I often tell people I don't actually know that much Rebol, I just "grok the idea" and support it on principle. I'm afraid I'm crossing over into "knowing a lot about Rebol" territory.
@HostileFork (Indendation that doesn't match the actual block structure, most likely due to missing {}.)
@HostileFork Esp nasty when they are in compound paths, such as a/-1/2/-1/5.
@HostileFork Your question is missing something. What is foo originally, really? Certainly not just a plain block!. I guess you are missing a make object! or context?
Red is another one of these... flying by the seat of the pants kinda Rebol codebases that kind of drives me a bit nuts. One has to be a mind reader. A lot of passing parameters as positions in a series, and then peeking backwards in the series, without going through an abstraction layer explaining what you're looking at. Not a lot of sanity checks on groupings via blocks, just knowing "well they're in groups of N..."
@earl Bah, yes, of course. It had scrolled off the screen so I "just retyped it".
@earl Oh you meant this bit...I was looking at the if. :)
Wish the other Rebol folks would get with the program and do nice clean-uppable Q&A here like you guys. I know there's questions and answers flittering back and forth on AltME or wherever. But if there was discipline to put it here, that would be more forward looking for if (when?) Rebol starts to get a following.
I'm just 28 points away from 10k reputation. Once I have that, absolute power will be mine. (If being able to cast a vote to erase questions entirely from this particular website is one's idea of absolute power.)
Would it be allowed to "fake" questions/answers for q&a? If i had a question, like "how do i json in rebol", and answered it for myself. Then i think, thats a good question/answer for others. Can i post that on SO somehow, or is that considered spam?
@dt2 Using StackOverflow as a way of tracking answers to questions you've answered for yourself is allowed, as evidenced by the fact that you can post a question and an answer at the same time. You cannot accept your own answer for two days, however. And obviously you won't get points for it.
@dt2 Note that Jeff Atwood, one of the founders of StackOverflow, approves of things like the R Flash mob that populated StackOverflow with R questions in order to give the language more exposure.
@dt2 Do note that I already have a JSON question, however. If you have something to add, it might be best to post as an answer to that.
@earl "some subrule - to prevent unwanted infinite loops in R3 this rule stops also when the subrule matches the input but does not advance it"
What does that mean, in layman's terms? I'm dealing with a PARSE difference between R2 and R3 and it involves SOME and INTO, and the deal is the R2 version goes INTO a block that itself does not contain blocks, yet a block rule is matched because the parse position seems to think it's not in the block
What it's doing is it stores the parse rule itself in blk and is using it recursively. The Red-System header is parameterized by a block, which causes a recursive rule invocation. Problem is that after that rule is run, R3 jumps back to thinking parse position is on the block instead of inside the block. :-/
I'm having some trouble creating a smaller repro for this, but I'll give it a shot. Any hints in the meantime if you think you might know what's going on would help.
(To clarify, in R3 the block! on the cited line winds up matching, while in R2 it does not match.)
@earl I will try this, gotta back out all my debugging spew mumbo jumbo since this seems to have isolated the problem.
Rebol could certainly use an actual debugger. :-/
Most of Rebol's competitors in the interpreted space don't have any decent debugging solution, either. This is where competing in the dark ages has its advantages...
I think it's one reason why JavaScript is so popular: Firebug, Dragonfly, Chrome Developer Tools, etc.
"It may suck, but you can watch it suck in slow motion."
@earl Your idea has gotten me past the issue in the R3 build, and I can continue dealing with other less inscrutable things...but the R2 build hits a "parse limit" error. The formulation of the rule in that style may be too much for certain lengthy constructions (?)
@earl The double acknowledgment of Saphirion on the builds page seems a bit unnecessary... I think one mention would be sufficient. Just in terms of aesthetics I think it would look better to have fewer links in the footer, but that is a more broad thanks than just on the OS/X build so perhaps the better place; I do not know your relationship.
But there are a lot of people to thank, right? It's a build page, not a thanks page...the only reason I think the logo link to article is a good idea is because of the need to get people (esp. Carl) to sign off on it, so it focuses that discussion. Once it's decided and done, no link or credit needed.
(It would just say "Rebol and the Rebol logo are trademarks of Rebol Technologies", the end.)
Also: as you are the one providing the binaries, linking your own name to some sort of presence might comfort some people that you have enough professional liability to not purposefully provide malware.
