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01:37
@ShixinZeng I'm speaking pretty abstractly, so if you've thought about it any more concretely and can sort of lay out a version of "you couldn't do this"...with code...it might help clarify the situation.
01:49
For anyone wanting to read it, Red preprocessor documentation
02:15
While Rebol is not compiled as a whole, that is not to say it couldn't be preprocessed, say at LOAD-time. So an #if false [...] would be run once and then vanish. But I guess I'd have to see examples of how it knows when something is a literal #if vs. an inert value.
@HostileFork You can take a look at the father of all of Red's preprocessing here
@MarkI [text](url)
Thx, I was getting there!
Well if there are any improvements or changes that should be applied to that, perhaps we can get a working Red-like compatible variant that runs in Ren-C. I'm still trying to figure out the precise mechanics of how read-only-ness is done in the source, because the LOAD phase is a time where you want to operate directly on the data. So it seems the lockdown would happen there, not in the "make block from string" or whatever the fundamental scanner interface is.
 
2 hours later…
04:23
posted on November 05, 2016 by HelloIAm

[Hacker News] Red Programming Language Gets Macros (1 point)

 
9 hours later…
13:25
@RebolBot print mold [1
2 3
4]
@giuliolunati What are you trying to say?
MOLD'ing a block remembers where are inserted newlines, so mold [1 2 3] is different from mold [1
2
3] ... I wonder where that information is stored.... and if is user-accessible at rebol level
^--- @HostileFork @MarkI ?
>> help new-line
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
USAGE:
    NEW-LINE position value /all /skip size

DESCRIPTION:
    Sets or clears the new-line marker within a block or paren.
    NEW-LINE is a native value.

ARGUMENTS:
    position -- Position to change marker (modified) (block! paren!)
    value -- Set TRUE for newline

REFINEMENTS:
    /all -- Set/clear marker to end of series
    /skip -- Set/clear marker periodically to the end of the series
        size (integer!)
@giuliolunati ^--- See new-line? for testing if it is set. It is stored in the block's item pointer.
13:35
Oh, thanks... so no way to replicate mold at user-level? :-/
@giuliolunati Sorry, I updated my post too slowly :(. Yes, user mold is possible.
Very well! Thank you!
 
1 hour later…
14:45
@giuliolunati Also too:
2
A: How can I turn on a word's new-line state in Rebol?

rgchrisSeemingly the new-line state is assigned to the word based on whether the assigned value has a preceding new-line at the time of assignment (I'll ruminate on the correctness of that statement for a while). This function reassigns the same value (should retain context) to the word with a new new-...

@rgchris I still haven't had the time to go back and finish that SO question! I was so happy I could now post here I forgot all about it. Thanks for reminding me.
@MarkI It is curious how my functions there work, would be good to get the full story. I recall asking once whether new line state could be relied upon for, say, determining intent within a dialect to which @BrianH cautioned against it. That Red now mimics that to the point where my functions in that answer work there too suggests that maybe it is a consideration. Maybe.
(it'd be pretty fudgy to implement a dialect where new line state was a determinant unless it were exposed to PARSE)
@RebolBot
expand-br: func [block][
    forall block [
        if new-line? block [block: insert block 'br]
    ]
    block
]
expand-br [a b
c
d e f]
15:08
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== [a b br
    c br
    d e f
]
(ok, didn't like tags!)
@redbot
expand-br: func [block][
    forall block [
        if new-line? block [block: insert block 'BR]
    ]
    block
]
expand-br [a b
c
d e f]
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== [BR a BR b BR
    c BR
    d BR e BR f
]
Ok, FORALL must work differently in Red.
Never mind, NEW-LINE? was broken in Red until recently.
 
3 hours later…
18:33
@rgchris Note that the system feels free to muck with the new-line bit, e.g. stripping it from paths; I'd say it's not a guaranteed user-controlled piece of info.
The semantics of the bit on copying and other things are also not well-defined.
 
2 hours later…
20:06
@rgchris Stared at the source for a few seconds (fun fun fun, sys-value.h, learning new stuff finally) and it's clear that LINE is an option on a value, not on a position in a block type. Why that is true, is a different question, which I would enjoy finding the answer to, but in the meantime I can only say that when that option is set or cleared is ... less clear.
@DarekNędza
@rebolbot
zipper: function [
a [series!]
b [series!]
/local c
][
c: make block! 10000
until [
either not tail? a [append c first a][append c none]
either not tail? b [append c first b][append b none]
a: next a
b: next b
all [tail? a tail? b]
]
c
]

a: [1 4 7]
b: [2 5 9 10]
zipper a b
; Brought to you by: try.rebol.nl
== [1 2 4 5 7 9 none 10]
20:19
@HostileFork, dumb question from a sys-value.h noob, but, seems to me Rebol can change to a 21-bit uchar (i.e., change REBUNI), a 24-bit, or even a 32-bit uchar (which is unnecessary, but may be more efficient), without changing the size of a value (including the) header. Can you easily confirm this suspicion?
As in, as far as you have seen a REBUNI is always found inside a union with something 32-bits wide.
 
2 hours later…
22:02
@MarkI As far as I've seen, yes.
Except, perhaps obviously, the slots in strings that are 1-byte or 2-bytes wide.
22:18
@HostileFork Exactly. You have anticipated my next question. Doesn't the series mechanism allow for arbitrary SERIES_WIDTHs, that in a block series is just a series with (element) width 16 (bytes)? So widths of 3 or 4 bytes would not be difficult.
@MarkI No, but given the desire to reclaim space eventually and such I am more persuaded by the UTF-8 everywhere argument.
22:34
The main problem with the UTF-8 everywhere application to Rebol is that every series position is an iterator. A string position could store both the character offset and the byte offset for performance on BACK and NEXT, but if the string is mutable that could become invalid.
The properties would be even wonkier than today's wonky string behavior if changed out from under it.
22:46
posted on November 05, 2016 by giuliolunati

m: module [][f: func [] [x: 1 return 1]] m/f causes segmentation fault Note: 3 factors are necessary: in module + non-existing x var + return

23:20
@HostileFork Sure, I was just checking that there is nothing that would make running a quick test on the efficiency of a 3-byte-wide series impossible.

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