and values of a context or object:
? lib - the runtime library
? self - your user context
? system - the system object
? system/options - special settings
To see all words of a specific datatype:
? native!
? function!
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>> ? self
SELF is an object of value:
system object! [product version build platform license catal...
do-error none! none
none none! none
do-commands block! length: 0
browse function! Open web browser to a URL or local file.
func function! Defines a user function with given spec and b...
target unset! none
url! datatype! uniform resource locator or identifier
@AstDerek So the bot has a dialect... it/("she") only speaks parseable Rebol. You need a newline if you want code to be evaluated because there's other stuff...
And if the default assumption were code, then the bot dialect wouldn't kick in
@AstDerek Note that there has been a (questionable) decision to keep increasing Rebol's version number underneath the version "2" until being version 3 is official. :-/ RebolBot is actually using Rebol3 it's just that Rebol3 is version 2.101... until a declared "3"
@AstDerek Well to be frank with you, the level of rigor is not up to my standards in that department. :-/ But hey, no one said transitioning people over to open source and community governance was going to happen overnight.
@HostileFork won't be much of a problem by now, I barely knew this existed. I don't mean others don't know it, but if there's a stable release, the betas can be named anything
@HostileFork maybe you need a codename for this release
@HuayinWang Hey there. Your website is hard to test for veracity, it's... marketing-ish. I don't know what multi-touch-attribution is, and am skeptical it's a real thing. But I do like that story about the guy who likes carvings of dragons and then later meets a real one and demonstrates he isn't actually a fan of dragons but rather drawings of them... so I'll let you know you've a typo on your profile URL... currently ".om" instead of ".com"
@Fork, making a video is a lot of work indeed. Need some quiet space. Not at home in the vacation of the kids. And I had a lot of stuff to learn myself. (I have started an discussion on the Red mailinglist for best practice for creating your directory structure with Red and Red/System and the various contributions and the scripts you write yourself)
@Fork PRI: :PRIN I see PRIN as unfinished PRINT, no newline at the end. It is ten to hundred times better than PUTS or PRINTF (I really, really, really hate that one) other languages use.
@iArnold Yea, video is hard, and even harder when you're having to sort of wing it with A/V you didn't exactly control... the timeline so far... I'm just going to have to call it done here shortly, it's Friday so can't let this drag into another week
@iArnold The job isn't to be sort of better, it's to be the best. :-)