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00:50
>> print ['Really? 'X 'is x: [[[[((1)) + ((2))]]]] 'prints 'as also '.^. print ['Really. 'X 'is first x/1] 'above?]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
Really. X is 1 + 2
Really? X is 1 + 2 prints as .^. above?
One of the clearest examples of blurring the code/data distinction is that consarned PRINT dialect/reduction/evaluation/function. Pattern.
The annoying habit of PRINT stripping [] and () without even looking at them any further means you must be wary of printing block-valued words, even when "quoted" inside outer blocks.
To this day (obviously, apologies to the group, and to HF, who understands) I keep thinking things are evaluating in there when they shouldn't be, and aren't being, evaluated.
All I know is that every time I print anything, I have to mold it. Stupid really, but hopefully one day I'll know when the output of certain Rebol functions is a string or a block.
Yep. Continues to be a fairly crazy study of "simple".
Sometimes I think PRINT is the bane, sometimes the boon, it is pretty ... encompassing.
Harshest truth is that I don't think it's knowledge that can be, er, communicated.
It can only be designed.
I like the idea that print x when x is a block can be sensitive to that, and give an error by default, just as I like the idea that if [cond] ... can do the reverse and error if it's a block and not coming from an evaluation. That ability to sense if parameters come from an evaluation or not was an important step.
Ren-C has two other experiments. One is the idea that sequential string literals indicate an intent to line-break. The other is that literal blocks in the print spec be used as "tight" groups--distinguished from blocks retrieved through variables, which are printed as blocks.
So inner blocks do not get the automatic spacing. To turn off spacing you can thus say print [[...]]
Having tried a number of different experiments, it's not the worst state of the design. It does save you from having to worry what your functions return when you use them in print, because the tight-spacing-group semantics only apply to literals in the print spec.
It's funny because in usage it's fine, it's just that whenever the usage of literals is different than when you go through a variable reference you lose your footing a bit. Your "real cases" work great, but then trying to give people examples it seems crazy.
The tight-spacing rule runs up against the sequential string literal rule, for instance, and print ["a" ["b" "c"] "d"] won't give you a bc d like you expect, but a b (newline) c d. Change it to x: "b" | y: "c" and print ["a" [x y] "b"] and it gives you a bc d.
(The argument being, with all that lexical space available, why would you have written "b" "c" if you meant "bc"?)
01:27
But perhaps it's a case of not being creative enough. Maybe in the world of PRINT, TAG! shouldn't print as a tag, but be a mergeable unit. print ["a" <b> <c> "d"] => a bc d. Fast aliasing is now available for strings to reuse their series as tags, as-tag.
02:11
I can build things according to a design, I can maybe criticize some incompletenesses, but I can merely laud they who imagine designs.
02:24
My imagination may be running out.
Having wrestled with many options, at the end of the day, there may need to be a move to explicit spacing, no matter how ugly that sounds. print [{The value is } value], print [{The value is} space value], possibly using literal BLANK! as a briefer form print [{The value is} _ value] (which I prefer to sp)
03:09
@HostileFork You mean on this PRINT thing? I hope you don't mean elsewhere, there's a ton of places for significant prettification.
 
5 hours later…
08:35
Hi people, I need your help!
I wish that code print 1:
w: to-word "yui"
set :w 1
print yui
quit
But obviously it fails with "yui word is not bound to a context". How can I simulate yui: 1 if the name yui is contained in a string?
 
2 hours later…
10:27
@giuliolunati Not a generalized answer, but try LOAD "yui" .... or INTERN "yui"
The question of default contexts and how the binding gets started is one quite glossed over, and it's one of the puzzles of why things appear to function at all...
 
4 hours later…
14:51
posted on November 01, 2016 by Arie

A nice simple question to get the blog started. So you want to make a program with a Graphical User Interface using Red? Red supports this by providing a View engine. Okay but what is this VID? They say it is easier? True. VID stands for Visual Interface Dialect. So it is a DIALECT. It is a way to make creating a GUI easier. Just describe the interface without having to worry about too

15:34
@rgchris From Red Gitter if you missed it, interesting... JSON edge cases... "out of over 30 parsers, no two parsers parsed the same set of documents the same way"
 
