@Morwenn Yup, basically that's what I'm thinking. Just wondering if there's any better way. Rebol has all these macros, and one option would be to say "just use inline functions" but part of the puzzle here is writing something weird. It doesn't make much sense to be writing something weird if we aren't compiling the weird though.
So I'd like to see us build for a platform which doesn't have inline functions...
Return<int> is convertible to int, Parameter<int> can be constructed from int and is convertible to int. Double conversions are not allowed by the language. That's settled.
Thanks for the upvotes guys. This is all kinda new to me so I'll probably be in lurker mode a while yet. I'm pleasantly surprised by both the level of activity/engagement here, and the "Rebol spirit" that comes through clearly in both the conversation and technical direction.
@Ashley Glad to hear it. If you want to read some high points, or general notes, the "starred posts" at right can walk you through some history. If you click on the link icon at the left of a message, you can jump to read a conversation in context.
Chat supports basic markdown constructs. So in the above I had typed: [the "starred posts" at right](http://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/info/291/rebol-and-red/?tab=stars). Two asterisks for **bold** (bold) and one asterisk for *italic* (italic)
The main thing I've been hmmming over is this issue of whether to ease up on the demands NewPath has where it would turn every %foo/baz/bar into a path and then depend on evaluation to make element 1 a FILE!, then stringify baz and append /baz, and then stringify bar and append that... or to let it be a prefixed string literal as today.
I don't know about the dates. My original thought was that in path dispatch, if a date! saw a TIME! as the next value in the path it would evaluate to pick them both up.
Hm, you'd think FILE! would be more popular for doing short string literal appends. append "abc" %def is one character fewer than append "abc" "def" or append {abc} {def}
In fact, I was just thinking the other day, with all these types I'm supporting in the lexer, I doubt if the kind of coding I want to use Rebol for would use more than 3. I'm all about utypes and language extensions, and I can't wait ...
Well, I've had a pretty grueling time of trying to pick apart my pending "big changes" into manageable bits. Each time I think I've got a manageable bit I find out it depends on something that depends on something that needs to be checked in first.
So... I need to rest a bit and then I'll attack it again. Got to get ahead back to the point where new features are coming online.
@MarkI Thanks :-) Yes, it is a pain. But hopefully it will pay off here in a bit.
Hoping it's not too long before the definitionally scoped returns and custom OP!s are in, but there's some less flashy stuff to do first. Tomorrow, tomorrow. Nite!
@MarkI +1. I think this approach is part of what I called "PredictablePath" before. But as this approach never got specified, it's all handwavy. So I very much appreciate your progress towards rigour.
@MarkI I think I'd prefer (2) [slashes-stop-in-paths] slightly over (3) [slash-grabbing-paths] (and (2) without the "some other separator" variant). I strongly agree that this cleanup is necessary.
@earl I don't like it if %foo/baz/bar is a FILE! and foo/%baz/bar is either a 3-element PATH! with a %baz in the middle or a 2-element path with %baz/bar as the second element, so if we are to lean to a world where %foo/baz/bar is still a FILE! as today then I would say foo/%baz/bar should just be illegal.
This is "natural" level lexical syntax. I don't understand what a statement like "Either you allow file in paths, or you don't" means. That's like having a string and saying "either you allow quotes in strings or you don't"
You use escaping, it's contextual, and if you're entering source there are ways you do it to avoid ambiguities and keep the source sensible.
The fact is that when you are looking at foo/%baz/bar, whatever you decide to write up in a manual, someone looking at that (myself included, if not especially, aware of the discussion) feels it is ambiguous. You really shouldn't have to go look up a rulebook to decide what that is.
So disallowing it and making you write something blatant and obviously clear is better than picking one half of the ambiguity and saying "we'll go with that"
I'd be for it stopping if %foo/baz/bar were a 3-element path. It would make sense.
Then %foo/baz/bar is a 3-element path, foo/%baz/bar is a 3-element path, and foo/baz/%bar is a 3-element path.
If you mess with that, you need to adapt accordingly to keep people from having a jumbled mess in their heads. And in Rebol, the fact that 1 + 2 * 3 requires you to get out the rulebook for OP! and not the rulebook for + or * specifically is the nature of having a rulebook that is small and strategic for what it needs to be.
Those should be legal, but they might not be the structure you want in a dialect.
I see no reason to disallow %"foo"/bar or %"foo/baz"/bar or %{foo}/bar or %{foo/baz}/bar (pending my understanding of percent-encoding of things like spaces, which in my view doesn't belong in Rebol at all when you can use spaces there).
And for construction syntax, also legal file!{foo}/bar and file!{foo/baz}/bar, possibly with quotes as well.
