I know @BrianH wants to rally the "community of implementations" but the languages that do this successfully have better specs. In our case, the ANSI C code is the spec far too often. "It does what that code does." So it's just not going to work as well.
At least not yet, which is why Rebol and Red need to agree and we get those ducks in a row. This thing is about take off, I knooooow it. The closed source thing held it back for a decade and a half...that's it. It would probably rule the Internet otherwise.
what's the difference between
var div = document.createElement('div');//output -> [object HTMLDivElement]
document.getElementById('container').appendChild(div);
and
var div = '<div></div>';
document.getElementById('container').appendChild(div);//output -> <div></d...
that's just the kind of question I read as reference for what I was trying to do
this is how I work lol
how do you program? Is it all happening within "known territory"? When questions, do you read the language specification? What if something is not documented in Rebol?
@graph StackOverflow is how everyone works these days, but I'm always shocked to hear how many people I know who are older (40s or so) haven't made accounts.
They just google, read it, and never ask questions or answer or comment. I'm like "why not?"
@graph There's a lot of "institutional knowledge" being carried around in the heads of certain individuals. @BrianH is a walking encyclopedia of every decision that has ever been made, reversed, and knows the how and why. He does a disservice by being able to answer anything you can ask about that. Because what if he were hit by a Mack truck tomorrow or something?
I am thankful for the diversity. The languages are different. There is never going to be a common specification. Most of the REBOL like languages use the same literal forms for values which, for me, is an essential lowest common denominator and can be achieved.
@graph I have seen into the future, and that's the kind of truck that hits BrianH, which is why I've been on such a crusade to get some better methods of institutional knowledge about Rebol out there, such as on StackOverflow. :-)
Hm, I guess I could have just told him to stay inside that day.
@PeterWAWood I tried to tidy it up a little: reb4.me/tt — but it's all the more clear that it is feature deficient at this point. (link of curiosity value only)
The windows-centric Rebol bias always sort of confuses me. People still use Windows? (People I know don't.) Why are the latest and greatest features always showing up in the Windows version first--there's like, no hacker cred with Windows. Start with Linux, then get it in the Windows port...
Most of my clients use Windows, so we mainly support Windows here at Respectech. We also have a Mac specialist, and I handle the Linux and BSD stuff for those rare occasions when someone is willing to pay for support on that. We're running our PBX on CentOS and we're looking at offering that as a service to our clients as well.
@HostileFork A common test suite can act as a spec. But having a real spec is a good idea. Most of the community-of-implementations languages haven't really been designed, so "be compatible with CPython" is the best they can do. R3 is being designed incrementally, but it is actually being designed, so it's possible that we could put together a proper semantic model for what it means to be a Rebol-like language, especially if the Red people also get involved in the discussions.
But I'll take source-level lexing/parsing compatibility to start with.
And I said what about "Breakfast at Tiffany's?"
She said, "I think I remember the film,
And as I recall, I think, we both kinda liked it."
And I said, "Well, that's one thing we've got." :-)
So how stripped down could a Rebol in the browser be, as per repl.it, that's going to be a big question. I'm thinking more about it.
So if Carl ever integrated changes, I'd have pushed my dependent and possibly more controversial next change which brings full C++ buildability and also ups the embedded openssh API to the current prototypes. But y'know, there's lots of that kind of stuff already in the browsers available through JavaScript, it wouldn't have to be in the repl.it build.
So I'm wondering how big would the repl.it JS wind up being?
You can #ifdef out features here and there but of course it's better if you make things that should work, work.
Are we going to mainline that? Is everyone cool with those #ifdefs?
I'm wondering about the size just because of curiosity, it doesn't matter as per my music video YouTube argument. The people on the 300 baud modems or whatever are just going to be left out of the game, I prefer to attack that by giving them fiber optics. :-)
Let us help you get rep, answer a Rebol question or ask one, see the FAQ. You'll be in faster than AltME, I'm waiting to get a password to Rebol4 because Kaj forgot I apologized to him years ago apparently. (And will only accept a re-apology on AltME, the grapevine says.)
I am currently in the process of learning Rebol.
In other languages I know, I can read input from the command line, for example in Java:
Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in)
sc.nextLine();
In C#
Console.ReadLine();
In C
scanf("%s", s);
I was wondering how one would accomplish the same t...
