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1:32 AM
This is pretty cool, old Amstrad emulator compiled to WebAssembly runs a demo that downloads and starts running what feels like instantly. Webpage includes some detailed explanations. More evidence that targeting WebAssembly and then making the JS integration smooth is a good plan.
 
 
4 hours later…
5:21 AM
posted on January 06, 2019 by hostilefork

This changes PATH! to no longer be an ANY-SERIES! type. This means it cannot be operated on with series operations like APPEND, and it can't be traversed to give new positions into paths with things like NEXT or SKIP. However, other operations like LENGTH OF, PICK, and FOR-EACH continue to work. Because there's no way to change them, ANY-PATH! is also immutable. This means that a path c

 
 
3 hours later…
8:29 AM
@HostileFork to "finish" that will need some years... ;-)
 
 
2 hours later…
10:42 AM
posted on January 06, 2019 by noreply

The past year It has been a tough year 2018, filled with roller-coasters and instability. The constant dropping of the crypto markets has forced us to change our plans pretty much every three months, in order to cope with that market uncertainty and our diminishing means. Though we have taken measures to ensure the proper funding for Red project for the next few years, so no worries on that si

 
11:19 AM
The plans for 2019: https://www.red-lang.org/2019/01/full-steam-ahead.html
 
 
2 hours later…
1:18 PM
Relocating to Europe? "Must be too hard to get a Green card for a Red team!". ;-)
 
 
2 hours later…
3:47 PM
Still would like to do a Redbol conference 'stateside—preferably east coast again :)
Not even a big production per Montreal, just a chance for our folks to congregate and compare notes.
2
(still only costs $40 each way on Amtrak NYC <-> Philly which covers a few of us, bus is even cheaper)
 
 
2 hours later…
5:25 PM
@rgchris I'd be up for it, maybe try and merge it with some other computing meetup thing around in the area with people who might be interested. I'll likely be in the northeast at some point this year one way or another.
 
5:53 PM
If you consider /foo to be a 2-element path with a blank at the head and a word in the second position, what would be a good operator for easily extracting the word? You could have REFINEMENT? be a test for the pattern, and then REFINEMENT-WORD as an extractor. But it seems to me that a terser operator which gave you the word or null would be better. like refined-of '/foo giving the WORD! foo and refined-of 10 giving null.
As a sidenote, PARSE doesn't seem to have a one-stop way of checking the type of the thing you passed into it. You can say parse (reduce [x]) [ahead path! into [blank! word!] end] but it there's no "outof" complement to INTO for talking about the type of the series-like thing you passed in.
 
@rgchris Florida isn't so bad either
 
parse try match path! x [blank! word! end] isn't bad, I guess.
@kealist Right precisely now, for people used to northeast winters, maybe not. :-)
 
6:18 PM
@kealist Has its virtues, I suppose. Would like to snag some of the college peeps around here though (Rebol featured briefly in a CS class at UPenn not so long ago).
I am technically a UPenn employee too. Just.
 
So work hums along on PATH! variants that are leading-slashed (x: '/usr/local) and tail-slashed (y: 'local/bin/) and both (z: '/usr/local/bin/). Blanks just don't render in paths, so that's a matter of whether there's a blank at the head or tail. You can also do a///b///c or whatever.
When thinking about the merging policies of such things for NewPath purposes, a question comes up on the meaning of these...for instance, if something is head-slashed, should you not be able to put it anywhere other than the head of a path merge? So you avoid errors like /usr/local/usr/local where someone has mistakenly used a path relative to root incorrectly?
Annoyingly, Windows puts drive letters and other things there, so to take advantage of any policies of this kind people would have to say /C:/Projects/ren-c or whatever.
You get significant benefit by folding what we call a REFINEMENT! today in with this. It falls under the checks that prevent the insertion of paths-under-paths. You don't end up with some bizarre special-case handling for things like with "paths that have refinements at the head". And refinements were already "immutable" so they fit right in with the new rules.
@rgchris If you can think of some ideal seasonal time and an arrangement perhaps with the CS department then it would be good to sort of slowly edge a plan into being. Ideally it would be after some amount of Internet Buzz; e.g. perhaps with the tutorial getting a little bit of hackernews-style attention, and then include a little ad there with "hey we're having a conference!" and see if it could snag people within some radius.
Maybe have the ad worked in as a tutorial step after they've worked through it a little...making people enter a Rebol DATE! value and some strings, where it's about the conference.
 
 
2 hours later…
8:26 PM
@HostileFork Doesn't the lexer interpret that as a [blank! url!] path?
 
@MarkI I guess it would.
 
I have made the change in my rebol-lexer.reb that would interpret the C: as a set-word!.
You can put urls in paths indirectly.
 
I think in the long tail of things, we should focus more on URLs and less on Windows filesystem junk. Don't want to make too many concessions there.
 
 
1 hour later…
9:39 PM
^-- My point above regarding NewPath was that, I'm thinking, file-to-local '/usr/local/('/usr/local) might should be an error, while file-to-local '/usr/local/('usr/local) would be legal. It would be nice if we could have features that actually improved coherence instead of making things more confusing. I think the current pathing by and large makes things harder to understand.
We have an interesting real-life testbed for NewPath: rebmake. It has path issues in spades. It's somewhat derived from CMake, where the path handling is also maddening. In fact, I think it's safe to say that basically no shell scripting system I've seen does it well.
 

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