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10:52
>> m: make map! [a 2] pick m 'a
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== 2
@HostileFork ^--- this fails in ren/c
11:12
^--- while m/a returns 2 -- Is the difference intentional or a bug, @HostileFork ?
@HostileFork sorry, forget all that ---^, I must use select, not pick .... shame on me.
 
2 hours later…
13:16
@HostileFork About RL_API, what table are you talking about?
@ShixinZeng Look at %reb-lib.h
I'm not sure what the point of doing it that way is.
It's more like a C++ object, so it puts things in a namespace, but then it uses macros in a global namespace to pick them out again.
I don't see the point either
I don't see any of those macros being used, are they?
They are what's supposed to be used by clients of the API, because the actual RL_XXX functions aren't supposed to be defined there...
So internal to the core, you call RL_Foo_Bar, but if you're an API client you're supposed to call RL_FOO_BAR
Again, for mysterious reasons that do not seem to be explained.
> The REBOL API provides common API functions needed by the Host-Kit and also by REBOL extension modules. This interface is commonly referred to as "reb-lib".

There are two methods of linking to this code:

Direct calls as you would use functions within any DLL.
Indirect calls through a set of macros (that use a structure pointer to the library.)
but does that provide any benefits?
It would make sense if there were for some reason more than one implementation, and you wanted to generalize code and parameterize it somehow.
Where Rebol is an interface of some kind, and you would run-time swap in different runtimes... or write code generalized to use more than one runtime.
13:31
right, but there is only one implementation
it's like to implement object inheritance in C
Or rather c++-like virtual functions
Yup. Well, as far as I'm concerned, it seems to not have much of a point besides namespacing, which you only get if it's the client who initializes a global variable with the name they want for the API and make your calls through the variable...but then you have to worry about exporting that variable around.
13:46
I guess another advantage would be you could use a DLL from a different version and it could defer failure until runtime when you used a routine that was no longer offered, as opposed to failing at compile time. So your wrong-version'd code could appear to work up until you hit use of that failing routine.
Whether this is a bug or a feature may be in the eye of the beholder.
Well, you could get that as well just by leaving the routine in for ordinary linkage, as opposed to leaving a gap in the table.
14:26
>> random [a b c]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== [b a c]
"Random" of an integer picks an integer from that range. I'd suggest "random" of a block should pick an element from the block, while "shuffle" should be what reorders it.
Alternately, random of a block should take a "random dialect" which describes the distribution of random numbers, or multiple sets, etc.
Either way, it shouldn't be modifying the block.
 
3 hours later…
17:03
>> parse [a a b a c] [some [ 'a | ['b break]] 'a 'c]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
Could anybody explain to me why the above didn't return TRUE? I thought "BREAK" would break out of SOME when it sees "b", and then "'a 'c" should match the remaining input "a c".
@ShixinZeng I think break just breaks a list of options via |
break meant "this rule did not match, and don't try any more options", so you get a result like some ['a | ['b 'unmatchable]]
I had some naming quibbles with break, continue, accept, reject--and while I don't remember my proposal offhand, it did involve changing them around some.
17:26
@HostileFork I am reading the doc, and it says BREAK is for loop
red> parse [a a b a c] [some [ 'a | ['b break]] 'a 'c]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
>> parse [a b a c][some ['a | 'b break] 'a 'c]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
The break just breaks out of the container, not up to the containing looping form.
Red broke^H^H^H^H^Hfixed that.
Er, wait, sorry.
>> parse [a a b a c][some ['a | 'b break] 'a 'c]
17:32
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
>> parse [a a b a c][some ['a | ['b break]] 'a 'c]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
OK, I was right, sorry for apologizing :)
@MarkI Thanks
Np.
17:35
but this makes BREAK in rebol less useful
You need to articulate your rules differently sometimes, I agree.
Should always be possible though.
@ShixinZeng Agreed, considering it makes BREAK a synonym for ACCEPT
@HostileFork I am trying to fix a bug in tets/test-framwork.r. If the interpreter crashes, it fails to parse the existing log file.
@HostileFork That makes sense to me, when you break it is always true, so it is an accepting form.
Presumably Red makes another distinction there?
@HostileFork where is ACCEPT in PARSE documented?