"On February 6, 2012, Atwood left Stack Exchange so he could spend more time with his family.[5] Atwood is credited with the proposal of "Atwood's Law" which is a corollary to the Rule of least power design principle. It states that any application that can be written in JavaScript will eventually be written in JavaScript." Hehe
I have a few funny quotes, I wonder if anyone has repeated them. I like my "There are at most three numbers that are relevant in computer programs: 0, 1, and N. Lately I'm not so sure about 1. And I'm getting more skeptical about 0."
@DocKimbel I'm not going to hold my breath, but that would be great. :-)
@BenjaminGruenbaum There is a bit of bad blood from a little incident a few years ago between me and Kaj de Vos, who does a lot of Rebol development and runs the conference, etc. It was kind of my fault.
So there was kind of a demand for a "public" apology, which is ironically not public. :-)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't know if this is really a StackOverflow question. Like I say I'm weirdly hesitant about it because I feel like some of these things are too... hmm... "why is Rebol the way it is" style questions aren't quite what the moderators like, and I don't want to get in any arguments over that with them.
"I tried this code, why's it getting an error" is safer, because that's what people usually come to Stackoverflow looking for
@BenjaminGruenbaum But really, the thing is that this is something that one group of people will see as the tail wagging the dog. Like "the decision was made because doing otherwise would make the interpreter less objectively elegant, so you retrain your brain instead of polluting the design, because retraining your brain is better... but the computer is supposed to morph to the human conventions, not vice versa". Other people will say "yup, it's obviously cleaner that way".
I'm someone who doesn't mind retraining what I've been taught if I decide what I was taught was lame. Like in writing, they tell you when you quote a "word," that you are supposed to put the comma inside the quotes like that. That's "proper typographic style". But I always put punctuation outside the quotes unless the punctuation was actually part of what's being quoted.
And if I wrote articles for the New York Times they'd say "Didn't you go to school?". And I'd say "Yes, I did, and much of what I was taught was garbage.". See?
But you also see that looks "funny" and so I don't know. The operator precedence thing is controversial, sure, but it's part of the design and it's not a decision that I consider to be up for debate myself. You can do a dialect specialized for mathematics which has precedence if you wish, and I think that freedom is one of the reasons that the DO dialect need not stress too much over its simplification choice.
And precedence rules are hard to remember. I mess up all the time in C++ so to keep from making mistakes I often put parentheses where I don't need 'em. That's available in Rebol as well.
@BenjaminGruenbaum You're supposed to be able to make your own infix operators in R3... the category of things that are like + and such that "break the rule" a little as a syntactic convenience. So you are able to define your own foo myop bar kinds of things where it has the effective behavior of what would otherwise be myop foo bar.
But I tried that the other day and there was a bug in it or something, I forget. Or maybe I just used it wrong and it crashed instead of advising me how to do it right. It'll be fixed.
I was referring to the decision not to support precedence of mathematical operators, I'm sure Rebol would let me create my own mathematical operators and then do precedence myself I was wondering why was the decision to support mathematical operations but not respect their mathematical order was made
@BenjaminGruenbaum Looking for the simpler essence of computation. But there are other languages that do this and make you say +(1,2) to get three or what-not. This is where you find Rebol being a big set of thought-through tradeoffs. One slogan is: informed by theory, driven by practice. So you wind up with a bit of an oddity but it really grows on you.
It was worth it in the design to scrap precedence, but not to make people write + 1 2, so the tradeoff was to warp the design around it and you get something a bit weird but ultimately readable.
I find polish notation and infix notation equally valid. I'm just not sure why not support operator precedence of math if you're already supporting infix notation. I'm not saying it's not a valid language design choice I'm just wondering why it was made
@HostileFork Why was it worth it in the design to scrap precedence?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well I told you some people would call it "the tail wagging the dog". But it's just a judgment about what the purpose and intent of the DO dialect really is, and how to keep the interpreter hyper-small and clear and uniform. And in Rebol you do a lot less arithmetic and array indexing anyway so the legacy of what you learned in school or from other languages matters a lot less...
It's pretty rare I need to go to the arithmetic level in Rebol
@BenjaminGruenbaum One side effect of the way Rebol works is you really get to preferring the format of if 7 = length? foo [do stuff] kind of thing because you can't write it the other way without parentheses. If you say if length? foo = 7 [do stuff] the foo = 7 test will be run and then you'll take the length of that. So you wind up throwing in parentheses for if (length? foo) = 7 [do stuff] to get around that and again, we think symbolic parentheses are better used for cooler purposes.
