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4:49 AM
posted on March 18, 2018 by codebybrett

(1) Help had a minor alignment issue for help on objects. This resolves that. (2) Initially I thought (1) was caused by DELIMIT and had created tests for what I thought DELIMIT should do. However one test is removed here because DELIMIT is simpler in behaviour than the test expects.

 
 
5 hours later…
9:26 AM
@GrahamChiu DID is NOT NOT, or TO-LOGIC. It should be available. Try just saying DID 1 in that interpreter.
If you don't have DID, the interpreter is older than DID, which was introduced a few months ago
 
9:54 AM
@HostileFork An old build somehow resurrected itself in my main directory!
 
10:32 AM
@MarkI I've actually become oddly fond of DID. It strikes me as a word computing lacked.
It straddles the boundaries of meaning, like how NOT 1 being FALSE is kind of gibberish if you don't sort of take it for granted.
Yet I've been pleasantly surprised at how often it isn't gibberish. flag: did any [...] is... actually... not bad. And once you get used to it, it feels about as natural as NOT does in the "unnatural" applications. It's no worse!
I've got a pending blog article about this, as a generic discovery for computing wording, that maybe should go beyond just Rebol.
 
 
7 hours later…
5:21 PM
@GrahamChiu AltWebForm is top of my to-do list.
I'm once again considering some aspects of how LOAD-WEBFORM translates keys into nested objects.
Would also look to support Ruby/PHP conventions too—e.g.: foo[bar][]=One&foo[bar][]=Two
There's a surprising amount of complexity to what can at first seem innocuous. Consider how the following might behave: foo[][bar]=One&foo[][bar]=Two (Ruby/Rails' response is {"foo"=>[{"bar"=>"One"}, {"bar"=>"Two"}]})
Which is inconsistent with: foo=One&foo=Two => {"foo"=>"Two"}
 
 
1 hour later…
6:59 PM
can this be tweaked as options?
 

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