17:40
@ShixinZeng Nowhere. Internal synonym only, apparently; maybe different in Red.
@ShixinZeng There was one line of documentation in the PARSE project wiki which may or may not have come back online, but repeated here... referencing an example in UNTIL but there wasn't one.
@ShixinZeng There is one line "new in R3, synonym for break" on en.wikibooks.org/wiki/REBOL_Programming/Language_Features/Parse/…
@HostileFork @MarkI Thanks. I'll take a look
It seems that the spectrum of what is needed:
* reject the current option in an option list and go on to the next one
* accept the current option in an option list
* to reject an entire option list (or single rule)
* to break a loop and consider it a match
* to continue a loop by starting the match over (only useful if you modified the series or state somehow?)
I dunno. BREAK and CONTINUE do seem to be loop-oriented words, so I think parse <whatever> [break] being an error seems reasonable.
red> parse "whatever" [break]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
17:50
>> parse [a b] ['a _ 'b]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: _
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [a b] ['a _ 'b]
>> parse [a b] ['a none 'b]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
So a none/blank in the rule is ignored?
>> parse compose [a (none) b] ['a none 'b]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
17:53
how to match a NONE input?
@ShixinZeng You should be able to do it in Ren-C with lit _, but that doesn't seem to work.
@HostileFork right, I tried that, and here is the trace output:
--> parse
Parse input: 'a
Parse match: a
Parse input: _
Parse match: _
Parse input: 'b
Parse match: _
<-- parse == false
== false
Looks like it didn't advance the rule in the lit blank case
I think you meant "advance the INPUT"? because it did advance the rule to 'b.
@HostileFork so a blank/NONE should match a lit none or ignored?
@ShixinZeng lit none is the literal word none, e.g. 'none ... and the goal for Ren-C is none [1 = 2 | 3 = 4] => true, so it's not going to mean what it means in R3-Alpha. But I would say that lit _ should match in PARSE
>> parse compose [a (none) b] ['a lit #[none] 'b]
18:07
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: lit
** Where: parse
** Near: parse compose [a (none) b] ['a lit none 'b]
@HostileFork understood.
@HostileFork in Ren-C, it's like:
parse compose [a (_) b] ['a lit _ 'b]
--> parse
Parse input: 'a
Parse match: a
Parse input: &void
Parse match: _
<-- parse == false
== false
You shouldn't have to do a compose, as _ is a literal BLANK! not a word.
So compose [a (_) b] and [a _ b] should be the same thing.
@HostileFork cool
And blanks are considered valid values for compose, while voids dissolve... (and failed IFs return void, SWITCH that doesn't match, CASE that falls through, etc.)
So it seems that lit _ in the rule is compiled into a VOID?
18:15
LIT just seems to not work right, in R3-Alpha either, so it just seems to need to be looked at.
>> parse [3] [lit 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: lit
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [3] [lit 3]
red> parse [3] [lit 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
*** Script Error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: lit
*** Where: parse
*** Stack: do-console all not unset? set do _execute if all not unset? set do parse
@HostileFork R3-Alpha doesn't even seem to recognize lit in PARSE
Hm, I seem to remember it from the parse project.
But perhaps never implemented.
18:17
OK
I thought it was, otherwise how would you match a literal number, like a 3, then?
>> parse [3] [3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-end.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - unexpected end of rule after: 3
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [3] [3]
>> parse [3] [lit 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: lit
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [3] [lit 3]
18:19
Just not implemented it seems. Hm.
I actually kind of liked the idea of blanks meaning "match anything", so parse [a b c] ['a _ 'c] => true, but there's some advantage to it being a no-op if you want to null out a rule. And it's a bit less obvious if you say [(rule: all [1 = 2 | 'x]) 'a rule 'b] and then that matches an arbitrary thing in the middle.
So I guess I'd say that the guidance on what blanks mean should come from that context.
From that, it almost seems like the blanked rule should be a fail...like blanks match nothing. Then empty blocks can just mean no-op and keep matching.
@RebolBot
foo: func [x [integer!] y [string!]] []
foo 10
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-no-arg.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: foo is missing its y argument
** Where:
** Near: try load/all join %/users/try-REBOL/data/ system/script/args...
@RebolBot
foo: func [x [integer!] y [string!]] []
foo "hello"
@HostileFork What do you mean?
