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14:05
r3-alpha>> NUL: make char! 0
== #"^@"

r3-alpha>> parse #{AE} [#{AE} to [NUL]]
== true

r3-alpha>> parse #{AE} [#{AE} thru [NUL]]
== false
^-- welcome to "tales of the bizarre edge case", where the internal detail that binaries are terminated with a zero byte in R3-Alpha is leaked by TO. There was no particularly solid justification for why they were--as binaries can contain any byte including zero--so we can likely presume this existed for the AS STRING! mechanics of Rebol2.
(But as those strings permitted zeros in them, it's not entirely clear why zero termination would matter for them either.)
It raises the question: should the internal detail that ANY-STRING! are terminated by a zero byte be exposed at any level? Today that answer is no, and it probably should be no. pick "abc" 4 doesn't give you CHAR! of 0...it gives NULL, which is falsey. So why would PARSE allow you to see beneath the abstraction? You have END.
 
1 hour later…
15:17
I created a new branch on the r3n copy of the repo. Had some functions added to the mysql branch https://github.com/r3n/ren-c/blob/b863bb2908b51333abb0065e1d30fca0bdb3cbbd/extensions/mysql/mod-mysql.c#L74 Not sure this is how to "handle" the connection.
Have not even tried to compile using the mysql-config.r added, not sure if I have much time to work on this coming weeks therefor decided to put this 'draft' out now so you can all shoot at it.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE In the mysql there is a difference in mysql_query and mysql_real_query where the latter can handle strings including nulls, but then the total length of the (binary) string must be given. dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/mysql-real-query.html
@iArnold You won't do very well with void* of the REBVAL*, you need to extract the information you want in the form of character strings or whatever. That is what rebSpell() and such do.
rebUnboxInteger() will get you an int out of an INTEGER!, rebSpell() will get you a C character string out of a TEXT!, etc.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE Good thing it is a work in progress. Thanks, still trying to get my head around it.
If it's possible to talk over a typical TCP connection, then @rgchris's concept of usermode code speaking to the database is likely more viable.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE True, but I suspect that may not work in my situation and I have very good hope on the C API to work.
 
3 hours later…
18:52
    rebol2>> find/match "abcd" ""
    == none

    rebol2>> parse "abcd" ["" "abcd"]
    == false

    red>> find/match "abcd" ""
    == none

    red>> parse "abcd" ["" "abcd"]
    == true
^-- so here we have a question. If you look for an empty string, do you find it? Being able to find it presents some thorny questions for things like REPLACE/ALL ... how do you replace all the empty strings that you find?
19:34
Always do copy "" ? ;-)
20:11
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE Confirmed it does not work for me. Continuing the C API story.
20:37
Too soon, I remember another thing to try first.
How goes it @giuliolunati? I'm still working on stackless, but taking breaks for other things to make it less torturous. Need any bugs fixed?
21:21
OK, @rgchris it did work somehow. Output was:
Awake-event: lookup Awake-event: connect Awake-event: read Read 93 bytes #{ 590000000A352E352E352D31302E322E33322D4D6172696144420030D6530045 27336A3E352E2500FEF7080200BF8115000000000000070000006D78353C6B28 2375494B7A46006D7973716C5F6E61746976655F70617373776F726400 }
@rgchris So not 340000000 but a little more...
And how would this solution proceed now?

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