Like templating boilerplate code, indicating DO dialect code to run when parse rules are matched, etc. etc.
@BenjaminGruenbaum This might be a little "deep" for you just yet, but the Rebol is a deep lake is one of those "must reads".
length: [3 + 4]
code: compose [if (do length) = length? [a b c d e f g] [print "Sorry, I would challenge the idea that you can do this kind of thing in Javascript."]]
do code ;-- not length, whoops
Here, compose is a dialect for working with boilerplate, and parentheses are used to call out the pieces of the boilerplate you want evaluated
So when I say we don't like using parentheses for precedence, this is one of the reasons why. Because it's more natural and elegant to write your sentences, as with written language, as words separated by spaces and let your brain do that work. Cleaner.
But the DO dialect still allows you to implement precedence with parentheses, if you must.
The compose was just taking a template, a boilerplate of code which is a symbolic structure but that didn't have the number 7 evaluated in it...and it evaluated the 7 literally so you had the 7 in the code. Like, literally.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, I edited it because I had typed do length, I screw up a lot because I write stuff off the cuff and don't copy and paste out of an interpreter, bad habit. Semicolon is a comment to end of line.
I think semicolons are a little thin on their own, so I like to double them up like ;; comment or do like Doc does with ;-- comment, it's a matter of taste.
If I don't use any syntactic sugar like arrow notation and I don't mind globals I get
length = function(){return 3+4};
code = function(){(length()>7) || alert("I'm not sure, but I think I can");}
code();
If I use notation that isn't cross browser
length = () => 3+7;
code = () => (length()>7) || alert("I'm not sure, but I think I can")
code();
^ no need for partials I just need it to print not to return the print function
@BenjaminGruenbaum Did you read through my Dudeney Numbers Article? Look at things like interleave-block and show me how you'd do this kind of thing nicely in JavaScript.
Note I'm doing parentheses training wheels, that's very "ugly" Rebol code, but I want to help people understand.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I can see how someone might, at first, on the surface, think that being able to call code stored in a function is more-or-less isomorphic and equally useful to being able to hold code itself in variables. And yes, some examples do not really drive home the difference. Carl wasn't trying to prove that particular point in that article, though...different deep point.
I think--and this is something I've started to realize--a lot of Rebol online explanation really seems to assume people know Lisp already. And many younger people just don't. They're not even teaching it in CS programs half the time. So we often, perhaps, misguidedly assume that we should focus on defining Rebol by its differences from Lisp without properly helping people through the logic of why Lisp was so amazing.
I'm not sure how your algorithm works, I can implement the functions you use like this:
digitCount = (n) => (n+"").split('').length;
digitSum = (n) => (n+"").split('').reduce((a,b) => a+b);
makeDigitBlock = (n) => (n+"").split('').map(x=>parseInt(x));
interleaveBlock = (n,op) => makeDigitBlock(n).join("op").split("");
I can run javascript code from within javascript as well if that's an issue
@BenjaminGruenbaum There's some things you can do with strings, sure, and there's always the trap in teaching that if you choose a really hard example you run the risk of people not being able to understand the solution. Yet an easy example they will feel they can do another way with a more conventional tool. I don't have a perfect answer for this problem.
Because javascript has eval, it can do some stuff if you're careful, but it's risky and brittle.
Your help in defining what's convincing or unconvincing is valuable to us.
Once someone is convinced, it's hard to see the world or problem space from a fresh point of view.
Well it wasn't a Rosetta code problem, it was just something I got curious about and wrote up. And I guess the thing is, you don't realize quite how semi-horrified I am at the JavaScript you use above because it doesn't fit my symbolic aesthetics...it's like that RegEx doc posted about the IP address vs the Rebol parse...
Some people would go "but I don't understand the Rebol and I understand the RegEx, so RegEx wins". It's hard to argue with that.
That's not at all what I'm saying. I'm defining mathematical functions and then calling them, I'm really not sure what is not clean about it. Not to mention in Haskell it would be solved in 5 lines in a pattern match.