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-expect-arg.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: foo does not allow string! for its x argument
** Where:
** Near: try load/all join %/users/try-REBOL/data/ system/script/args...
So I've found a way to make it no less performant (in non-erroring cases) to check the number of arguments and then the types, as opposed to checking the types as you go along in the enumeration. This means the above would both say "foo is missing its y argument" as the first error to be hit.
(If a type error is found in mid-parameter evaluation, it swaps out the function to be dispatched to be an Erroring Argument Function, hence there's no extra flag to check in the non-error case, because it was going to dispatch the function anyway.)
Assuming there is no currently-unknown-to-me technical reason anyone (@MarkI, @rgchris, etc.) can think of why this change would be any worse, there's a known-to-me-technical reason why it is better.
19:04
>> parse [3] [1 1 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
That's how you get a literal 3 parsed.
:-/ That should require at least saying 3 skip.
red> parse [3] [1 1 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
*** Script Error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: 3
*** Where: parse
*** Stack: do-console all not unset? set do _execute if all not unset? set do parse
@HostileFork Er, no.
19:05
Er, oh, backwards.
I knew that :)
But still, bad.
SKIP has its own weirdnesses also.
19:17
@MarkI So here is one reason to favor consuming all N of your arguments before starting on type errors: github.com/metaeducation/ren-c/issues/255
But how to apply that to variadics. :-(
A variadic argument error may have to appear to originate from the function that defined the variadic parameter... not the location that ends up TAKE-ing it.
@HostileFork Your proposal is in general impossible. Consider [b: 2 add (b: :negate 2) b].
@MarkI What is impossible about that?
19:36
You must evaluate the first argument to ADD before it becomes possible to see if the second argument is complete.
I didn't say not to evaluate them. I said not to give type errors until after all the evaluations had been done, and you'd done any necessary arity erroring.
OK, wrong fish kettle then :/
@HostileFork All I can say about your proposal then is that prioritizing arity errors will never prevent wasted evaluations, unlike the way it is now.
Well arity-checking is a relatively limited protocol (although complicated by variadics), but parameter checking is something that can expand into kind of arbitrary pre-conditions, range-checking, etc. Trying to build in the current type-checking convention leaves a lot of questions open and asks a lot of the definition of the evaluator.
If type checking came after the arity checking, it could be modeled as happening after the function had started running. Hence, it could be more easily extended and rethought.
This would remove it from the MAKE FUNCTION! definition, as RETURN was removed and layered on by FUNC/PROC
Anyway, I just figured out how to reverse the order without costing anything extra (such as a second pass of enumerating the arguments to type check them). They're still checked on the first pass, and there's no "did it fail" flag to run special behavior that successful calls wind up checking.
Could wind up being important but before worrying about that the module/usertypes/virtual-binding/etc. concerns have to be sorted out, and I am still kind of stuck on figuring out how to attack it all.
20:03
@HostileFork I think you have to look at it from a non-library-writing perspective. The "wasted evaluations" I mentioned are not no-ops. In fact, as is obvious to anyone, they can even obscure the type error right out of existence:
>> b: does [b: does [1] 'seven] print [mold try [add b b] newline mold b]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
make error! [
    code: 305
    type: 'Script
    id: 'expect-arg
    arg1: 'add
    arg2: 'value1
    arg3: word!
    near: [try [add b b] newline mold b]
    where: [try print try do either either either -apply-]
]
1
Point being, in an interpreted world, stopping evaluation "as soon as you know something is wrong" is proper, to help the user.
@MarkI Well there's no time travel, so semantically you can't go back and change an already evaluated-and-stored REBVAL in a frame to not be an error.
@HostileFork Right (I think), but how it got that way can be wastefully further obscured by performing any more evaluations.
Well, imperative programming has that character to it in general.
20:09
So, don't make it worse?
Design is tradeoffs, so it depends on if the benefit outweighs the consequence.
In this case, the consequence of dealing more or less with what you are dealing with already; e.g. it's not doing some large scale paradigm-breaking flaw where that flaw was not existing before.
