Forgive the hijack, Room 291. I'd like to publish some stuff so you guys can review it and I'll check back later tonight.
Please let me post these 42 messages consecutively, thanks!
Here is a dissertation on the hierarchy of the lexical components of the Rebol 3 language.
I have chosen to focus on the value side of the lexical scanning process, rather than on the lexical forms themselves.
Thus the non-elidable contents of scripts are LEXEMES, rather than lexical forms. This has two consequences in practice.
The first is that lexemes can correspond 1-1 with Rebol datatypes; this may be uncommon, but it still eases comprehension.
The second is that lexemes usually have multiple lexical forms, each of which MAY span the entire result datatype range.
I have also avoided using Rebol datatype names even when the correspondence is 1-1, since values are not forms.
Every UTF-8-encoded Rebol script consists of elidably-spaced lexemes. There are 29 different lexemes.
Of these 29, one results in no value (1-1 the Rebol comment); the remaining 28 all result in exactly one Rebol value.
Comments are TERTIARY lexemes, and the other 28 are PRIMARY lexemes. (There are no SECONDARY lexemes. Yet.)
Primary lexemes are AGGREGATE if they can contain other lexemes (7 lexemes), and ISOLATE (21 lexemes) otherwise.
Aggregate lexemes are STRUCTURAL if they can contain any other lexeme, especially tertiary lexemes (3 lexemes).
One subcategory of structural is CONVERTER (1-1 the Rebol construct); it can result in one of 39 (/56) Rebol values.
Aggregate lexemes are LINEAL if they restrict which lexemes they can contain, particularly other aggregates (4 lexemes).
Isolate lexemes break down into 3 sub-categories; NUMERIC (9 lexemes), TEXTUAL (6 lexemes), and MORPHEME (6 lexemes).
Numeric lexemes break into 3 sub-categories; TEMPORAL (2 lexemes), ARITHMETIC (6 lexemes), and CHARACTER (1 lexeme).
Textual lexemes break down into 3 sub-categories; DELIMITED (3 lexemes), INFIXED (2 lexemes), and PREFIXED (1 lexeme).
Aggregate lexemes <--> any-block! plus constructed values
Structural lexemes <--> block!, paren!, and constructed values
Tertiary lexemes <--> Rebol comments
Primary lexemes <-->> any-type!
Lineal lexemes <--> any-path!
Isolate lexemes <--> no Rebol concept, but 'atom' or 'item' might work (anything but non-block, please!)
Temporal lexemes <--> date! and time!
Arithmetic lexemes <--> scalar!, minus time! and char!
Prefixed-textual <--> file!
Morpheme lexemes <--> any-word!
For example, you could talk about "morpheme values", and you wouldn't have to use the kludgy any-word! Rebol term.
Similarly, "lineal" substitutes for any-path!, "primary" for any-type!, and "aggregate" for any-block!.
Numeric lexemes <--> scalar!, plus date!
Character lexemes <--> char!
Textual lexemes <--> any-string! plus binary!
Delimited-textual <--> string!, tag!, and binary!
Aggregate plus textual <--> series!, minus image! and vector!
Infixed-textual <--> email! and url!
If the correspondence between a lexeme category and a Rebol typeset is 1-1, then the lexeme name can be substituted.
(We can ignore the fact that Rebol constructs are aggregate lexemes; if we are talking about values, they are absent.)
Furthermore, this characterization properly reclasses binary! as a string type ("textual"), which it always has been.
Phewf, that was a mouthful. Thanks for being patient!
I also had some weird "retry" messages while I was pasting ... I guess that's the way SO chat works?