Get all the right triangles with integer edges and range between 1 and 10 and parameter 24 in haskell:
let rightTriangles' = [ (a,b,c) | c <- [1..10], b <- [1..c], a <- [1..b], a^2 + b^2 == c^2, a+b+c == 24]
Again, I'm not saying Rebol isn't useful or awesome. I'm just saying I'm not sure it solves this particular problem better than all other languages
@BenjaminGruenbaum Certain tools are optimized for certain domains, you won't find me arguing against that. But the thing that's truly interesting about Rebol is the tool's willingness to adapt itself to your problem, whatever it is. It is easy for Rebol to be adapted to do a dialect for that (although the <- is not currently a valid symbolic word, though I think it probably should be)
But it's not so easy for the reverse to happen. Look for instance at my Rubol (just an expeirment, don't judge too harsh)
And if one is a bit-twiddling geek who finds stuff like this amazing, you'll appreciate the craftsmanship of the artifact itself...
How is it possible that in a 64kb compiled exe, these programs can generate such crazy visuals, complete with matching music?
An example: Ars Nova By Phantom Lord (YouTube video of the demo running)
This program's only 64kb in size! How did they do that?
Are they using some sorts of pre-exist...
@BenjaminGruenbaum The aspect that you're missing is that you just don't have any good injection points. Yes, you solved that specific problem, in a very narrow way. But software engineering is about the evolution of exceptional cases, changes in the specification, changes in rules. By writing it like that, you don't see how weak it is, because you don't realize how you don't have the points to hook in something if it turns out your needs change a little.
@HostileFork Again, I'm not doubting the usefulness of Rebol instead of having to parse and tokenize (in this case the split and reduce) myself. I just think it probably shines in more complicated situations
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes but you see my point on the conundrum. Trying to teach someone a tool that shines at managing crazy levels of complexity involves them understanding or seeing a very complex problem, and that's antithetical to teaching.
Try and look at your code above as a bunch of "knobs". Each symbol in the code, is a knob you can turn or tweak or twist.
Your "3" for instance, there it is. It's a piece of your artifact, a knob you can tweak. You can dial that up to 4, or 1000, or whatever.
When you see it as we do, you'll realize that in general programmers are building machines with the wrong knobs. Their "hardened" "clever" code must be rewritten and there is churn disproportional to a change in specification.
Is it short? Does it work? Well, maybe it does. "No one has invented a programming language in which it's the least bit difficult to write bad code." as the saying goes.
Well I don't consider it that much worse than anything else, Python or Ruby, or whatever. At least it's deployed on every machine in the world at the moment.
I'd argue that java script code is easier to abuse than python code :) There are parts of the language you're not supposed to touch. They exist there for backwards competibility but you're not supposed to use them at all or to any extent.
But at a higher view, a view of the act of programming as running a program in its own right, you realize you need the ability to meta-program. To treat code as data. Now I use C++11 and sometimes building hardened tools needs a different approach, but if I'm going to be throwing out my formalisms and use an interpreter I better be getting something back in return. Rebol gives it, those languages do not.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The Rebol difference is systemic, it's about language and aesthetics, and I can't really say much other than it's a black hole into which many have fallen and not come back. Instead of a && b && c you can write all [a b c]. Instead of a || b || c you write any [a b c].
You can write a switch statement with executed conditions and get:
case [
a [print "a case"]
b [print "b case"]
all [c d e] [print "cde case"]
]
It's not just about ugliness of commas and dots. That's part of it, but only a little part.
It's not even about the DO dialect. It's that it was a tool good enough to build the DO dialect, good enough to build PARSE, good enough to use and recycle both of those into building ever more elegant machinery.
@HostileFork I'm not, but I think you'll have a hard time convincing me on why Rebol is better for simple cases like IP and email parsing, or switch cases. I think it''s an awesome concept for places where I have to do tokenization of complicated structues.
Well, you don't parse emails and IPs in Rebol. They're first class datatypes and you just load them. If they're not what they're supposed to be, they won't load.
@rebolek Again, I'm not doubting the usefulness or power of using Rebol, I just think @HostileFork is going to have a pretty hard time convincing me it's easier for very simple examples.
I'm always ready to be convinced though :)
I'll probably make more educated statements after I complete the tutorial
@BenjaminGruenbaum regarding Rebolek's point, yes.... note that you can do type? 1.2.3.4 and get back tuple. Then reverse 1.2.3.4 and get back 4.3.2.1 ... then length? 1.2.3.4 and get back 4. It's another series type.
@BenjaminGruenbaum So the point really is about the knobs, and the injection points, and having your code really matching the spec. Your IP address parser may work but it gets hard, what if you want to do variable substitution so that users can say things like 123.FOO.21.[suffix for float 0.295]. There is almost no component of your code that you can reuse there. Nothing you wrote remains useful because the aspects were not properly factored.
