« first day (2112 days earlier)      last day (1668 days later) » 

17:19
@HostileFork I just noticed that you removed /no-set from REDUCE, which we depend on: make gob! reduce/no-set [offset: calculate-offset]
I think I'm gonna bring it back
 
3 hours later…
20:10
@ShixinZeng Could you switch those to COMPOSE? make gob! compose [offset: (calculate-offset)] seems clearer to me. I have a plan of sorts for an extensible reduce, a kind of REDUCE-EACH...
20:41
@HostileFork I guess we can. It just requires a lot of mechanical changes. Let's see what other people think about it.
red> help reduce
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl

USAGE:
    reduce value /into out

DESCRIPTION:
     Returns a copy of a block, evaluating all expressions.
     reduce is of type: native!

ARGUMENTS:
     value  [any-type!]

REFINEMENTS:
     /into => Put results in out block, instead of creating a new block.
         out  [any-block!] => Target block for results, when /into is used.
@ShixinZeng There's nothing particularly "wrong" with it, but it's not in Red, and I feel that it's challenging as it is to keep the core stuff "clean"... and I can think of lots of other ways you might want to have partial reduction in a block processing besides that, so it could use a more general answer. But reduce-no-set as a native that did just that would be fine.
Just wouldn't be in the box, necessarily.
Got it. Just trying to minimize the changes to our scripts
20:52
@ShixinZeng I want to make it possible to "augment" functions with refinements easily, but that's tricky... but in any case, I do intend to offer an easy way to write reduce-no-set in usermode at not too terrible a cost.
So basically, this reduce-no-set would still be using the data stack
And thus, making the right sized series from the start, for instance
So if you add back in a reduce-no-set in native code that meets your needs, it and its variants would have an easier way to be written...but again, some of the goal is to make the "extension" authoring just like writing new natives.
So it's not like it would hurt to have a native implementation of reduce-no-set, as it would not hurt for any other thing you felt like speeding up
I do think it would be interesting if, as in your TCC example, we got to the point of foo: function [x] { PARAM(1, x); ... return R_OUT; } or whatever.
@HostileFork I thought about embedding TCC and allowing user to write natives
It's a good idea
C as the "Red/System"
Has its advantages.
I think it's neat that, even with all the tricks for specific binding as such, and the C++ build, that TCC is still not ruled out. Though I found out... it doesn't support inlining.
So if you say inline, it ignores you and does a function call anyway
Here's my changes to bring back "reduce/no-set":
--- a/src/core/n-reduce.c
+++ b/src/core/n-reduce.c
@@ -41,6 +41,7 @@
REBOOL Reduce_Any_Array_Throws(
REBVAL *out,
REBVAL *any_array,
+ REBOOL no_set,
REBOOL into
) {
REBDSP dsp_orig = DSP;
@@ -50,6 +51,11 @@ REBOOL Reduce_Any_Array_Throws(

while (NOT_END(e.value)) {
UPDATE_EXPRESSION_START(&e); // informs the error delivery better
+ if (no_set && IS_SET_WORD(e.value)) {
+ DS_PUSH(e.value);
+ FETCH_NEXT_ONLY_MAYBE_END(&e);
+ continue;
+ }

REBVAL reduced;
But, I think that, just being strategic about which things get turned into macros (already being done to make the debug build not suck too badly) could be pushed a bit further to see what's needed for the TCC build to un-inline
@ShixinZeng Yup. Fine with me.
To enable user-mode natives, we need to embed the processed header files and direct TCC to look for it
21:00
Yup, to make it one exe it would have to extract the TCC includes for the C language also
Basically I'm thinking Rebol with TCC linked into it
And it might not have to extract them, there could be somewhere it could be virtual
then I wonder how would debug those user-mode natives?
And skip the filesystem altogether
Yep, not sure if TCC can look for header from memory
Well, you'd end up debugging the generated source. It wouldn't say foo: function [x] {some c code} ... that would split up into some table and then a REBEXTENSION(some_extension, foo) {some c code}. You'd be debugging the latter.
Something like that.
You'd have to debug that in GDB or MSVC or whatever
is GDB able to debug generated source code?
21:10
It doesn't know what generated source code is.
As far as its concerned, the generated source is its source.
So as long as you don't delete the file you generate, the debugger will find it.
well, this generated source could only be in the memory
Could be. Well, I do imagine the C preprocessor that does macro expansions and such has some notation for indicating original lines...because you can debug things that have come from macro expansions and still hit the right lines
So assuming it's modular, and you don't have to use any particular preprocessor, that line marking is probably a feature
Yep
All right, gotta go
K, ttyl... I gotta go too, try out my new hiking boots :-)

« first day (2112 days earlier)      last day (1668 days later) »