I keep thinking I can patch in some piece of work, and then it unwinds until I realize it actually depends on another piece, and the aggregate of putting in all the pieces destabilizes things too much, so I have to revert out and go put the smaller piece in isolated.
Also, just a note: the latest Catch builds have been enhanced and support expressions such as CHECK( 1 + 2 == 2 + 1 ); which weren't supported before :)
@HostileFork I have some doubts. I changed some statements to expressions since CHECK_THROWS_AS requires an expression (at least in the doc) and I hope it didn't beak anything.
Well, I will let you handle it anyway. See you later :)
That seems a bit confusing with parse ["foo" # "bar"] ["foo" none "bar"]. I guess the general "re-use words already taken by Rebol" principle is overriding there.
If void happens maybe it would make more sense?
parse ["foo" "bar"] ["foo" void "bar"]
As parsing for unsets would be more rare, we'd assume, and void is not tied so intrinsically to a specific type more the notion of "nothing to say here, no op"
@earl Yup (attempt to shift a word that could mean anything and mean something more specific, though it really needs to thus print the phrase "panic" when dumping said errors for that to be finished)
Didn't completely originally choose the term, as the codes were RP_ (rebol panic) so I went with it.
Panic() is now a macro that will assert, so if you're in a debug build it doesn't just exit and lose your state...
I had edited your question for "clarity" and changed it to say 'was removed'. That made it sound like it was a deliberate decision. Yet it actually turns out it may just not have been implemented.
BUT if anyone asks me, I don't think it should be in the box...and not just because it's a lousy ...
Wonder how hard that RegEx compiler would be to write. The idea of a "block" input to RegEx is curious... like capture groups using parens. So however their notation goes, being able to have the matching of the parens taken care of by the Rebol parser, as well as using literal parens in strings.
I don't read RegEx, but: (abc|def)=\g{1} matches abc=abc or def=def, but not abc=def or def=abc.
Hmmm, they use backslash in their language for things besides escaping. :-(
But language-wise, you could say that parentheses with an integer is how you refer to a capture group. [("abc" | "def") "=" (1)].
A good first start might be a Rebolified-RegEx to RegEx-string compiler, to get the dialect hammered out and complete. Once that's done, try compiling it to PARSE.
I like the idea of the primitives just assuming you want a transformation to a parse rule, vs having additional functionality themselves... though the leaking of variables in parse rules is a problem. Is there a USE, planned or implemented?
You are free to do what you like, though note I was trying to make it possible for the generated makefile to be used to make make between linux and windows in the same directory
But after getting fed up with that, I added a .gitignore rule and just keep multiple make-* directories
I also think about renaming makefile.boot back to plain makefile, and use a longer name for the generated makefiles. Such as makefile.local, or something. Or maybe r3-<target>.mk.
@earl Also, in at least one travis test, the Rebol pulled to do the bootstrap make should be one from rebol.com so we keep things stable-like until conscious decision to break it.
I also think about renaming makefile.boot back to plain makefile, and use a longer name for the generated makefiles. Such as makefile.local, or something. Or maybe r3-<target>.mk.
Well by that token, one might be able to leave a CMakeLists.txt in the directory as well and go in it and type "cmake" also.
Though it might confuse IDEs. I don't know how well File->Open CMakeLists.txt could work in something like Qt Creator if you opened the bootstrap file.
And perhaps that's some of why not to do what you're suggesting. I think that being more clear about there being a generation process (again, my ideal being done via everything generated from a .reb in the directory as the sole checked in file) is some chance that when a makefile/CMakeLists.txt shows up that it be "sane-seeming".
Also, it means that the make directory isn't cluttered with things you're not going to use. So if you plan to build Rebol and don't plan to install GNU make on your system at all, you don't have to live with a version control tracked makefile sullying the directory...
As a working Rebol3 is a prerequisite to the build, we are envisioning a world where it is the only prerequisite, so I think it would be nice to inch closer to that now.
It adds the value of when we reach this point I convince you we put a Rebol script in that directory to replace it instead of going backwards. :-)
Reminded of a story about a question where there was this guy who found pieces of driftwood, and would carve and whittle them into animals...working within the constraint of how weird the wood was that he found to make that animal. So he had the before and after pictures of the process, and it was very detailed and such.
So someone was interviewing him and showing his process, and there was a question like "how can you do that? it's so amazing, to turn the driftwood into an owl/orca/ocelot (or whatever he had made)"
His answer was to the effect of: "Well, I look at the driftwood. And everything that doesn't look like an owl, I cut that part off."
I think that's a fairly universal principle of design. :-)
Here we go: Travis CI now tests building Linux/x86, Linux/x64, Windows/x86, and Windows/x64. Linux/x64 is built with and without NDEBUG, all other builds are NDEBUG=1.