It is making unavoidable flaws avoidably worse.
Call that a trade-off if you like.
How about I file that as "thank you for bringing up an issue, that's worth noting". And yes, it is a tradeoff.
But to bring up a change that I think has been quite the success, allowing SET-WORDs to be the target of void evaluations and thus unset is one.
And although here and there, trapping an accidental storage of "no value at all" to a variable had value, in the grand picture of things it wasn't helping all that much considering what an irritation it was...especially when voids became a more common meta value that couldn't be stored in blocks.
And the slew of "variables holding a value you didn't want it to" cases... a string where you wanted an integer, or whatever, stopping those assignments really wasn't doing many favors in the code.
@HostileFork Thank you for not dismissing the concern.
20:31
>> parse [3] [quote 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
Ah, maybe it's QUOTE I was thinking of... misremembered as LIT.
parse [3] [lit 3]
1: parse : function! [input rules /case]
--> parse
Parse input: &void
Parse match: 3
<-- parse == false
== false
So this should raise an error in Ren-C, right?
>> parse [3] [lit 3]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: lit
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [3] [lit 3]
@ShixinZeng Yes, unknown keywords should raise errors.
20:34
So, it's a bug in Ren-C
Looks to be. I'll see why it's not erroring.
>> parse [a _ b] ['a quote _ 'b]
1: parse : function! [input rules /case]
--> parse
Parse input: 'a
Parse match: a
Parse input: 'b
Parse match: b
<-- parse == true
== true
Interestingly, the match of _ is not shown in trace
@ShixinZeng Thanks! I did not see that keyword yet.
Why does QUOTE in PARSE evaluate its argument if it's a GROUP! (?)
That seems like the opposite of QUOTE.
20:54
>> parse [(a)] [quote (a)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-no-value.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: a has no value
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [(a)] [quote (a)]
>> parse [(a)] [quote (quote (a))]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
@ShixinZeng The parse tracing doesn't seem to be hooked in generically to every point that might match. I've mentioned that the parse code is kind of bit-twiddling spaghetti code; which means it doesn't do very good error checking. Red's approach seems more sane.
OK. I've actually never looked at the PARSE implementation
21:02
>> parse [(1 + 2)] [quote (1 + 2)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
>> parse [3] [quote (1 + 2)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
red> parse [(1 + 2)] [quote (1 + 2)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
21:03
If you want to match an evaluation, that shouldn't be named "quote"
Agreed
>> parse [3] [do [1 + 2]]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
; rebol.com/r3/docs/errors/script-parse-rule.html
    *** ERROR
** Script error: PARSE - invalid rule or usage of rule: +
** Where: parse
** Near: parse [3] [do [1 + 2]]
In Ren-C, it crashes:
>> parse [3] [do [1 + 2]]
r3-core: /home/zsx/r3-dev/make/../src/include/sys-stack.h:416: Drop_Chunk_Of_Values: Assertion `!opt_head || CHUNK_FROM_VALUES(opt_head) == chunk' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
red> parse [3] [do [1 + 2]]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
Well, it shouldn't be hard to make that work, if that's the desired syntax.
21:11
I don't know, I just found the keyword do
Though I had some ideas about GET-BLOCK! and GET-GROUP! w.r.t. parse
It seems to be trying to do the input, not the ensuing rule.
>> parse [print "Hi"] [do]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
Hi
== false
red> parse [print "Hi"] [do]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
>> parse [print "Hi" print "Is it a DO/NEXT or a DO"] [do]
21:14
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
Hi
== false
According to trello.com/c/mu0XLDwm/36-do, it seems I was misinterpreting do
>> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer!]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== true
>> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer!] print ["result:" result]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
result: 1
red> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer!] print ["result:" result]
21:18
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
*** Script Error: result has no value
*** Where: print
*** Stack: do-console all not unset? set do _execute if all not unset? set do print
red> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer! (print ["result:" result])]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== false
@ShixinZeng I imagine that DO was considered useful for making dialects in PARSE. It has some other undocumented things like DO INTO and DO SKIP and DO QUOTE. Anyway, for now, here's a change for the error reporting and QUOTE
@HostileFork just checked out the commit, and it looks good
Going home, TTYL
22:17
RT @vasudevram: Post: Red-Lang: Live-coding of a clock demo, EVE-style: http://jugad2.blogspot.in/2016/10/red-lang-live-coding-of-clock-demo-eve.html #RedLang #programming #EveLang #animation
As described DO in PARSE is odd but interesting...but it doesn't work in R3-Alpha. I can make it work as described, for whatever that is worth.
