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00:03
@earl yup, that's the one. I don't have a lot of time to do Rebol stuff at the moment, but I need that fix integrated in order to make module tests, when I can. I'm looking forward to those builds being published, since there are articles related to behavioral changes in them that need updating too.
posted on April 16, 2013 by BrianH

[Comment] Weirdly enough, we've found that while getting the maximum of 2 values (the existing MAX) is used pretty often in Rebol, getting the maximum of a more than 2 values in a block is actually not commonly done. The main reason is that the more-than-2-values collection has to come from somewhere, and in Rebol that usually means a prebuilt block or an intermediate block. Needing to find the

00:18
@BrianH Updated my wip-cmake branch. It's now mainline + community + cmake, so a strict superset of mainline.
@earl Cool, thanks. Now maybe the next time when you want me to test something I can get it to build properly, not like the last time :-/
@BrianH To update your working copy, you should just have to fetch my updated branch (git fetch earl) and then, if you have no local changes lying around: git reset --hard earl/wip-cmake.
00:49
@earl that worked. I'll regenerate the Cmake stuff and let you know if it works.
01:01
@BrianH Cool.
01:28
@earl I had to set R3_MAKE in the Cmake GUI to the copy of rebol3.exe I had in the build directory, and the generated solution file was rebol3.sln rather than r3.sln this time, but it seems to work. The application even builds without the dependency hack we had to do before. Victory?
@earl the file src\boot\host-init.r still shows up as having been updated when you do a build, making git detect the change afterwards and tries to add it to commits. Until that gets fixed, we can't merge this into mainline.
 
2 hours later…
03:53
0
Q: Using a nested rule with parse

johnkI am trying to parse some data which is formatted as follows. data: [a b x b x x b a a x x b b x ] What I need it to extract the a's and b's in order and perform a different action for each a and b. The expected output would be: a b b b a a b b == true I have come up with this so far, but ...

 
1 hour later…
05:08
1
A: Using a nested rule with parse

HostileForkI may be missing something...but isn't what you want simply: parse data [ any [ thru ['a (print "a") | 'b (print "b")] ] to end ] That generates the output you request.

0
A: Using a nested rule with parse

BrianHIt's the to and thru, you don't really need them. Let's take advantage of R3 here and do without. parse data [ some [ 'a (print "a") any [ 'b (print "b") | and 'a break | skip ] ] to end ] The and does a lookahead, and the...

0
A: Using a nested rule with parse

Graham Chiu>> data: [a b x b x x b a a x x b b x ] == [a b x b x x b a a x x b b x] >> parse data [ some [ 'a | 'b | skip ]] == true

 
3 hours later…
07:40
Does anyone have ideas on indenting parse rules? I saw L's proposal the other day .. any alternatives?
I'm probably lying but as I recall, the | is treated like ][ for ident purposes to make the alternate rules clearer, and on their own lines.
@GrahamChiu I tend to break lines so that the alternates are on their own lines, started with the |, if something gets long.
07:56
"I'm probably lying but as I recall, the | is treated like ][ for ident purposes to make the alternate rules clearer, and on their own lines." - I may have missed some proposal from Carl, but I observed that many people including myself used the formatting described by @HostileFork. However, I also observed that the formatting I described recently is much easier to read. I do not know if @HostileFork noticed it, though.
The alternatives were:
formatting problem
@Ladislav If you didn't see the "fixed font" button there, it works like stackoverflow...four spaces of indentation.
Fixed
Width
Font
    Preserves
          Spacing
[
	; the first alternative starts here
	; still the first alternative
	|	; the second alternative starts here
		; still the second alternative
	|	; the third alternative starts here
		; still the third alternative
]
@Ladislav You can also edit your last post for 2 minutes. Pushing the up arrow is a convenient way to load the last one for editing without using the drop down menu.
So, the above was essentially what I used before I noticed that there is a much better alternative for formatting:
[
		; the first alternative starts here
		; still the first alternative
	|
		; the second alternative starts here
		; still the second alternative
	|
		; the third alternative starts here
		; still the third alternative
]
Of course, it is possible to unindent it a bit to obtain:
[
	; the first alternative starts here
	; still the first alternative
|
	; the second alternative starts here
	; still the second alternative
|
	; the third alternative starts here
	; still the third alternative
]
, but I still prefer the "more indented" variant, since it is more readable in complicated cases
@Ladislav Well, hm. That's a lot of whitespace. I guess if you use sub-rules intelligently then things wouldn't get too bad.
Running to bed, back tomorrow...
08:09
Well, I do not mind about space when readability is so much better
Good night to you
As for the subrules: I do not object against using subrules intelligently, but that still does not mean I don't want to be able to write some rules like the above.
0
A: Why allocate a variable in rebol?

