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00:04
So I went through the rebol-issues repo and closed a bunch of things that were View-related, as "if there's ever a /View we'd be starting over from scratch". And I added in some tests for things that should have been marked closed but weren't. I closed about 100 issues total, bringing it down from ~1700 open issues to ... ~1600 open issues.
00:52
posted on July 24, 2020 by @hostilefork Brian Dickens

@hostilefork wrote: I was trying to make some fairly generic routines that would accept either a WORD!, a TEXT!, a CHAR!, or an INTEGER!. Then it would give you either a WORD! or an INTEGER! out. At some point I ran up against this: >> to integer! "1" == 1 >> to integer! #"1" ; I wanted 1... == 49 ; ..but I got a codepoint (the ASCII va

01:39
@iArnold I'm just working through some of the protocol routines. It is somewhat a case of reducing the codebase and just getting the plumbing right. I'll post another work in progress tomorrow to test out some of the handshaking/packet exchange.
 
5 hours later…
06:46
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE I fell for the .h file trap again, looking beyond rebol.h to find more about rebSpell(). As is it is rather cryptic, I always want to completely understand what is happening, I must let that go and use it. A small amount of trust in it like I would have with Rebol code itself. Good thing it is now my vacation so no internet access for me. Cu l8r!
@rgchris Don't hurry ;-)
07:02
@iArnold I do not think libRebol is cryptic. If you want cryptic, look at the likes of host-core.c using the RXI_ARG() and such. Not only is it cryptic, it's deeply flawed in design...exposing random details about the GC that you cannot possibly write correct code for.
If you have a Rebol expression and want it as a C char* to pass UTF8 you call rebSpell(). You can do this with rebSpell(some_string_value) or you can do it with constructed expressions like rebSpell("mold first", some_block_value). When you are done with the char* you have to call rebFree() on it. That's it.
Hardly cryptic.
07:26
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE I think: "char * (*rebSpell)(unsigned char quotes, const void *p, va_list *vaptr);" is.
@iArnold That is an implementation detail in an auto-generated file. All the routines are the same. Whether it's rebUnboxInteger() or rebSpell() or rebValue() or rebElide() or rebDid() or rebNot(), they take a sequence of either "rebol text" or spliced values or instructions.
If you look up printf in C you will find it is implemented in terms of int vprintf( const char* format, va_list vlist ); And if you want to know what a va_list is, you have to look that up.
Anyway, I'm not certain that if there were an essay in the header file explaining it all that you would read it.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE Yes just read it, va_list is in stdarg
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE too boring...
08:06
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE hi! wealth ok, covid is down here in Italy. Stopped coding :-( the build system is a behemot...
And you?
@giuliolunati :-/ Sorry to hear the build got you down. Small incremental changes are usually easier.
@giuliolunati I'm trying to work on a few different things, doing some Database stuff, some Bridge stuff: forum.rebol.info/t/portable-bridge-notation-pbn-parser/1306
But stackless remains the large task. Right now working with error handling in the stackless world.
While things are taking time, it really does seem the case that the changeover to WebAssembly is slow for many projects...and it will continue to be something that kind of "emerges" over the course of the next years.
 
10 hours later…
18:34
I've written this cheap and cheerful SQL lexer in part to replace a flawed helper function in the MySQL scheme. Would appreciate feedback or suggestions with regard to it's capacity to correctly match e.g. MySQL or other SQL flavours...
5
(the rule as-is just returns a marked-up version of the source string)
SQL syntax is vaguely spec'ed (I found some BNFs but they have some holes) and I need to go on a bit of a search for some test statements.
@rgchris Maybe @Edoc's area of knowledge. First glance thought: you don't need the DID on the is_sql: assignment as failed parse is null and series positions are truthy...
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE I had a PROBE in there at one point, was just for a concise response.
It's kind of too bad there's not a good policy for logic bearing tests in the "blank-in, null-out" department. I write about LOGIC!-bearing results and that here
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE Indeed, although he gets to write his own flavour :)
Not too concerned about the composition of the script, just that it matches 99.999% of MySQL statements.
I do keep having this weird idea of VOID! being an ANY-WORD! or ANY-STRING! type so that you can make different kinds of unfriendly values that are more informative. ~not-a-number~, ~no-result~
18:45
I think there's a Microsoft implementation that uses $ for a literal money type.
 
