@hostilefork wrote: A lot of influencing factors have changed over time. Before making another major change, I want to run through the history of reasoning and look for any gaps, given modern understandings...in case some turn was taken that we would not take again given what kinds of things we know now. To that extent, I'm going to somewhat "sanitize…
>> append/dup [a b c] [d e] 2 == [a b c d e d e] >> append/dup [a b c] [d e] if false [2] == [a b c d e] >> apd: :append/dup == make action! [[series value dup /part /only /line] [...]] >> apd [a b c] [d e] 2 == [a b c d e d e] >> apd [a b c] [d e] if false [2] == [a b c d e]
@hostilefork wrote: If I've done my due diligence in reasoning through a world where NULL is normalized, then being able to have your code assert places where you did't expect a NULL is pretty important. Once upon a time, this was called ENSURE: >> append x ensure select [a 10 b 20] 'c ** Error: e.g. "Couldn't ENSURE you had a value, it was NULL"…
Certain invisibles seem to have trouble when non-word! precedes them, e.g. ASSERT: >> x: 1 reduce [x (assert [true])] == [1] >> reduce [1 (assert [true])] Assertion failed: kind.byte == REB_WORD, file C:\Projects\ren-c\src\core\c-eval.c, line 2341 For some reason, ELIDE does not have this problem: >> reduce [1 (elide [true])] == [1] The 0-arity "NIHIL" invisible gets anot…
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