(I can be swayed by this, in that I will click around someone's portfolio and such before downloading executables from them, and if get the sense that I could reasonably show up at their house with a baseball bat... then they have an incentive to not erase my hard drive on purpose.)
@HostileFork well, you can always turn trace on, if you're feeling lucky...
Be nice if you could direct trace somewhere other than system/ports/output—have some way to parse the result and display it in a more useful/less overwhelming way...
@rgchris I only just got the idea to inject trace on and trace off statements in the code itself, near the points I wanted to look at. A simple idea, but not one that had yet occurred to me given my mental model of debugging.
Incidentally, if you can think of yet-another-R2-compatible way of solving the problem I describe in parse...earl's seems (so far) to be semantically correct but it chokes R2 on large input. Maybe there's another way?
(It may choke R3 too, I'm not to the point where I know that yet.)
@rgchris Literally it's along the lines of [#L 1 Red-System [#L 2 Title: "foo" #L 3 Author: "bar" #L 4 ...] #L 11 #L 12 #include %something.reds ...]
The loader goes in and pokes these line number markers in while it's still a string, then loads it as a block so the line numbers are annotated.
And what's happening is, somehow or another in R2 it happily descends into the block and starts processing [#L 2 Title: "foo" #L 3 Author: "bar" #L 4 ...]. But in R3 you end up backing up to getting, uh, not on that machine right now but let's just say it's more like [[#L 2 Title: "foo" #L 3 Author: "bar" #L 4 ...]]. In any case, by the time you reach that [into blk | block! | paren!] rule it matches the block! in R3, and indeed, it is a block so that part's right at least.
Like I said...I haven't really had a whole lot of success with off-the-cuff attempts to reproduce it, I'd have to just copy it out and start paring it down line by line to the essence. (Which is what I did with that Unicode binary problem, and it's a good way of doing things, but an even "better" way is if you guys just figure it out for me. :-P)
I was targeting a repro against input [a [b]] using SOME, ANY, and BLOCK! such that block! (print "match block") would print "match block" in R3 but not R2.
That's what I'm seeing, but simplified cases seemed to behave the same in R2 and R3.
But I have gotten past the Red compilation phase with R3, and to the Red/System phase, and at least for "Hello World" the output from the Red phase seems (mostly) identical between R2 and R3. Slight difference in number of leading zeros on some things.
(Requires patched interpreter, and many modifications to Red sources.)
This is looking like the current biggest bottleneck, the rest seems like mostly a pattern of details I've become familiar with by now.
I don't want to trouble you too much, I can certainly go through this and load in the real data and strike line by line until it is reduced...just wondering if eyeballing it from those more experienced could save me the time.
As I said, it does for the moment seem that earl's fix may be working, it just may not be fitting for files with thousands of lines
@HostileFork if my fix works, you can also try replacing SOME with WHILE in r3, and see if that works better. if it does, you can make the rule use SOME in R2 and WHILE in R3. not elegant, but maybe the most straightforward.
@earl You seem to grasp what is going on, perhaps you'd be able to write that repro I suggest? (using ANY, SOME, BLOCK! with input [a [b]] that prints out "matched block!" in r3 but does not in R2)
Bear in mind that the goal here is not necessarily to leave this as is, if you have a better idea for doing what's being done here that would be more saliently expressed and work in both R2 and R3 I'm sure that would be welcomed.
@earl Have not tried, but again the problems the R3 build are hitting are not related to this ATM, your modification got it through to the next nuisance
Yes. But I'm they are most likely not the problem.
It's just that the into blk fails due to the SOME difference, backtracking this particular case to the second option (| block!) which also matches and then messes up things.
It's the rules that are positive and don't advance the input that are the problem. So after they've done what they need to do, have them fail and we're on to the next rule.
Speaking of r3?, is there a standard test for r3? I've been trying to treat things on a case by case basis with tests against stuff like value? 'hash! to try and be more "feature-oriented" than "version-oriented", but I don't know that any test exists for this other than maybe doing a TRY block on a WHILE sample and seeing if it throws or not. :-/
@rgchris I will give this a shot. It's only 8 words, thus likely less disruption than a conditional approach. (If it does work, it would be nice if we formalized a good StackOverflow Q&A to link to explaining why it's written that way... I tend not to comment code myself with things like "black magic" :-P)
I think the black magic only refers to the rule being recursive.
I do foresee one problem with the 'end skip' approach: consider rule [A | B | C | D] —if for any reason rule B matches (but is force-failed), rule C will be next, not rule A (per R2 handling).