@HostileFork What are the current methods of executing Rebmu? Is there an easy way of running a Rebmu string from shell? Can we have RebolBot do/rebmu ?
My daughter posted her first YouTube music video playing the harp. To keep this on-topic, part of the video was filmed using my Rebol-based surveillance cameras. She'd (and I'd) love it if you gave it a watch and maybe click the "Like" button and send her a comment on YouTube. :-) youtube.com/watch?v=81Lp5r7jH08
@Zuanzuan 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.
@qtxie The series pointer at bar: [0], regardless of being local or not, was fixed because it wasn't a primitive value like an integer. So what you were actually making local was a "pointer", roughly speaking. The pointer is the same each time you call... but what is pointed to is not. If you really want what's pointed to to be different each time you call you need to invoke a COPY.
Rebol errs on the side of efficiency for such cases. It can be a source of confusion.
With the current bug in R3-GUI layout cropping faces on my layouts, I need to set the initial size of a layout to be viewed. How do I do that?
in R2, it was:
view layout/size [button] 1000x1000
There is no longer a size refinement on layout and trying to set a facet does not work
view layou...
I think that it was generally accepted that email! be extended to include that notation and that email! be renamed to a more generic person! or some such name.
[Wish] Reflects now established convention of @name notation referring to a person in web/online services. There's a strong semantic case for this as a datatype for use in data exchange/storage and dialecting. Twitter defines a handle as `["@" 1 15 [alphanum | #"_"]]` though generally longer names could be supported with possibly more characters to support a wider range of services. Does not c…
@HostileFork Your hostilefork.com is still down (Error establishing a database connection).
@HostileFork I was wondering if Rebmu could be an efficient compression method for Rebol code. Would it give a better compression ratio than the built-in compress function?
You actually achieved very good native compression using Rebmu. Trying to compress your Rebmu code added 2 bytes to the total. :-) — Respectech2 days ago
@DocKimbel Yes...thanks...I know, that site is old and predates having my own virtual servers and I haven't moved it off my friend's computer, he hasn't gotten back to me yet. I think it's just that the mysqld isn't running, but I don't have superuser access to restart it.
Outside of showing off for code golf puzzles, there may actually be applications for being able to enter really small code by hand without invoking a compression step. I dunno. If you have access to a compressor on the authoring side then I'd think compression would usually win out. It's still mostly evangelism, plus it's kind of fun and a way of learning new Rebol techniques.
If it is not a big work, it would be nice to have it. I have the feeling that Rebmu could be an efficient compression method, that would be worth having. But I would like to test it first against compress to see how well it performs.
Squeezing out short scripts involves using things like IL which Rebol programmers don't use, so a good musher would notice constructs such as if a < b and do the transformation. A poor musher would get something like iA < b while a good one would make ilAb.
But with such tricks then you'd start interfering with metaprogramming or assumptions about looking for if and < in the code and finding them. This isn't a problem to native Rebmu code, because it's written understanding that the call is to IL
I'm not as concerned about being costly to implement as the fact that you're changing the code, and that unmushing (as written) doesn't transform "ilAb" into "if a < b" but rather actually literally calls a different function
And if you try to do the optimization, what happens on code that actually used a variable called "IL"? So you'd really have to mush with no optimizations to have a lossless compression where the code runs as originally intended.
Well, you would lose all capitalization in words
Oh, so really on that point, if a < b would actually need to compress to ifA < b. Symbols like < are a pathological example.
Well, again this is changing the code, which interferes with any metaprogramming assumptions that happen to be implicit in the code.
So the most likely way to do a musher that has value would be to take code that's already written to Rebmu assumptions and uses short variable names and promises not to care that you transform if a < b into ilAb. And its application would be as a crutch for people who want to try Code Golfing but don't want to go as far as entering and debugging their programs as Rebmu.
But not needing such a crutch was a design objective. What makes programming in Rebmu in solving these challenges feasible is the ability to drop in all-lowercase Rebol wherever you want to do some probing or debugging.
I do think it's testing the limits of dialecting. And it's another example of where not being able to override PARSE's words shows that people with interesting ideas can get blocked by literal keyword inspection within dialects.
In any case, TTYL... I didn't get a lot of sleep, and am going to give it one more try...!
Here is one example (using Rebol 3) of how this could be done:
club-data: map [] ; store data in hash map is one option
foreach line read/lines %games-scores.txt [
fields: split line space
take/last fields ; split always leaves a empty field at end of series?
; lets take last 6 ...
@Respectech was some non-standard codec used for this video? I'm having trouble getting uninterrupted playback at 720p. Could be my connection at this time, but it's been relatively OK when my kids have watched other clips.
@vamsi The RebolBot only answers to messages addressed to it as the first word. But it can do code evaluations and more!
@RebolBot print [{"I'm useful for teaching Rebol," said RebolBot to} reverse {ismav@} {-- "so do come chat with the room if you'd like to learn a bit about the language."}]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print [{"I'm useful for teaching Rebol," said RebolBot to} reverse "ismav@" {-- "so do come chat with the room if you'd like to learn a bit about the language."}]
"I'm useful for teaching Rebol," said RebolBot to @vamsi -- "so do come chat with the room if you'd like to learn a bit about the language."
@Boeckm No problem, but it is a very different sort of language from most anything else out there... download is zero install, under half a megabyte, cross-platform. More than just batteries included in there... date arithmetic, network protocols, literate metaprogramming. Rather addictive.
