For error handling use TRY and test the result:
>> err: try [read http://localhost]
** Access error: protocol error: "Timeout"
>> if all [error? err err/id = 'protocol err/arg1 = "Timeout"] ["Got a timeout."]
== "Got a timeout."
@rgchris I don't think that one would be easy to delete. We could all symbolically downvote it. I just did. But SO doesn't like to go with deletion of historical things like that, just really bad questions.
I successfully triggered deletion of two really bad ones, like "Is Rebol dead?", but there was no useful information or discussion on those. So the deletion was approved by other moderators. Don't see that happening when there are that many answers.
@onetom Here be dragons. Simply put, the lexer/parser is hand-optimized code, not generated by a formal system. When you hit issues like this, then you understand what @rgchris and @earl and I are griping about... and why we have the desire to get this stuff hammered out in a more formal way.
Having syntax compatibility across Rebol and Red helps in most every conceivable scenario.
Red's grammar is currently laid out via Rebol PARSE rules, in red/lexer.r. Rebol's scanner is currently ...
To do: Hex-valued literal notation (Rebol has none, Red uses FFh, FFFFh, FFFFFFFFh)
I'm creating a dynamic variable ("Variable variable" in PHP parlance) with the following:
foo: "test1"
set to-word (rejoin [foo "_result_data"]) array 5
But how do I get the value of the resulting variable named "test1_result_data" dynamically? I tried the following:
probe to-word (rejoin [f...
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-not-defined.html
>> foo: "test1" set to-word (rejoin [foo "_result_data"]) array 5
*** ERROR
** Script error: test1_result_data word is not bound to a context
** Where: set
** Near: set to-word (rejoin [foo "_result_data"]) array 5
I respond to these commands Note: [] means optional input or shows expected datatype, (|) means choice: (do|do/2|do/red|do/boron) expression "evaluates Rebol/Rebol-like expression in a sandboxed interpreter" (hi|hello|goodnight|goodbye|bye|[good][night|morning|afternoon|evening]) some-text "returns a greeting to the user who greeted bot" cc id "retrieves curecode data" delete [ loud ] "in reply to a bot message will delete if in time" do/ideone which-lang [word! string! integer!] expression "evaluates a source expression for the specified language"
@GrahamChiu that's what i keep saying. it's impossible to get familiar with git :P unlike with darcs for example... even if git sticks, it sticks like dirty: u want to get rid of it...
@kealist Easier to get it to the top of the list if we downvote the one we don't like. :-) But there are anti-gaming algorithms on that sort of thing. I do however think that was an irrationally over-upvoted question that should have been closed earlier.
@GrahamChiu I think I'm going to edit the industrial automation talk. It's kind of a big deal that this company we'd never heard of has like 7 Rebol programmers and automates stuff at Dannon etc. I'll try and be faster with it. I took a relatively long time with the "What is Red" because I feel there needed to be something on the web like that... and @DocKimbel sometimes gets on a grumpy note with me thinking that I spend too much time on Rebol when in his mind "the writing is on the wall"...
I'm certain he sees my Saphirion debates as a sort of Don Quixote thing, like "why are you bothering". But I just have a different angle on it.
In Rebol 3, the following code will work (This comes with help from @PeterAWood):
foo: "test1"
set load (rejoin [foo "_result_data"]) array 5
do (rejoin [foo "_result_data"])
@GrahamChiu I want to write a drop-in Rebol replacement for an already used tool that has a sucky implementation. But it does seem that as I look at this, one keeps hitting little weird edges.
@kealist The Rebmu talk is the best one though. :-)
I'd like to fairly soon see a rebol.net which uses the RebolBot database to feed a clone of the chat here, and aggregates goings on... a hub... and I will provide hosting for rebmu.rebol.net
I don't understand why we don't have a recode.rebol.net ready to go. :-/
I'm sure @rgchris is ready for quartermaster.rebol.net, @earl is ready for downloads.rebol.org, we supposedly aren't far from help.rebol.org but we just have to move these things along
@kealist We were already a bit tired by the second Red talk, I'll have to review the material, but again: remember, I wasn't in charge. I'm working with what I have and I would really rather be coding or seeing this other progress happening. The automation talk is my likely next target.
