Here's a another scheme to probe values to the JavaScript Console:
use [probe][
probe: js-awaiter [
return: [void!]
value
] {
console.log(reb.Spell(reb.ArgR('value')));
}
sys/make-scheme [
Title: "Console.log Scheme"
Name: 'log
Actor: [
write: func [port data][
probe form data
]
]
]
]
Usage: write log:// "Value" — Would be curious how this could be done without the PROBE middleman.
The URL could be anything of the form "log:" some skip. Could use different values to represent different outcomes: write log:error "Something Bad Happened"
Or a triplet: write log:type=error "Something Bad Happened"
@GrahamChiu If you want to grab files from a URL and save to a JS var, that is what READ of a URL is for. I have fixed download which will let you save a BINARY! or TEXT! to the browser as a local file. Say download %filename.txt "some text" or download %filename.bin #{DECAFBAD}. You can also specify a /MIME-TYPE, but it defaults to text/plain or octet/stream
@GrahamChiu In the first version, you can use log:<whatever>. The second version you explicitly use one of log:type=info|log|warn|error
@GrahamChiu I decided against the :// notation, it's not really a URL (even if it's a URL!).
The scheme is always determined by that first part, e.g. log:type=warn — the port is created and the URL is parsed by DECODE-URL (port/spec), though the original URL is still available (port/spec/ref), so you can really use it however you want.
I've attempted an updated version of CLEAN-PATH—should be good for R3C as well. I removed support for clean-path %///foo —I'm not sure where that convention came from or whether it was behaving correctly.
Interesting talk last night folks! Too bad it is a little late from this perspective, and saturdaynight boozed ;-) too but the choice was the talk or 'quality time' with the misses and it was not my choice ;-) (nature calling guess LOL)