@RebolBot
print 12-Dec-2012 + 20
print copy/part to string! read rebol.com 80
print {"It's nice to have {asymmetric} string delimiters, as matched pairs are fine."}
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print 12-Dec-2012 + 20 print copy/part to string! read rebol.com 80 print {"It's nice to have {asymmetric} string delimiters, as matched pairs are fine."}
1-Jan-2013
<!doctype html>
<html><head>
<meta name="generator" content="REBOL WIP Wiki"/>
<
"It's nice to have {asymmetric} string delimiters, as matched pairs are fine."
When you call some business to get something taken care of, and it's something you want to ensure is all done and wrapped up, and they give you a "confirmation number" and you write it down, it is not "confirming" anything.
It is a tracking number in their system of the transaction. You can't take it to court and go "but I have a confirmation number!" and have them say "nope, not in our system".
@PaulTarvydas My mistakes in reducing the example aside (would be easier with a multiline Rebol 3 terminal to type in...!) does this distil down your implied problem?
@SoleSoul Maybe you can just get by in Rebol 2 by passing along strings properly encoded in whatever the native layer expects. That's probably UTF-16(LE) for Win32.
@HostileFork I think so. I'm pondering/trying to understand recursive descent parsing vs. parse. I conclude that parse doesn't memoize, and, it fires actions on the way down before the parse succeeds.
@earl And I'm not sure I understood your first suggestion. Assuming a particular unicode string could be represented using an ASCII encoding with zulu extensions (255 chars. Made up the 'zulu'), can I tell Rebol GUI to treat it as a zulu text? Is that what you suggested?
@paultarvydas It could make a good stackoverflow question to take my reduced example and ask if there's any techniques in parse to get actions in the inner rules to only fire if an outer rule is completely matched. @earl or @Ladislav may have ideas. The only ones I have are the obvious. TTYL
@paultarvydas Are you familiar with parsing expression Grammars (PEG) / packrat parsing / top-down parsing languages (TDPL)?
PARSE is in the same category. And has the same operational behaviour: top-down, left-to-right, with backtracking.
So actions are executed whenever they occur next in line (left to right) on a so far successful branch. (And they are re-executed when backtracking upon failure.)
@RebolBot parse [a x] [ 'a (print "a1") 'b (print "b1") | 'a (print "a2") 'x (print "x2") ]
@RebolBot expr: [(append/only bt tail t) term ["+" | "-"] expr (append t 'e1 remove back tail bt) | (clear last bt) term (append t 'e2 remove back tail bt)] term: [(append/only bt tail t) factor ["*" | "/"] term (append t 't1 remove back tail bt) | (clear last bt) factor (append t 't2 remove back tail bt)] factor: [(append/only bt tail t) primary "**" factor (append t 'f1 remove back tail bt) | (clear last bt) primary (append t 'f2 remove back tail bt)] primary: [(append/only bt tail t) some digit (append t 'p1 remove back tail bt) | (clear last bt) "(" expr ")" (append t 'p2 remove back ta…
@Ladislav I briefly wondered if there was a generalization as a parse keyword where you could "push" code instead of executing it, and unwind if not. Like compound-rule: [defer [rule rule (print "found 2")] | defer [rule (print "found 1")]]]. The parens for RULE would be kept in a queue and only run when the rule was finished. Works for print statements, but not much else. Seems like a case where if you want another kind of grammar/productions tool you need a different dialect.
@Ladislav Well, "works" but I mean that contextually a lot of times the sub rules capture parse positions and have other things that are expected to be "in the moment"... you can't still run that if the moment is lost... it's hooking into imperative programming. So I wonder how useful it would be.
@HostileFork "you can't still run that if the moment is lost.." - you may not understand what you are saying - if you want to wait until the whole rule is finished, you simply have to wait until the whole rule is finished
@Ladislav What if it was rule: [s: some digit e: (value: copy/part s e)] and you have two in a sequence in compound-rule which tries to defer [rule rule]. Waiting would get you the same value twice, based on the latter execution's assignment.
Predictable execution? Well it would do what it did. Useful? I dunno.
If you capture the state of the context at the time the paren was first seen... but I just sort of operate on assumptions like that if there exist primitives like NOW then it's only generally possible if you capture the state of the universe. But Rebol is free to not be a functional programming language, so it doesn't have to "think like that"
@HostileFork " if there exist primitives like NOW" - does not matter. I can transform my example so that it prints not only the trace but also the time when it was matched, in Rebol it is quite trivial, in fact.
@Ladislav Well I wasn't saying your example didn't work, or couldn't be made to work. I was talking about an idea parse trying to generalize it with a keyword like DEFER that rather than executing paren code immediately saved it in a stack until the end of the rule being matched... then ran all the saved parens at the end of the match.
It would require sensitivity in the sub-rule to the context in which it was run. But I guess that's already the case, usually.
You'd have to save a fair amount of state to make it useful, and even if you saved state (like variables containing parse positions) so that the code could do the captures as intended, you'd be foiled by modifiers. Basically the whole parse system you were using would have to know about the DEFER and not do anything to mess it up
@Ladislav It could be interesting. I don't know if it would please attribute-grammar-functional-programming purists who are perhaps most looking into the feature. But they might not be the audience anyway.
However, @paultarvydas may well be just unaccustomed to Parse needing some more experience to find out that it can do nearly anything (Turing complete, and highly convenient/addictive, as I see it)
@HostileFork , Something I think should be in the works, a set of parse exercises to solve in a tutorial aimed at building up a more complete understanding of the power and flexibility of it.
I'm quite limited with it, but would love to have something guided like that to work through
@johnk @kealist It's a good idea. Ages ago when I was going through my learning curve with parse I did a tutorial (Rebol 2). I think when the learning curve is fresh in your mind, you have a good idea what other people will want to know.
@brett @kealist As a starting point it would be great to update your tutorial to rebol 3 parse. I copied and pasted the page into etherpad which allows collaborative editing (with history)