1 hour later…
17:00
@HostileFork It seems that the behavior of QUOTE in PARSE was documented here: Any value that follows the word quote is used literally, with the exception of parens (which are evaluated and their results are used for matching). For example, this is how you can match an integer value, even though integers are normally used for counters
@ShixinZeng It's a necessary thing to be able to do, but let's not call that operator QUOTE.
Instead, a specific "match this evaluative result" operation (presumably not DO, but another name), so that you can quote groups with QUOTE.
>> quote (1 + 2)
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== (1 + 2)
@HostileFork Understood. Just wanted to point out that the behavior was by design.
More pleasing if that's consistent.
Yep, there was obviously code written to do it. :-)
17:06
I'm not so sure whether DO should be what it is in the design or if it should be DO a block and then use the rule, and rename what DO is now.
Especially given that the DO is only a DO/NEXT of the input.
Whereas if it were this operation we are describing, it would be more parallel to a DO of a whole block.
(Bearing in mind this is a pretty much unused/prototype feature, that wasn't really working.)
@rebolek You were doing those Eiffel-like pre/post conditions, so maybe an issue I was thinking about would be relevant to you... that is the idea of type-checks coming after the arity check.
That would mean that the "type checking phase" would all come after the arity phase, so expanding and customizing type checks to add ranges or whatever would not seem any differently-timed than regular type checking. It would all move into a moment "after the function is called"
17:28
posted on November 01, 2016 by Arie

Keywords: [draw image Livecode transparency GUI] Level: Easy Title: "How to create a transparent image" Author: "Arnold van Hofwegen" The best way to experiment with draw and drawing an image is by using a livecode demo session from within a Red GUI-console. In this short blog I'll use the simple version by Nenad. For completeness this is the code ``` view [ title "Red Livecoding" output:

17:39
@HostileFork Just realized that infix arithmetic operations had one more layer of function calls than their prefix counterparts, because they were infix version of an intermediate function, not directly the prefix counterpart.
+: enfix func [arg1 [<tight> any-value!] arg2 [<tight> any-value!]] [
add :arg1 :arg2
]
@ShixinZeng Yes. Though the idea of a re-skinned type signature for a function has come up for other reasons, e.g. REDESCRIBE.
As long as the types are a subset of the types of the original function.
(a.k.a. "not really a hard thing to change")
We should be able to optimize away the intermediate function, right?
I just suspect there would be big performance impact on computation intensive code
Yes, we could make a simple thing like +: enfix tighten :add.
That'd be cool
As opposed to solving the generalized type subsetting problem
17:43
is the REDESCRIBE you described above implemented already?
Only for descriptions of functions; that's how you can give new meta information to specializations and such
But it was intended to also let you restrict the types
So there's no way to set the flags (like <tight>) yet?
Not yet. The tighten operation above would be easier to write.
Maybe we should extend REDESCRIBE to do this?
Let me look and see how hard it would be.
17:48
Great
@ShixinZeng I actually think the odds are high (now that we've gotten a bit further on it) that <tight> does not have a future as a generic parameter convention. It would not exist for anything but compatibility, while the non-tight forms would be pervasive as the only way of gathering arguments in DO for both enfixed and non-enfixed functions.
While it's early yet to be saying that the new infix rules are The Answer (build largest complete expression on the left possible, acquire right arguments normally) it has good bones.
As such, the OP! compatibility through tighten (or make-op, or whatever) may be enough and we can strike the annotation.
All things being equal, simpler is better!
I guess the question we might have is whether or not the ability to mark any parameters tight or not is something we want to leave in the mix and see if there are creative or interesting usages of it.
But my leaning is to say that the unified parameter convention with no tightness, ever, is better.
@MarkI @rgchris @giuliolunati ^-- are we still on the OneFunction train, despite round 3.0 / 2 (round is single arity and hence round 3.0 forms a complete expression in left to right processing, hence this would have to be round (3.0 / 2) for intended effect)
 
2 hours later…
19:53
posted on November 01, 2016 by hostilefork

This makes +: enfix tighten :add a faster version of: +: enfix func [arg1 [<tight> any-value!] arg2 [<tight> any-value!] [ add :arg1 :arg2 ] It avoids the overhead of the user code stub, via direct reuse of the function's implementation (just with an updated parameter list). Also the parameter types and help notes will match the original. Currently this cannot be used on s

20:35
@ShixinZeng I now remember the main technical problem why I didn't do the type tweaking feature in REDESCRIBE yet. It gets tricky with specializations. Because if you specialize something like APPEND, let's say, so it has 1 parameter instead of 2... it's still going to be the native C code that runs with the expectation of the PARAM()s and REFINE()s of APPEND. Hence you actually push a frame for APPEND's paramlist, not APPEND-SPECIALIZATION's reduced paramlist.
Consequently, if you want to update the type signatures for APPEND-SPECIALIZATION, you would have to update APPEND's type signature too... but you don't want to mutate the native APPEND, hence so really you need a copy of both parameter lists...but then generalize this (a recursive process since you can specialize specializations, adapt, chain, etc.)
It's not impossible by any means, but just something that I don't think the general need is there for yet to warrant going after it when there's lots of other things to worry about.
@HostileFork

>> echo %x
** Script error: echo must return value (use PROC or RETURN: <opt>)
** Where: echo
** Near: ... echo %x ??

