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07:49
Have to paint some doors in the house today. No programming session :-/
08:15
@GrahamChiu We need some documentation desperately soon, to guide us and other newcomers through the REN-C source code. It should be in en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jip_and_Janneke language. The current comments are a) high level English and b) Very technical They are very hard for non native speakers and even for technically skilled persons they have to be up to date with the complex structure already to make perfect sense.
This also applies to some discussions on the rebol.info forum those can be very hard to follow and examples are very abstract or minimalistic in such a way that it is hard to imagine a common usecase where a certain feature will be needed.
08:32
@iArnold uh, why address me? I don't code in C/C++
09:24
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE Did I mention my wife is bipolar? Had our 29th anniversary a couple of days ago, and after all these years, I still find it hard to deal with, so you know full well how the general public tends to react.
09:56
@GrahamChiu Yes, sorry, it was toward the general community here. We need it because we all need to understand more of this if we want to contribute.
 
2 hours later…
11:44
No, you don't. There are MANY areas in which you can contribute that require NO understanding of the C++ code or comments.
There is no need AT ALL to write any C or C++ to contribute, and no-one is asking you to.
Stick to user space, write Rebol, reap rewards, share success.
If you want to write easy-to-understand documents about the Rebol end of Ren-C, go ahead, everyone will thank you. But you don't need to understand or write C to do that.
 
1 hour later…
13:14
@MarkI i don't think you get the point here. We need it because we only have one guy hacking away on the core.
And that one guy freaked out a bit as a result of frustration that he is the only one so no-one relates on the same, or even in the neighborhood, level.
And when contributing on native functions, generics or bugfixes or adding new modules, understanding the structure of the Rebol core is essential knowledge.
And this knowledge is hard to grasp because it now takes a lot of effort and focussed time that the majority of us lack so we stay in user/beginner land. When that would not have to be that if there was a thorough beginners guide about this subject.
@iArnold In my experience these kinds of guides don't really exist. Most guides are pretty shallow with Documentation that has giant holes in it. For programming language development, you just have to dig in and fight with it for the most part
I have to use Material Design Typescript sometimes which seems to be used everywhere, and the documentation is crap
The times I have looked at R3 / Ren-c source code, I didn't know what was going on, but was able to figure out after messing with it and jamming print statements and such here and there
IMO, there is no way to get around it but to spend the time and effort
3
 
4 hours later…
17:00
My point is that HF's comments don't need fixing, or stupidising, or Jip-and-Jannekeing, or whatever you were trying to get at. They are quite simply the best comments I, you, or anyone else has ever or will ever see, and implying otherwise will get me riled up. That is all.
The best defense against something happening to Brian, is Brian, and he's doing it. By writing absolutely first-class comments.
If you want to write something else, write something else. Just don't change any comments, or add any stupid ones.
17:40
@kealist That is a lot of duplicate work for everyone to do. Glad that everybody agrees again. If I did not consider myself to be 1, I would call out "You Rebols!".
@MarkI Bet you are native speaker.
@iArnold You would win that bet. But it can't be helped. It is unfortunate, but the comments need to be precise, and that requires careful writing.
18:49
I know I would win that bet! I don't bet unless I win ;-)
Well the comments are very good, yet it feels some information is missing. Also the annoying github comment that tells the last change on a file instead of the purpose of the file is making things worse for exploring the repo.
19:19
@GrahamChiu A clear picture on this outbreak globalhealthnow.org/2020-02/coronavirus-expert-reality-check
19:32
@iArnold Can you give an example of "the annoying github comment" that are you talking about?
19:43
You obviously have never visited any github repository. For example, what is the purpose of the a-globals.c file in src/core github.com/metaeducation/ren-c/tree/master/src/core ? It says to me 'Delete repetition of Apache License no warranty clause' which is a description of the last collective committed change this file was part of.
This is one thing I REALLY hate about github. (And all the other things I hate about git and github)
It makes exploring the sources a lot harder.
@iArnold Obviously
yeah. obviously :-D
20:51
@iArnold GitHub comments are not about file contents but about the last action taken for a file by the committer. You need to read the file contents to see if anything inside tells you what it's about
So, that would be Carl or Brian who would have written them.
It's nothing to do with Git.
@GrahamChiu I described that. And I say it sucks for exploring the sources. I thought I made that clear enough.
@iArnold I just read the comments that appear in my inbox

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