@GrahamChiu last time i checked it was just very slightly "harder", but it's true it doesnt have any installer like git. i was thinking maybe it would worth to make one with rebol...
As your example code is REBOL 2, you can use GET to obtain the value of the word:
>> get to-word (rejoin [foo "_result_data"])
== [none none none none none]
REBOL 3 handles contexts differently from REBOL 2. So when creating a new word you will need to handle it's context explicitly otherwise ...
@sqlab I will try lookup with r3 on my RasPi later. This is the modification of Carl`s tcp-serve.reb script I will use: server/awake: func [event] [ if event/type = 'accept [new-client first event/port] if event/type = 'lookup [probe event/port] false ]
Atm I'm playing with Carl's basic tcp test scripts and would like to know: "How to get the IP-Address of clients connecting to the server?"
Any ideas? I tried to probe a client subport at the server-side but it doesn't show the remote-ip.
Can someone give me hints on gathering that information....
@HostileFork I wasn't suggesting deletion, just that we find a way to get some votes behind the questions we do care about. And to do it the right way, by having the people that know rebol and red and have accounts here vote on worthy questions/answers based on merit. It's evident that if a reasonable question receives only one or two votes that not everyone here is checking the Q/A.
We have all the questions and answers flowing through chat, it's a minor diversion to assess them as they come in, applying votes and the odd comment as appropriate. Each vote/comment (or indeed question or answer) adds value to the resource.
I'm not absolutely certain if this is the case, but it appears Rebol 3's 'bind doesn't alter the word, rather creates a new word, which means you'd need to set 'target again:
@RebolBot do wd: to word! "false" bind wd system/contexts/user type? get wd ; doesn't work
[Comment] I agree with changing the default, but how about calling the new option /by instead? This would be more helpful when you do multi-level splitting, where the value you're splitting by would be an array compatible dimensions block, rather than a select compatible record size.
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> val: "false" bind? 'val
== RESULT is an object of value:
system object! [product version build platform license catal...
do-error none! none
none none! none
do-commands block! length: 0
browse function! Open web browser to a URL or local file.
func function! Defines a user function with given spec and b...
target unset! none
url! datatype! uniform resource locator or identifier
Here's something that requires at least Rebol 3:
func [
"Create an object based on some words and values."
words [any-word! block!] "Word or block of words"
values [any-type!] "Value or block of values"
/local object
][
object: make object! either block? words [length? words]...
frame is a REBSER. Somehow something that should be a series/object-class value is being proxied into a logic! by SET_OBJECT, if I'm reading this correctly. :-/
Should be easy to catch in a debugger, I don't have one set up at the moment
@SoleSoul Just saying that one can quickly browse, go read the context surrounding, etc. Some people feel that it's hard to catch up, and that the unstructured nature of the chat doesn't file everything away under a topic. I say it shouldn't have to, and there are these other ways.
Cya
So why is it that chemical weapons are worse than killing people with guns and tanks, again?
@HostileFork I suspect the binding problem is in attempting to bind new words when they don't exist in any context (and Rebol 3 doesn't like that). But if that was the case, you would have received errors. Need a more succinct framing of that problem...
I can't get my head around the last result. I would think that set or bind would take an unbound word and set or bind it. Maybe set is just supposed to be for modification rather than creation?
and a bound word has to have a context first? It still just bugs me that I can type a word and it is automatically bound but can't generate a word that is bound
I think I just don't know the higher level ideas behind why it's useful to not bind a word when it is created. Maybe that's a better direction to research
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> source intern
intern: make function! [[
{Imports (internalize) words and their values from the lib into the user context.}
data [block! any-word!] "Word or block of words to be added (deeply)"
/local index usr
][
index: 1 + length? usr: system/contexts/user
data: bind/new :data usr
resolve/only usr lib index
:data
]]
Binding doesn't add words to the context, unless you tell it to - you have to use bind/new.