MaxVI just tested >> a: make block! 10000 >> b: copy [] >> delta-time [loop 10000 [append a 1] ] == 0:00:00.004315 >> delta-time [loop 10000 [append b 1] ] == 0:00:00.005795 The difference is just less then a hundredth of a second. Then I restarted rebol and tested: >> a: make block! 10000 >> b...

 
4 hours later…
11:59
I had forgotten how enjoyable Rebol can be. Writing parse rules to extract the comments from Carl's blog: parse blog-comments [ any [ article-rule | name-rule | datetime-rule | comment-rule | skip ] ] This is so easy to follow in comparison to regex.
2
 
2 hours later…
13:57
@earl "The Finder hands the job off to Launch Services, which hands it to the user instance of launchd. So launchd winds up being the parent process." Hmm.
@HostileFork Doesn't sound like a very safe heuristic to me :)
14:18
@BrianH That's no particularity of the CMake build, the "regular" build does the same. src/boot/host-init.r is a generated file, which is also versioned. When you run make prep, it is re-generated. Should just be dropped from versioning, I guess.
@BrianH Sounds good, thanks a lot for testing. Did no r3-make.exe exist in the build directory, so that you had to manually set R3_MAKE? Or was an existing r3-make.exe just not picked up?
@HostileFork Won't the user launchd also be the parent of other processes, such as user agents written in R3? Or user-specific scheduled scripts?
15:04
@earl Just telling you what someone said. I guess we could do some empirical checks. It could be turned off with a command line option if it doesn't do what people want.
posted on April 17, 2013 by abolka

[Comment] Similar Windows problem: #1892

15:45
@Ladislav I almost never see the | on its own line. I almost always see it inline or on the end of a line.
@earl first of all, no build directory existed, I had to make one (and it must be called "build" or else it doesn't get ignored by git). Second of all, for your last Cmake set that program needed to be called rebol3.exe, not r3-make.exe - r3.sln was renamed to rebol3.sln too.
@BrianH I like it at the end as well. Speaking of this, is there any kind of style guide for Rebol in general? If not, are there bits and pieces here and there that could be gathered up into a more complete guide?
@earl if host-init.r is regenerated with every build then it shouldn't be dropped from versioning, it should be added to .gitignore so git doesn't see it.
@HostileFork this is OSX. Why are these scripts not using the #! line?
Not to appear like I'm promoting Clojure here (really, I'm not) but we can, for a start, rip off the Clojure style guide.
@earl, could this be under rebolsource?
@Adrian good, trying to make MAX variable-arity when we don't have variable-arity functions was bad enough :)
@Adrian Carl has written a lot of articles about it, but not in the last decade that I recall.
Could be better served as a GitHub Pages site rather than a raw project.
15:59
@BrianH Yeah, program now needs to be called r3-make.exe (just like with the "regular" build). If r3-make.exe exists in the build directory, it should be picked up automatically. The solution was renamed from r3 to rebol3.
@earl I'll rename the program and regenerate Cmake.
@Adrian Absolutely, yes! And at the moment, we could also really need a brief guide for the C style used in R3's implementation.
k - Carl's stuff is a good start. Can we just grab it as is or is that still under a restrictive license?
@earl agreed on the C guide too. That tripped me up at first.
BBL
Btw, I tried contacting Carl privately through sassenrath.com in an effort to speak to him about rebol.com, but, so far he hasn't replied.
16:06
@Adrian Fear we can't w/o obtaining a license.
@Respectech, please, please try to get 5 minutes from him.
 