@earl Very cool. Over the long term, the only thing I'll say of the NDEBUG=1 is that whatever build it is that runs the tests should do so without defining NDEBUG, when we're at that point.
If you've got any build checking that release builds, it's probably not necessary for both a release and debug 64-bit linux build. Just a debug one would cut down on the build churn in the "be nice to Travis" dept.
Then maybe run test on release 32-bit and debug 64-bit linux and consider that to be likely coverage of the core issues.
Yup. Just thinking out loud that were it me, I'd say strike release Linux/x64...and run test suite on debug Linux/x64 and release Linux/x86 (when we flip that on)
And probably do Windows/x86 as debug
Then that makes sure one 32-bit build is run through debug #ifdefs and one isn't, and same for 64-bit builds.
This pull request incorporates all (except one) missing changes that were previously applied to mainline rebol/rebol but up to now missing from Atronix (and then mostly removed from Ren/C during the Atronix merge). The following three pull requests were missing completely: rebol/rebol#186 (BrianHawley/fix-2109-function-local-not-at-end) rebol/rebol#198 (BrianHawley/wish-2121-no-return-re…
This pull request incorporates all (except one) missing changes that were previously applied to mainline rebol/rebol but up to now missing from Atronix (and then mostly removed from Ren/C during the Atronix merge). The following three pull requests were missing completely: rebol/rebol#186 (BrianHawley/fix-2109-function-local-not-at-end) rebol/rebol#198 (BrianHawley/wish-2121-no-return-re…
@earl I don't know what the timing gap is between when the TCC build is a "Rebol with TCC build" and today's build-with-tcc. And if it's a "Rebol-with-TCC-build" then it would be done as a step inside of an existing platform configuration, because you'd need to build Rebol first.
So what we probably would do is make the Windows 64-bit build a Rebol-with-TCC build and the Linux 32-bit build a Rebol-with-TCC build
And just add a testing step where they build Rebol.
So the plan on that was to go ahead and make the TCC project a submodule in the extern directory or wherever, and figure out how to make the rebol --tcc act like TCC in processing of its args
And do whatever linker hack-and-slash it takes to make that happen.
Hmm, I think the rebol -tcc thing should be relatively easy; basically just replicating TCCs main (which is relatively short) inside Rebol. Any ideas about what to do with the required headers?
First idea was embed them compressed and find the part in TCC where it looks for files, if it's an internal header then don't go to the filesystem to get it
The other idea was to dump all the internal headers to some temp directory in the filesystem
Or to offer the option letting you say where to put them and not try the splice
@MarkI In terms of prescriptivism I think that one area Rebol actually has a chance to help with would be to set a standard (or agree with the UNIX standard) that files use forward slashes. Allowing either is just asking to be part of the great divergence.
@MarkI I'd like to see support for more ISO8601-style dates added (as does @rgchris, IIRC). Specifically: 2015-01-01T20:45:00. That would then also work in paths.
@MarkI It seems the whole encoding thing needs to be given a review. People have expressed displeasure with the percent encoding issues with URLs. There needs to be a straight story on it, and I imagine that whatever the story is is what happens to FILE! too.
I prefer braced strings to quoted ones, and I prefer spaces to percents, so %{/Users/Brian/My Folder/File With Spaces.png} is the sort of default I'd want to be looking at.
That's the case that should be optimized for.
And matched to the case of %/usr/local/bin/we-know-better/than-to-put/spaces-in-filenames.tar.gz
Because I don't particularly care for %"foo bar" being different from %{foo bar}
In any case, this all seems like something that can have various pins put in it and then the design is what is left over when the pins are down. The main thing from my point of view is the shift to giving URL! a similar treatment to FILE! and doing so via @. Then letting NewPath step in to process the non-@ and non-% forms, while letting those have slashes in them and still stay strings.
Compared to that pin, the rest is details.
It means @http://foo/baz/bar is not a PATH! and %/foo/baz/bar isn't either.
Which pushes back a bit to a state of compromise where you're not forced into NewPath if you just wanted a string with a type on it.
Pending further notice, I consider NewPath a critical addition, so that's my stance until I try it and decide I don't actually like it.
So far in conception, I like the idea, so I'll have to see the execution.
There is simply no great or revolutionary leap in development productivity in having another string type. It's nice. But it doesn't knock the ball out of the park.
If you come to the language design table and that's all you've got, it looks meager.
I do hope NewPath works, because a chunk of my belief that the dialecting can get interesting hinges on it.
