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1 hour later…
6:56 AM
@Feeds (Warning personal opinion ahead) Boy that is a bad way to address the readers of the blog.
 
@iArnold Solving AI and cryptographic protocols of the future? It's a pretty long list for that 1.0 release. I'm amazed they find the time what with the 64-bit support, multithreading, file I/O, and bootstrap...
I guess if you solve AI then it can write the rest.
 
7:19 AM
@HostileFork There are many days until "soon(TM)", time enough. ;-)
And despite all, 64 bit? That is not a priority right?
 
@iArnold Everyone knows the best AIs run on 8-bit
 
Yep, dusting off my C64 and Sharp MZ800 again.
 
7:49 AM
Well I seem to have made a little bit of progress on the asynchronous error front. While there is definitely a limit to how much time I want to spend mucking with the R3-Alpha device and port code, there's something to be said for having such a large sprawling bunch of "stuff" to use as a backdrop for thinking about cool Rebol and API applications.
 
 
3 hours later…
10:33 AM
@iArnold If you would ready channels properly, thought not fully publicly communicated, I was quite surprised first 64 bit stuff is coming till the end of the year ....
 
 
2 hours later…
12:49 PM
posted on September 16, 2019 by @hostilefork Brian Dickens

@hostilefork wrote: There is something called an AWAIT handler, which is essentially a callback on a PORT! to tell you about events that have happened. I don't want to get too deep into the R3-Alpha port model, but something has always bugged me about the naming of the events you get back when a particular asynchronous READ or WRITE has happened. That'

 
 
1 hour later…
1:51 PM
r3-alpha>> length? read/part %test.c 100000
== 963
Hrmph. So as with COPY/PART, Rebol does truly treat /PART as a "suggestion". This means you always have to check if you care.
At the moment the "match dialect" (used by MATCH and ENSURE and friends) given an INTEGER! checks the length. So you can say ensure text! second [<a> "b"] or ensure 2 [<a> "b"]. That could help casual cases of this.
 
 
2 hours later…
3:51 PM
Yet another reason interpreting (a)/b/c as a PATH! and not (a) /b /c is important: the API, because when you are splicing you can say rebValue("(", obj, ")/b/c"). The interpretation of rebValue(obj, "/b/c") is by necessity different--commas separate items.
 
4:26 PM
With my skepticism of Rebol decorations being typically useful in the DELIMIT (/SPACED/UNSPACED/PRINT) dialect, and with ISSUE! returning to ANY-STRING!, I wonder if print [#foo "bar" "baz" #mumble] could cue non-delimiting behavior, e.g. foobar bazmumble.
 
 
1 hour later…
5:42 PM
@HostileFork If I had a C variable v holding a word, as if from v = rebValue("x") but not knowing that its name is "x", is there a way to splice its set-word form into an expression?
^-- What's inside the quotes of the rebValue expression above is a single quote followed by a single letter x. Stupid chat is TERRIBLE with code! Or, maybe it is I that am terrible.
Anyway, that kind of points out the whole issue (pun not intended) of how to splice in words of various forms.
 
6:32 PM
@pekr zager and evans in the year 2525..
 
 
4 hours later…
10:02 PM
@HostileFork sorry I don't helped, was beyond my understanding ...
 
 
1 hour later…
11:25 PM
@MarkI rebElide("reeval setify", rebQ(v), "1020"). if you do this often you could memoize it. void * rebxSetifyR(REBVAL *v) { return rebR(rebValue("reeval setify", rebQ(v)); }
I don't want to bake too much of this in but make sure parts are there that if something becomes a bottleneck you can keep pushing on it to remove that.
Caching a premade CHAIN and invoking the function by pointer vs a scanned and bound name should get you speed.
 

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