2 hours later…
20:25
@rgchris Looks cool, and I need something like this for the DSL scanner. I'm not strictly scrubbing input yet, but I'll need to. When a scan (or expression parse) fails, as long as it isn't fatal I display an error msg in the REPL and reset to the default input state.
And yes, you're both are correct, strict SQL is for DBMSes, what I'm targeting allows for things like composability, parameterization, etc. But a script similar to this is indeed useful to lock-down input more carefully.
@rgchris Yes, unf there's significant variance between the different flavors of SQL for different platforms. Eg a common one is some platforms permitting concatenation with a column fn CONCAT(), others with +, and others with ||.
@Edoc Mostly this script will pick up odd constructs (currently flags '||' as 'other') so long as they don't use what I see as the main delimiters: `(),.;'" — otherwise it's completely agnostic on grammar (it'll happily parse "`something` From * Select"). What I'm unsure is if there are other delimited constructs in any variation out there that contain spaces.
(not counting comments too which are covered and also delimited by more than one character)
I should point out I'm going overboard for what my needs are—at the moment I just need to be able to identify where ; is used as a statement delimiter: 'not a delimiter ->;' is delimiter ->;
20:53
@rgchris Yes I get it-- it does the basic lexer step, def a useful initial check before creating AST and processing it (although in your case the database handles the rest).
Here's one I missed—MySQL uses '#' for comments (as well as '--' and '/* ... */')...
@rgchris There are entire toolsets that just handle these types of issues.
Madness.
@rgchris What I think about for your case is, are you able to handle the things embedded in text... or things in window functions, stored procedures (or whatever equiv MySQL would have). It's a lot of stuff!
Someone, somewhere must have written some tests.
20:57
@rgchris I'm sure. SO prob has what you need.
Nothing obvious. Most tests I've found are grammar related.
I might be jinxing myself, but I almost feel like I might have it easier, as I focus on my own REPL approach which lets me handle (or discard or ignore) syntax error. I can remediate input with the author. You are casting strings into the void and hoping the DB agrees with the input, or you'll get a cryptic error.
"Pathetic earthlings. Hurling your bodies out into the void, without the slightest inkling of who or what is out here..."
I guess it's not as if anyone using this will throw any old code at it (we're Rebollers after all, we don't go for the cryptic constucts), but it doesn't feel right if something obvious gets through.
@rgchris BNF for the SQL standard probably isn't going to be of much help here.
21:14
It's weird in the way it exists, it doesn't seem to be written for humans yet it has comments that no machine could follow up on. Why bother?
It's in a near unparsable BNF format too.
Might be painstaking, but I'd probably just do the best I can with the MySQL language constructs docs dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/language-structure.html
Not sure where it fits into what either of you are doing, but just a reminder of the ODBC dialect which uses @... references for substitution points, breaking a BLOCK! up into the SQL part and the substitution variables, putting ? in the spots that should be filled in: forum.rebol.info/t/…
SQL could be a lot better. Weird how instead of improving it, they just kept adding more and more (complex) stuff to it. MS finally got around to making substantial improvements with LINQ, and then Oracle/Java saw that and grabbed some of it for Java 8 Stream.
That ODBC-EXECUTE in my link above really is a piece of code that you just can't imagine writing in other languages at that level of clarity.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE In the current version of the MySQL protocol, the substitution happens before transmission (?s and $Xs are caught by this lexer too so could use the lexer to do the substitution in an even cleaner way).
21:26
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE I've seen it, it's slick!! And I'll definitely be reviewing that for opportunities. So the technique is great but for my project, I'm focused more on creating and managing keyword/declarative DSLs (similar to SQL). Actually querying databases is not the novel part.
@rgchris For me too, I scan immediately, first thing, in order to handle composability-- the creation of and evaluation/substitution of variables. An expression isn't in final parsable form until that has resolved.
21:49
This is only a replacement for the ? ? ? pattern, but uses REWORD and permits reuse of positioned values:
expand: func [
    statement [block!]
][
    assert [
        statement: parse reduce statement [text!]
        ; could use a less severe replacement for REDUCE
    ]

    reword first head statement make map! collect [
        repeat x length-of statement [
            keep x
            keep/only statement/:x
        ]
    ]
]
expand ["foo $1 $2 $1" "abc" pi]
One downside is that REWORD isn't noisy about out-of-range references.

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