Design question: as I've alluded to HTML5 specifies two 5MB local storage objects. I've established conceptually that you can map a FILE scheme on top of them. Question is if I want the filesystem to bridge both objects, is it reasonable to have them represented as two paths under %/? e.g. /persistent and %/tmp
Design Question II: As far as I can ascertain, it's only possible to store strings in storage—no other values. Is it worth taking the storage cost to convert to Base64? Could compress automatically.
Automatically compressing doesn't seem like it's worthwhile, if it doesn't do anything people can't do by compressing themselves. If compression is easy enough then those interested in it should do it.
If it manages to avoid an intermediate buffer somehow, then maybe.
I could convert to Base64 if you write %/thing.bin #{BIN} with a leading byte as a hint. READ always returns BINARY!. You're losing space if you store binary values, but at least you can do it.
So maybe try to see if that works and use base64 as a fallback if it doesn't, or if it works often enough then punt on the base64.
IIRC blobs let you glue parts together, I haven't looked all that much into it, but perhaps you can glue some filesystem header information like the date stamp or other information without needing to flatten everything out into contiguous memory.
@HostileForksaysdonttrustSE It's working pretty well. I'm not 100% clear on how much of the multi-return proposal has been implemented. But I'm using that as a model. forum.rebol.info/t/…
I think I'm able to eliminate quite a bit of PARSE gymnastics using transcode, and in the process it's opening up some cleaner solutions in other places.
I'm thinking of using the Patreon money to pay for the video recording. It's a minimum of USD8/month per user and I can make it so it's only USD8 by not allowing other users in my domain from starting a meet session. It will be less hassle for me doing the recordings, editing out stuff and then uploading them.
And hopefully we won't have the sync issues we do at present.
@GrahamChiu To get it to be any good it would require editing anyway. I have software that's more than adequate for this. Can we not worry about it right now?