>> get bind/new to-word "email?" bind? 'system
But your question shows a couple misconceptions about the R3 binding model. There is no single global context in R3, not like R2. The word 'system in your ...
But to get back to the point (bind)—'intern uses bind/new to add a word to a context. Don't fully understand how 'resolve works, but this function is where the 'load magic occurs.
Hmm, right. What Brian said :)
(I don't fully understand 'resolve, but it's clear that's how values migrate from the 'system context to the 'user context)
I think that this stuff, because it is not understood very well, doesn't get the same level of scrutiny that other pieces of the system do. bind? seems very obviously the wrong name, for instance, and I'm surprised I didn't know about bound? until today
I'm playing with REBOL 2.101.0.2.5 under Mac OS X 10.6.8.
I created a simple module file (test.r) to test and ask a different question:
REBOL [
type: module
exports: [
external-method
]
]
internal-method: func [ arg ] [
print join {Internal method with arg: } arg
]
ext...
@kealist You'd have to use BIND/new for the last example. BIND doesn't by default extend an context with slots for words not already contained in that context.
I'm playing with REBOL 2.101.0.2.5 (Build 26-Feb-2013/18:15:30) under Mac OS X 10.6.8.
I created a simple module file (test.r) to test and ask a different question:
REBOL [
type: module
exports: [
external-method
]
]
internal-method: func [ arg ] [
print join {Internal ...
@kealist Hmm, that may be a rather difficult point to understand, I fear. "why it's useful to not bind a word when it is created." -- it's not about "usefulness", but about what is possible and/or sensible. In Rebol's dynamic semantics, you don't have a "current context" available during execution. That implies, that when you dynamically create a word with the lowest-level primitives, you simply don't have a useful context available to bind those words to. Therefore they are left unbound.
The alternative would be to bind to one of the "well-known" (global-like) contexts (such as user, lib, or sys). However, that is a somewhat dangerous default, that causes more trouble than it helps.
When you use LOAD, that's exactly what happens: you bind to a well-known context, and are explicit about this binding being ok.
Well, the pains of using a relatively constrained datatype ... :)
Just recently got reminded that the original decision for inverting the alpha channel in RGBA values in R3 was so that opaque colours (alpha 1.0 or 255, usually) in Rebol compare equal to the value with the alpha channel left out. I.e. 100.110.120 = 100.110.120.0.
Well-intentioned, probably, but turned out rather painful in practice.
Same story for the version numbering. Unfortunately, the constraints of tuple! don't allow us anything but numeric components. So no way to have 3.0a42 or 3.0rc1.
So we either state that the whole 3.0.x series is alpha and unstable (and 3.1.x beta?) and that R3 "1.0" will start at 3.2.x. Or we reset to 0.0.0, and start an R3-specific numbering. Or we stay with the current 2.x < 3.0 "cuteness".
In any case, I plan to add more detailed build information to the binaries, to help with more precise identification.
I definitely am increasingly disliking things like to-set-word. It feels like the hyphenated stuff is very user-level-declaration, while the punchy names are "almost" keywords... to set-word! is better.
I'm okay with '-' when used in the right places. I started at first writing Rebol in a sort of camelBack because I found the hyphens distracting, they were too minus-y and bias led me to have a hard time reading the code if I used them to break words.
But as I started thinking of them as a good way to express compound names, not liking things like to-set-word follows in a way, because it's taking this very common operation and making it look like a user declared variable or function.
@earl We're just trying to figure out the guiding rationale here. :-)
New plan for all Rebol functions: contract them, add a T on the end, and an /only refinement. If they return anything other than unset, end in a question mark. I think we're onto something.
Well, I think for true consistency we should flip this around, because modifying routines in Ruby or whatever end in exclamation points. So let's use the ampersands on types.
And we never settled the port! naming problem, so it would be streamlike&
If Carl would just grow some facial hair and get a Hawaiian shirt, it would do wonders for the adoption. We all know: no facial hair means no language success. @DocKimbel, get working on that beard.