22:49
Apparently those "undocumented things" are things you don't have to use a block for. So do skip doesn't call into rule recursion, but do [skip] would, with the same effect.
red> parse "a" [copy foo thru skip (print foo)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
a
== true
>> parse "a" [copy foo thru skip (print foo)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl

== false
Um, what did you expect THRU SKIP to do? Looks like it just does a SKIP in Red, not great IMO, and it errors in Rebol because it doesn't make sense.
>> parse "a" [copy foo skip (print foo)]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
a
== true
23:07
@HostileFork Also, DO works fine in R3 Alpha. Could you please demonstrate a counterexample?
The example given from the parse project wiki does not work, as demo'd by Shixin above.
The SET example of @ShixinZeng above just shows that the result of the DO does not replace the input.
The parse project wiki is wrong if it supposed to change the input.
>> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer!] print ["result:" result]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
result: 1
Should be 2
23:09
>> parse [1 + 1] [set result do 2] print ["result:" result]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
result: 1
see ... it is 2
The DO does the input, but does not replace it.
That's not useful.
Replacing the input is almost always not what the user intended to do.
If you're going through the input, parsing it and then picking out some part of it to run an evaluation, you almost certainly want to have a way of getting the result of that evaluation.
23:11
If you're you, maybe!
I'm not sure what this hypothetical code is for which you want to evaluate input using DO, which says [1 + 1], and have it produce a 2 you have no way of accessing.
You can easily access it.
>> parse [((1 + 1))] [copy result [do 2] (print ["result:" do result])]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
result: 2
== true
You mean, "you have no way of accessing it without doing it again", which is a valid gripe, I guess.
Uh, that also changed the input. If you're going to change everything then why use parse at all.
23:15
Interestingly, it does remove the outer parentheses pairs, if there are any.
That DID NOT CHANGE THE INPUT.
x: 1 + 1. See, I got the 2, too
Please read what you are saying.
parse [1 + 1] [stuff involving do and set or copy]
>> x: [1 + 1] parse x [copy result do 2 (print do result)] print mold x
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
2
[1 + 1]
23:17
Does not change the input, I say again.
Misc on Rebol Parse Project: The Trello
Purpose: Putting REBOL code in your dialects. Block parse dialect only. Syntax: DO rule At the current parse position, a single expression of REBOL code will be evaluated, using the algorith...
✍ 1 comment
>> x: [((((1 + 1))))] parse x [copy result do 2 (print mold do result)] print mold x
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
2
[((((1 + 1))))]
> parse [1 + 1] [set result do integer!]

Should evaluate the expression "1 + 1" and set the word 'RESULT to the resulting value (2). The PARSE cursor should be advanced after the expression (i.e. to the tail of the block, in this case).
>> x: [((((1 + 1))))] parse x [copy result do 2 (print mold result)] print mold x
23:19
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
[((((1 + 1))))]
[((((1 + 1))))]
Ah, it doesn't do any removal of parentheses, the PRINT did that, sorry.
The specification and I both agree that the sensible behavior is to evaluate to 2.
If we are to buy into the idea that this is a good idea in the first place.
23:32
I think it is simply a bug in SET, or don't use SET with DO, here is your example with COPY:
>> parse [1 + 1] [copy result do integer!] print ["result:" result]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
result: 1 + 1
Very definitely a bug in SET. Your example as written sets RESULT to an integer!. So it is intended to work as you say, and COPY does work as it should.
Fair enough.
23:55
I think I still think & should probably be used for characters, given the overuse of #...the precedent of HTML entities...and the overall unlikeliness of & ever being embraced as a favorable character in words. first "abc" = &a and third "AT&T" = &amp are more graceful than first "abc" = #"a" and third "AT&T" = #"&".
And having that HTML entity table in the interpreter to use for decoding, it could then be made available through a native or some other means, which would be useful.

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