In Rebol you can almost always salvage some of what you wrote and tweak it happily. If you don't reuse or modify code, then sure...okay, I guess it's not that much better. Then I have to make arguments from aesthetics, such as "I don't like all those commas and parentheses, they look like cruft, like your code is breaking out in a rash or something".
@BenjaminGruenbaum But having in your back pocket the ability to go "hm, I think this would be better if the language were bent a little more" then it's impressive. Check out when I added an enumerated type to Rebol, which it did not have. How many languages without enumerated types can you really get something that good with after the fact?
"Oh, but in my language X, you can make a class, and then..." and then what? I'll tell you what. And then you are going to be invoking it with (myenum()#&(^U)=>banana**lambdaX ==) or whatever garbage notation is shoved down your throat by the medium instead of writing the code how you want it to look.
There's a saying I like: "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world around him, while the unreasonable man expects the world to adapt to him. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." Rebol is the programming language for unreasonable men (and women, and AI, or whoever)
@SomeKittens We do have some "unreasonable" people in the Rebol community. :-)
@BenjaminGruenbaum When looking at old code on the net in Rebol written by me, please realize that I was a newbie and more going for the philosophy, I'm not that good a Rebol coder though I am better now.
I'm a very good programmer in a general sense, but people have clocked many...many...many more hours doing actual Rebol programming than I have. I've really not done all that much. I wasn't willing to invest too much in a closed source tool.
I've probably spent more time making clay sculptures, drawing icons, editing videos, debating things on wikis, and chatting than Rebol programming.
(One of my first marketing concepts was that Rebol was like modeling clay, because of its uniform substrate...and that the wide number of datatypes were like the tools you carve it with. It was considered too childish and colorful I think to be accepted because "Rebol is serious business". But one thing that came out of that was that I had the 3D bracketed O logo idea while I was making it.)
Just carved off the REB and the L and thought "hmm. I like that"
The antialiasing was a pain to get right, I had to do it all by hand, when you start working at that resolution it's sucky.
But anyway my point for @BenjaminGruenbaum and @SomeKittens and @graph is that the thing you might not know but is important is... I'm more the greeting crew, not the Rebol guru. The others are the ones who are going to be chiming in with the "um, here's the real answer" to your questions.
But like the saying goes: "Q: What do you need to know to teach a dog a trick?" "A: More than the dog."
@dt2 Heh, I read something about dolphins that these trainers were going through a hard time teaching some dolphins at an aquarium tricks, and then eventually they managed to communicate to them the idea that they'd get a fish if they just did something "new". So the dolphins started doing just that.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Note INTO. This is another one of the coolio things you can do with parse, which is to go into series types. You can even do it with strings. So parse [click click "squeeeeeek" splash] [2 'click into ["squ" some "e" "k"] 'splash] for instance... hehe
@graph I don't really advise being too worried about "catching up" because it's labor intensive and wastes time...I want this to be lighter weight than that... if something's interesting we should star it. The goal is to bring the current hidden Rebol world out to talk to the general public, and be more hands-on with explaining it...just whoever's awake, and if you miss it you missed it. :-)
But people will do what they want. It's there, you can read the history if you feel like... all the way back to the day the room was started in 2010 or whenever
Hehe just kidding. No, actually, the devoted followers were not very supportive of my idea of making this room. They don't like it because the web isn't written in Rebol. They like their inner sanctum all-Rebol chat system better.
That's been a hot topic for today, about whether people think my idea is good or bad, and the grumpy folks don't want to give up their system and come out to where the developers are.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The reason is much simpler than what it seems at the first sight. In Rebol, there are no reserved words. Due to that, the '+' or '-' words are just words, not "operators". As such, they cannot reasonably have any precedence, you can even do set [ + * ] reduce [ :* :+ ], which pretty much explains why it does not make much sense to define precedence.
@rebolek I think the "implemented in Rebol" blinds a lot of people to the missing features, which they would hardly be blind to if it were written in Tcl/Tk...or whatever.
@Ladislav Okay, looked at it... I don't have much opinion. The only opinion I have is that the idea of using numbers for platforms is weird, not totally convinced of the benefit of the numbers for the main platform. But yup, 5.75, that was the joke for Haiku so long as the numbers are there.
