12:33
Which I would almost agree with except for one problem.
append "abc" "def" ... there is no /only there. If splicing isn't the default, what does it mean to not splice non-structural series?
That discomfort made me think that splicing sort of has to be the default, and suppression is the right answer.
As the "need for suppression" became a rational thing, in spirit, I wanted to make it actually rational.
Which turned me from an enemy of /ONLY to its biggest fan, under conditions.
It's an uphill battle in a language used by 20 mostly non-English speakers. And I don't mean that in a disparaging sense, I find a lot of inspiration and cleverness in the cult (else why noodle around in here so often?) But I'm a metrics and numbers person also. I want it to be fun, and explainable, and I don't want to stop every 5 seconds and say "It doesn't make sense, just learn it.", because I talk to a lot of smart people and they demand good design if they are to care.
Attention spans are shrinking, every failure counts.
I want ammunition in my explanations.
It does not help when people are emptying my arsenal, and @kennycoc kind of hit the nail on the head with his comment.
2 days ago, by
kennycoc I know my opinion doesn't mean much, but "because language x that we make no claim to be compatible with doesn't do this we won't either" is never a valid reason. It's not so much that he is against making func safe or having multiline comments that bothers me. It would be perfectly fine if there was a valid reason for it, but when you are defining a new language, that is the time to think about these design choices logically and decide what the best choice really is.
On a more positive note, having used JavaScript for my transparency and accountability mega-time-sink, I can say it's garbage by comparison. We know this.
So the question of the day is: "Why are people using garbage?" I think I have some answers. @DocKimbel has told me that he thinks Rebol failed to drive adoption in a timely manner due to a lack of a freedom-based policy; open development, open source, and if Carl had played his cards better it would be Rebol in the browser and not JS.
I'm certain he is right that the failure to see the necessity of open source and open process was an absolute death sentence. That's 100% provably true and we continue to see that the weakness in process on the rebol/rebol GitHub repo is killing innovation as the clock ticks--thankfully red/red isn't suffering that fate.
But I'm not certain that success would have been guaranteed by being open, I do think that details matter... icons, marketing, REFORM REMOLD REJOIN FUNCT and anything making your language look like garbage.
People are ready to jump on my blackhighlighter website for minor details (and I value the feedback, @earl and @GrahamChiu). But that homepage was built in 24 hours and it BLOWS ANY REBOL OR RED WEBSITE THAT EXISTS OUT OF THE WATER.
"Brian, please" => "you're welcome"
@DocKimbel is tying my hands; he won't sort the I/O and let me make a video telling a personal story about a dungeon game I played on the Intellivision, and a funny attempt to recreate it in ASCII for Red that can be compiled from any platform to any other. That's another "I did it in an evening" tinker. I think it could be told, and I'm willing to work on it and follow it through.
(in that scene, I'm Jerry, and @DocKimbel is Rod. :-P)