2 hours later…
18:04
@BrianH That is correct, Brian. I started writing | on the end of a line. However, the end of a line is something you must find first to notice there is a |. So, I put it closer to the start, just sometimes letting it follow a closing ] or ). That was still not much visible, so I put it to the start of a line containing the first "alternative rule".
That did not allow me to easily see the group belonging to the same "alternative" yet, so I started to indent all subsequent rules belonging to the same alternative, and still not being content I finally arrived to the format I demonstrated above. I do not need anybody to accept this format, I just found out it was exactly what I needed and that is the reason why I described it as a "readable" format.
posted on April 17, 2013 by BrianH

[Comment] Thanks for finding that. The Windows analog to this bug was discovered when I was trying to replicate the #! functionality on Windows using .cmd file tricks. Does OSX have this same problem for scripts launched using a #! line at the top of the script?

In general, Rebol syntax does not "prescribe" any specific formatting but there are some rules worth following and suggested originally by Carl for parens etc. to make the text more readable. However, I do not think Carl defined any formatting suggestions for Parse rules (I may be wrong in this, though).
@Ladislav well, it is readable, especially for really complex rules. I don't like outdenting the | though, since it conflicts with the overall block contents indenting standard.
@Ladislav I am not aware of any formal coding standard for PARSE rules that Carl might have written, beyond that for Rebol dialects in general. We have example code though.
@BrianH Hmm, I did not think there was a conflict, but, as I said, I just described it as something convenient for me.
The problem is that if the groups are not visible in the text, you actually cannot read the parse rule
(as opposed to the DO dialect evaluation rules, Parse has precedence, "ordered choice" having a lower precedence than "sequence")
@Ladislav if you think of the | as being structurally in the same category as a ] [ then outdenting it makes sense. I would only do that for really complex rules though.
18:18
Certainly, the need for readable rules is higher when the rules are more complex
I am not sure | is the same category as ] [, I really just wanted to see alternative choices "at once" without the need to search
@Ladislav "in the same category" in the sense of being syntax and structure, rather than being operations.
I think that you probably shouldn't put a | on its own line if it is after a then, space allowing, since they are related.
18:43
Unless you are structuring the whole sequence like an if else statement.
[
    'a then
        'b
    |
        'c
]
Put the | at the same indent as the line with the then and it looks like the if else it acts like.
19:39
One thing to mention is that if we find a good way of doing this, it might be nice to go edit the StackOverflow answers to match the "best" style.
I'd also mention again that we are allowed, for purposes of institutional knowledge, to go find old Q&A from history and distil it here. It would be nice if we could contact the original question authors to have them re-ask and then the original answerers re-answer in a curated way.
This is approved by StackOverflow policy
As long as you don't flood them
19:59
@HostileFork, that last Parse answer you gave, where you said that Graham's answer was better - it wasn't. Your answer was better. No offence Graham :)
20:28
Wrt. Parse style—I don't think there's any one answer: generally I have my own format but switch up depending on what is most readable. I put '| first on the line and substitute a space for the first one:
parse something [
      one rule
    | another rule
    | a rule (
        with some code
    )
    | last rule
]
20:50
@GrahamChiu You mentioned you had a Commodore machine stolen as the only thing out of your apartment once. Curiosity question: what year was that?
@HostileFork No .. never lost a CBM machine to thievery, only to rust
@GrahamChiu Hrm. Searching history. Seemed to recall when we were discussing with breakin stories you had an unusual one
@HostileFork terrorist squad raided my apartment in London .. thinking I was IRA
@GrahamChiu Ah, took a computer but not a commodore?
must have confused my Kiwi accent with an Irish brogue
@HostileFork nothing gone except the front door
@rgchris I guess none of the pretty print routines indent on |
21:04
@BrianH Actually, I treat the ordered choice as an operation, but that does not mean I do not want to use the formatting that is the most readable.
@BrianH That is a formatting problem, in fact, since the THEN keyword modifies the properties of the choice operation, so the | "following" THEN does not behave the same way as the other | eventually following it.
To be honest, I did not even think how would I format a THEN expression (not using it yet)
I mean explicitly an expression like: 'a then 'b | 'c | 'd
'a then 'b | 'c
|
'd
@Ladislav @BrianH It seems to me that studying this matter abstractly isn't as useful as trying to look at concrete, used examples. Why not pick something like @DocKimbel's lexer.r from Red, or other large relevant examples? Why not a pull request with a reformat and see if it's palatable or not?
@HostileFork well, the problem with that is that you aren't talking about coding standards anymore, you are talking about real world use. That is way too practical to do in a coding standards discussion.
21:21
@BrianH In the Clojure Style Guide, the second sentence is: A style guide that reflects real-world usage gets used, and a style guide that holds to an ideal that has been rejected by the people it is supposed to help risks not getting used at all – no matter how good it is.
@HostileFork For the format I proposed see e.g. rebol.org/view-script.r?script=ladislav-include.r
Older versions used different formatting, as you might have expected.
The parse rules are close to the end of the script, search e.g. for "update-directives conditional-directives"
However, I do not think this "concrete example" helps you since you are now required to look at the large code. (no need to read it completely, though)
So, @HostileFork, will you let me know once you read it?
22:05
Well, I generally prefer:
] [
to
]
[
@HostileFork ][ is the right way, so scripts or code snippets can be copy/pasted in console.
@Ladislav From what I see in your INCLUDE source code, it's very close to my own style, except for the extra newline you are adding after each |.
@HostileFork Hmm, I see some differences. Let me give you an example
my-data: [
    [
        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
        11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
    ]
    [
        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
        11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
    ]
]
my-data: [
    [
        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
        11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
    ] [
        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
        11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
    ]
]
I do prefer open/close on the same line
My statement above for ][ is wrong. Only opening brackets need to be on the same line (no extra newline just before them) to ensure that code is console-friendly.
Bear in mind, given my history, I do not generally think of programs as two-dimensional text, they are graphs to me, and these debates are silly as I would rather be dealing with a projection of the underlying program.
But as I've eased back into the idea of editing programs as character streams, I've changed some of my opinions. It is a matter of accepting the medium.
22:16
@HostileFork I prefer too, one blank line is enough to separate code/data parts, two blank lines is wasting vertical space to me.
To me it is, again, like LEGO. A certain way of building the parts. It is not neurons, it is not semantic graphs, it is a toybox. But I and many other programmers and non-programmers are grateful for the thought put into LEGO. Well, before they went with commercial tie-ins and lost their mojo.
So yes, these debates cause me some angst, but I have decided on a few conventions in C++ and I'm less qualified to talk about Rebol conventions
@HostileFork Yes, what I wanted to underline was the fact that append [...] [...] almost "requires" the closing and opening brackets to be on the same line, while the data example does not require something like that.
Well looking at the two examples above, I am only telling you that I do not care for the brackets in the middle being on separate lines. I guess you can ask around.
In an ideal world, this would be what we used to call at MS Research "unparsing"
Draw graphical boxes if you like.
We made conditional expressions into circuit diagrams, the terminal expressions with no logic gate expression would unparse into their default. If/else/then drawn by flowchart. Same program.
Flip a switch and the inverter symbol goes back to "!"
No version control conflicts, no whitespace in your program, just rendering
22:35
Back to the parsing example, when not putting the closing and opening bracket on the same line I wanted to discern cases like:

