1 hour later…
05:25
@HostileFork Does this also apply to tuple! ? In a sense a pair! is also a couple of values in a (short) serie.
05:55
@iArnold There is a mechanical issue with PAIR! that is annoying, namely that the cell size for a pair is the same size as that for an INTEGER! or FLOAT!/DECIMAL!. Because the cell size is the same, you can't actually put two full integers or decimals in the size of one cell. This meant that the integers/floats in pairs are lossy and inconsistent with the numbers you put in them. You do not get the same in and out.
Doing series low-level design, it was possible and desirable to make a kind of node that could encode two values, occupy the same pool size as the heavily used and recycled REBSER (frequently allocated and freed size, "hot"), and also be responsive to garbage collection.
It's not necessary to change PAIR! from being "ANY-"IMMEDIATE! to take advantage of the redesign, preserve the precision, and avoid all the pointless semantic weirdness of why you didn't get the same numbers out that you put in. The choice is independent.
However, if PAIR! is something that is substantially cheaper than a series of length 2 and can hold two arbitrary values--just no position--then for some definition of "substantially cheaper" that can be very interesting. And I happen to believe it meets the bar of substantially cheaper and interesting.
So cheap that MAP! can be an index over PAIR! of key and value, and that additions and removals to maps do not need to rehash data--only indices. And find some-map key can give back a PAIR! with the key and the value, in such a way that the key may be accessed and modifying the value changes the map.
For that matter, maps could even share key/value pairs. There's a lot that can be done, although really the impetus isn't so much user-facing features, rather what having a pair of values that can GC minus a series node overhead--yet which fits in a series node--can offer the implementation.
@iArnold That doesn't really answer your question, and especially not about TUPLE!, which I think is nearly useless in its current conception--and even Red has shifted to hex for colors. So it seems to me that rethinking dots and their role would be worthwhile. All of this is about rethinking, and the PAIR! change is mostly just to see if anyone noticed that in addition to the bugs regarding loss of precision and type fixed
7 hours later…
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