@giuliolunati I argue this can be done with predicates, e.g. which predicate you use (reduce /identity [...]) would allow null to vaporize but the default is (reduce /try [...])
@giuliolunati Predicates were the idea that you could specify a function somehow to be the comparison operator in a FIND, or something to do on items in a compose or reduce...like
>> compose /negate [a (1 + 2) b]
== [a -3 b]
It's still being thought about, so don't assume it's set in stone yet...but I've thrown a few experiments in to try.
>> switch 2 /greater? [3 [print "bigger than 3"] 1 [print "bigger than 1"]]
bigger than 1
So what we can do is to say that REDUCE defaults to /TRY and gets you blanks, but if you said REDUCE /IDENTITY and it got NULL it would discard it.
I like this idea instead of making up a billion more natives
But to me the default operator for FIND and SWITCH etc. needs to be the same unless there is a good reason, e.g. /equal? which I guess we are now saying is becoming set in stone as /=