    step1
    step2
    step3

from case like:

    append value1 value2 ; which is essentially one step
but that is just to explain why I wrote it that way...
I certainly can write

    step1 step2 step3

as well, but that is actually unusual
@Ladislav In C++, I put all member initializations on separate lines in constructors regardless of how long or short they are. I also put the commas at the beginnings of those lines. I often think having a system/standard is better than "saving lines"
However, I can uderstand that if you see something conflicting with your own standard, you may find it annoying because it looks different than what you are used to...
Also, I am not using my glasses too often (I should), so I am starting to prefer "larger formats"
@Ladislav You're going to ruin your eyes! :-) Get a bigger monitor! :-) (just finished simulated car packing of worldly possessions for move, monitor is one thing that's not getting left behind!)
22:58
Well, not all my monitors are big, unfortunately (my notebook is just 15 '')
...and I am glad I bought Galaxy Note instead of SII
@Ladislav Running a Galaxy Nexus for the moment. It's... ok. I like it, especially being unlocked (US carrier policies are terrible, get an unlocked phone, if any rebellion is worth joining that's one). I guess I should install the R3 droid thing and test it
23:43
@HostileFork One of these days Google will replace all our monitors with their glasses!
@rebolbot do print "am i alive?"
tryrebol server timed out
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print "am i alive?"
am i alive?
looks like two versions of rebolbot are running!
@rebolbot version
@GrahamChiu 0.0.34 17-Apr-2013
@GrahamChiu 0.0.34 17-Apr-2013

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