@GrahamChiu Frankly, I do not know the rules. I am currently running Rebol scripts on Android (the test framework). Whether we will be able to put Rebol scripts into the play store is another issue somebody will have to resolve.
However, there may be other ways how scripts can be distributed, so I do not worry much.
@BenjaminGruenbaum In Rebol's world, type has meaning. Type carries semantics: read %foo and read http://foo have different implications. Becomes useful when building dialects: field 'name 60 238.238.238 #"n" or name: opt string! [2 60 alphanum] is within ["Fred" "Barney"]
@BenjaminGruenbaum I do wonder how many bytes it'd take to implement CoffeeScript in Rebol.
@BenjaminGruenbaum [a,b,c].all returns undefined for me where a b and c are set to true (Chrome)
@HostileFork I disagree, I think it's a bigger than little part.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not sure what this means, switch/case don't seem well implemented in JS. Something like this is handy: file-type: switch file-suffix [%.png ['image/png] %.jpg %.jpeg ['image/jpeg]]
Anyway, sorry @GrahamChiu—saw the earlier conversation and just wanted to add my 2p.
Looking at the CC issue @GrahamChiu referenced pointed me to another one which Jerry had logged. Has anyone seen/heard from him since Rebol went OS? There's nothing on AltME since that date.
@SomeKittens Oh. Well no guarantees on doing it straightaway, or promises on thinking it's worth bothering him about, as I've not seen it. But I will look at what you're doing, if for no other reason than to advise you on how Rebol might be applied to helping your problem...
My address is: to email! reduce [reverse "nairb" "@" (parse http://hostilefork.com [thru "//" copy domain to ["/" | end]] domain)] :-)
(Once the spammers get Rebol interpreters, the Internet will explode anyway. :-P)
@SomeKittens That's because it's a word being used by the PARSE dialect, not part of the DO dialect. HELP currently really only gives you information about terms that were ascribed meaning (at least initially in the) interpreter. There should be a mechanism to get help on these things from dialects, though.
@rgchris My goal was to make it hard to read, not easy. :-)
@rgchris You're right, it's my bad it's not all it's every
@rgchris You do that, sounds interesting :)
@rgchris In JS that would be implemented using an array of functions, that way I can add choices to the switch later and dynamically and then use decide[fileSuffix]()
@SomeKittens anyway, that decode-url thing above is a utility that turns the string-based URL! type into a series of symbols which can effectively be accessed by a method that is structural. select is like saying you want to find the parameter and then return the thing after it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The point is—CoffeeScript isn't JavaScript. It piggybacks on top of it sure, but CS isn't a subset of JavaScript. Fork might just as easily use his CodeGolf language.
:7892014 using very verbose syntax:
var myDecisionMap = {
'jpg':'image/jpg',
'png':'image/png'
};
myDecisionMap['jpg'];//image/jpg (myDecisionMap.jpg also works);
more complicated example:
var myDecisionMap = {
'jpg':function(){ /* some logic here*/ return 'image/jpg';},
'png':function(){ /* logic here */ return 'image/png';}
};
myDecisionMap['jpg']();
@rgchris Passing in a block for what select looks for is unfamiliar to me so I would have used select decode-url http://hostilefork.com quote host: . Now I'm having deja vu about how select [a b c d e f] [c d] gets you d... when it should get you e I'd think.
@Adrian I like CS, I'm not sure I like it better than JS, I have a lot less experience with it. It was very useful at a point but a lot of its features are not available in JS, especially collection stuff
@rgchris Yes, there is plenty of useful syntactic sugar for JS that is in ECMAScript 6, there are alpha implementations but nothing that's passed RC that's for sure
@Adrian Some are (available now but not when CoffeeScript started) :)
Also, one of the main concerns when I'm writing code is maintainability, and writing in CoffeeScript is not worth it unless I'm working with other people who'd bother learning it as well.
@GrahamChiu If you didn't read the Rebmu source the design is fairly good and well-documented. But I'd definitely be using parse in this day and age for the "unmushing"!!!
@rgchris For that specific IP example I'm not sure it'd make much of a difference save a few characters it would not be inherently different. (function(){}) changes to () => and that sort of stuff
@rgchris I'm really not looking for an argument on 'which language is better at this or that' . I'm here to learn Rebol, I'm in no position to argue what it's good or bad it. From what I understand and learned so far it has some interesting concepts that are unlike other languages I know which is really cool and interesting.