@HostileFork (Off topic I do not in any language.)
After coming weekend I hope things will be getting back to "normal" at home. I lost my macs in the battle for space at home and I will be focussing on using and expanding REN-C on Ubuntu Linux mainly.
So if :x can be used to fetch VOID!s, and GET returns VOID! for unset variables in Redbol, and /x is only needed for getting true nulls (of which there aren't any in Redbol's mentality), then that's at least somewhat compatible.
Though that means if you say unset 'foo in Redbol, you are actually setting the variable to void! :-/
while [x] [... x: try next x] ; (1)
while [:x] [... x: next x] ; (2) how you had to do it w/o the TRY before
while [/x] [... x: next x] ; (3) how you'd do it w/o the TRY in new proposal
I actually think (3) looks better than (2), and you don't have to hit the shift key to get it. If GET-WORD! errors on nulls, it has the benefit of really conveying that what you're doing here is dealing with a variable that may be null...not just trying to avoid a function call. It ties together the /optionality of a refinement with the optionality of a variable more generally.
@rgchris with ISSUE! returning to ANY-STRING! status, do you see value in #iss/ue being the string "iss/ue" as an issue, as opposed to a PATH!...similar to FILE!'s embedded slash policy?
Hrrm. So I guess compose 'a/((first [:b/c]))/d should be willing to make that a/b/c/d? e.g. splicing should drop off the GET- from the spliced path. If you just said compose 'a/(first [:b/c])/d that would be an error, because you can't put paths-in-paths under the emerging rules.