This is slightly better, though still not helpfull.
Oops. Yup. :-)
@HostileFork
And now I get this error on x86 Linux ..
>> probe trap [read https://matrix.org]
make error! [
[self: code type id message near where arg1 __FILE__ __LINE__]
[
code: 3000
type: Script
id: no-value
message: [:arg1 "has no value"]
near: [[
ready [
awake make event! [type: 'close port: http-port]
]
doing-request reading-headers [
state/error: make-http-error "Server closed connection"
awake make event! [type: 'error port: http-port]
]
reading-data [
either any [integer? state/info/headers/content-length state/info/headers/transfer-encoding = "chunked"] [
@HostileFork got you
@ingo That's something that was working before? Do you know which commit broke it?
20:45
@HostileFork Yes, it worked before, I think I last tested last week on thursday or friday. On first look it looks like the same error I get on arm since quite some time.
@ingo Well, that wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing.
It reproduces on my machine. I'll see what I can do about it.
21:10
@ingo I've gone back a bit and haven't found a version that reads it without error. There's also the possibility that the protocol or data or something has changed on matrix.org's side, to cause the problem more pervasively. If you can't dig up a version that doesn't error, then that's probably what happened.
@HostileFork me too, I went back to the 21. and it doesn't work. Seems I haven't used it for quite some time ...
Can Atronix's R3 read it?
Yup it seems to
Well then, I guess the thing to do is, no matter how far back it takes...find out where it broke. :-/
21:30
Okay, a version from 6 June can read it. :-)
22:19
Great! I can have a look again tomorrow.
Just about got the version pinpointed.
22:46
posted on November 01, 2016 by giuliolunati

a: func [x y] [lib/add x y] | +: enfix tighten :a | 0 + 0 causes assertion src/include/sys-frame.h:453: Underlying_Function: assertion "underlying == underlying_check" failed

@HostileFork agree!
23:13
@HostileFork I am not going to derail said train, but there are still at least three things I deeply hate about it.
I will mention them here again briefly, just in case someone can help me feel better about my losses.
Asymmetry of function argument treatment, abandonment of backwards compatibility, and that (user-opaque) implementation specifics necessitated it.
@MarkI I don't see it as asymmetric. Consume the largest coherent expression and stop when you cannot any longer.
I also do not think it is user-opaque.
It is indeed not backwards compatible, but a backwards compatibility feature is offered which does not require running in a fundamentally different mode of the evaluator or runtime.
If we abandon the idea of labeling arbitrary arguments tight and go back to the idea that only enfixed compatibility operators have this compatibility property, it gets more compatible in that no prefix function acts tight on any argument. Well, hm, I guess that's only backwards compatible with the version of Ren-C that allowed "OP!s" to be used as if they were "FUNCTION!"
Coherence is in the eye of the beholder, but symmetry isn't. By far the greatest number of functions are unary, and the first time someone tries a binary function, they're going to put brackets around argument 1 if it has operators in it. Maybe you don't hate parenthesizing every argument operator expression, but I do. The problem with lisp was the parentheses, Rebol attacked it quite successfully IMO, and now (f a b c) has gone from f a b c to f (a) (b) (c), even worse than Lisp.
Or f a b (c), as bad as Lisp, but less readable/explicable.
@HostileFork Sorry, I don't understand that. Are you referring to earlier proposals you have discussed, or a new one?
@MarkI Just saying that originally, there was a r3-legacy switch that required a modal switch, and now the bits are on the function values themselves, so code using OP! semantics can coexist with that which isn't.
Ah, got it. Thanks.
Well, when people write [blah blah blah blah blah] with no separation in the pre-expression-barrier days, and who probably would still write like that even so, the argument is that there is "Rebol vision" of a sort. That a reader generally knows where an expression is complete or not.
23:23
@HostileFork Of course, to an expert user. I should have said "casual user opaque". For example, "complete expression" is a term that is not intuitive by any means.
And expression barriers save you from f a b (c) because f a b c | is a bit nicer than that.
@HostileFork Perfect. If someone wants an operator to grab a "complete expression" on the left, put an expression barrier between its final term and the operator.
Just thinking out loud.
add 1 2 | * 3
That would defeat the barrier part of expression barrier. You can put a group around things to get a complete expression on the left historically.
I'm talking about reducing parentheses.
And I don't believe it defeats any part of expression barriering.
Oh, sorry, if you start the next expression with a binary operator you won't get an error, right.

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