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1:28 AM
@giuliolunati Oh no! Well, if we aren't on the phone we can't make that better...!
So as a data point, I presented the Rebol FizzBuzz example to the Philadelphia Clojure group, and they liked it. In general they seemed pretty intrigued with Rebol.
I do need to stop walking for hours all over town for Meetups at some point and work on the talks and the demos (!) ...but... I feel like we're going to be getting some local interest due to these goings-about.
WebAssembly is definitely a big buzzword getting critical mass. If someone has time, they should make some kind of...WASM native that is a WebAssembly analogue to Red/System. I don't know how much of Red/System's decisions one would want to clone directly, but, it's the kind of thing I think people could have fun with in the browser.
 
it would have been fun to be at that meet up with you in the presence of clojurians
 
1:49 AM
@JacobGood1 As I've said, I have this vague feeling that Rebol's interesting "aesthetic" design and evaluator could be blended in with Clojure to make a more formalized Rebol...but no proof of that. I should take some time to sit down with it and become more familiar in a practical sense.
do-not-have-that-time-right-now
They were working with "zippers" today.
A zipper is a technique of representing an aggregate data structure so that it is convenient for writing programs that traverse the structure arbitrarily and update its contents, especially in purely functional programming languages. The zipper was described by Gérard Huet in 1997. It includes and generalizes the gap buffer technique sometimes used with arrays. The zipper technique is general in the sense that it can be adapted to lists, trees, and other recursively defined data structures. Such modified data structures are usually referred to as "a tree with zipper" or "a list with zipper" to...
I just don't know when you come down to it if mutation is central to very much of what you actually need to do in Rebol. If you had to say delta-expressed-block: append original-block value and it left original-block the same...how bad is that, really?
 
 
4 hours later…
6:12 AM
@giuliolunati Just change the touch controller
 
 
1 hour later…
7:16 AM
posted on June 13, 2019 by hostilefork

>> to-url {http://foo boo} == http://foo%20boo Good point to raise... But, I do think we're on the right track following along on @rgchris's take that you should be able to round-trip URLs that are copied to and from the address bar of your browser. To the extent it's what's in the viewer's consciousness that is the "source code". I think that's what makes the URL type valuable, more

 
 
6 hours later…
1:16 PM
posted on June 13, 2019 by hostilefork

@rgchris Actually, it looks like the copy-to-clipboard in Chrome escapes this as well: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herg%C3%A9 I was previously under the impression it did not. That influences my thinking on this a bit, in light of the space issue. (It actually seems to only do the escaping if you have the whole URL selected when you copy, not just part.) Can you give an updated outline o

 
 
2 hours later…
3:19 PM
posted on June 13, 2019 by hostilefork

I think that result should be: #[url! "moc.elpmaxe//:ptth"] I used to think along these lines, that escaping and generality of forms was important. But there is Freedom To and Freedom From. "Freedom To" store arbitrary strings and flavor them as URL! is robbing you of your "Freedom From" being passed a URL that has no scheme and is not URL-like whatsoever. You effectively know nothing abo

 
 
5 hours later…
8:49 PM
posted on June 13, 2019 by hostilefork

Also, you can put the unescaped version in a link and browsers will do the translation. Apparently this is only technically legal since the RFCs related to HTML5. ...RFC 1738 has been superseded by RFC 3986 (URIs, Uniform Resource Identifiers) and RFC 3987 (IRIs, Internationalized Resource Identifiers), on which the WhatWG based its work to define how browsers should behave when they see a

 

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