A lot of it has to do with just not being sold on a lot of the classical examples of what Rebol has looked like. I think @rgchris is painting a good picture with what he's doing, and there's other attempts at literacy. But the build scripts in Rebol itself and the other code in there were what I'd call borderline terrible...(and from the inventor himself!) Much of the other Rebol code I've seen is similarly bad.
And I'd like to think that isn't an indictment of the language or method itself, rather just people being in a hurry.
For me, that generally means people writing less code. And in the Rebolverse, that's supposed to be dialects.
I've just had poor luck with dialecting interesting domains.
Rebmu is the most complex, but it's a dialect for dialecting Rebol code. It's not surprising Rebol is good at that. But I don't want to just dialect Rebol code under the rules Rebol programmers are willing to live under.
You are unlikely to see this pressure coming from the Satisfied Customers like DocKimbel, who thought Rebol2 was more or less what he needed. His complaints were that it's not fast enough (in development timeline or raw performance), not that he was trying a dialect trick and he couldn't do what he wanted in a representation.
In fact, when he does take on a crusade it's something about optimization. Like "there's no way to specify a small integer number in hex for my assembler".
I don't especially like @ as the sigil for URLs, I just can't think of a better one. The good news being that in NewPath, most of the time you wouldn't use it... and you wouldn't want to, because unless you have some very particularly good performance reason you'd rather get the evaluator to run for you.
I don't like % as the sigil for files, but again NewPath offers some hope to maybe even get rid of those a lot of the time.
data: read /usr/local/stuff/thing.dat is something I think should work in NewPath, where a PATH! led with a NONE! in the first slot is rendered like that and evaluates to a FILE!.
Facilitating also data: read /usr/["lo" "cal"]/(reverse "ffuts")/thing.dat
@Morwenn You'd have to quote it and do to-file, assuming read was only able to take FILE! and not written to take a path and do it for you. data: read to-file 'some/relative/path
TO-FILE of a PATH! could do evaluation, and as it's a path it should be bound so that you could pass it to something that could also decide to do the evaluation.
@earl Well it shouldn't ignore it, so it should error if it doesn't process it.
Or should you be able to invoke more than one script, or if that's your intention use a --do which lets you switch over to explicit management of ordering.
@earl Another idea on the builds, to do gnu89 and gnu99 on the linux builds, then maybe c++98 and c++11 on the Windows builds?
@iceflow19 Among the many issues is that really, FILE! is supposed to be a "tinkertoy" part. Another kind of string. So %foo can mean something in your dialect.
@HostileFork Well if want it as a tinkertoy part then we not just leave as that? Make %blah of a file! type. Have it be non grabby, and allow it to be composed with other file!'s, and when it comes time to actually use it to access a filesystem resource require that at their root they have a %:// or file:// scheme.
Treat it like any old word in a path. foo/%bar/baz (Having 3 elements)
My initial idea was to have %foo/baz/bar be 3 elements, and foo/%baz/bar the same
And as we're still talking about options, I might suggest that it's not the end of the world if you want a path to need to use quotes. %"foo/baz/bar" and %{foo/baz/bar} aren't terrible.
Especially when you consider full paths under NewPath are considering that if you start with just a / then you get a NONE! first element which cues it to evaluate to a FILE!
So it would just be relative paths that would have the quoting burden.
And same for URL!. It's only the tricky URLs where you don't want paths that you quote.
While I think its nice that we have the three datatypes file! path! and url! The syntactic overlap between them make it a mess when we try use them with path! (acting as a swiss army knife). In my mind you either have three options, converge them, diverge them or escape them.
It's an interesting concept to push them to be more word like in their rules, and then think of them as "needing construction syntax to break those rules"
And just having a particularly short form construction syntax. %{...} %"..." @{...} @"..."
Combined with a bet that most of the time you'd prefer to use "full FILE!" or "full URL!" instead of fragments, you might get away with a PATH! a lot of the time, as in the original NewPath intention.
But things like parentheses, as above, aren't legal naturals in words...while they may be used unescaped in URLs.
Rebol source would still be clean, but people looking at the data in the Ren/JSON-competitor format would be displeased that all the path-like % and @ have additional delimiters.
The thing being all of this, as @earl says, banks on NewPath. No NewPath, no point.
[Bug] Currently, the interpreter tries to parse _all_ command-line arguments as arguments to the interpreter. See the example code for a few example cases. Example cases (1), (2), and (3), in combination, are arguably bugs. The bug being, that there must be a way to pass arguments of every shape (OS limitations notwithstanding) to a script. Otherwise, making Rebol scripts fit nicely into other…
Well, question from a dialecting standpoint, does file fragments offer anything beyond what a word or a path can offer? Or is the only thing it offers the fact that you have an extra sigil?