@pierre If a Github fork is not created by accident (and they very often are, in my experience), then because someone wants to publish one's additional work.
For example, I have currently two public "wip" (work in progress) branches on github.com/earl/r3/branches. Those are up there, so that I can collaborate with others on them.
There's also two series of fixes up there, which are not yet submitted to be merged, because we wanted to test them more widely first.
Well, I'm a long-time intensive Linux user. So I really prefer for things to integrate with my native environment nicely.
But I think I understand where you are coming from. Back when I started with Rebol, one of the big appeals was the very nice graphical console on Win32.
@earl Good point: I was thinking of implementing some unix utilities, such as grep, cat, etc. in Rebol, or maybe better in Red: in such cases, of course, stdin and stdout MUST be perfectly reliable.
@earl I was also appealed by VID ease of use, but on GNU/Linux.
@earl Yes, unfortunately. I was actually doing this, at home (GNU/Linux) and at work (windows, 10 years ago), and it was just magically perfectly homogeneous.
R3 console is pain in the ass, really. Ugly as hell, no completion, and what bothers me most is no multiline = you can't just paste your code, when prototyping ... unless is serves us as real console = launched in defaultly opened shell and available via remote ssh session for e.g., then it is a clear step backwards ...
No completion, no multiline, no /View. Just so that we understand each other :)
Multiline should be doable rather easily, completion just for filenames will be a slightly bigger effort, full completion including words will be more work.
Nice, it works ... yes, I know, that's what I understand. I was the one trying to help Carl sort it out, how to have both real console, while still allowing to launch View. Carl did not succed, the fault might be with Windows not allowing something like that
Is MS crazy or what? Do other systems have similar problems? The need to have two distros? I expect it being burried in old APIs, so no will at MS to change those aspects ...
pierre, but earl might be right - back at the time of Win 3.1, 95, there was also 3.5NT server branch. And that was imo later base for W2K and later ...
@earl Yes. Unfortunately, they kept the same old awful "shell", MS-DOS-like, with so poor compatibility, long file names' support suddenly breaking, etc. End of troll, now...
Windows took a different route, and tried to be a pure GUI OS.
I don't have any quarrels with that.
In many parts, it turned out quite well. In other parts, such as the strict GUI vs console separation in the process model it makes you shake your head.
@DocKimbel Yes... I had an interesting project, where I considered asking softinnov some work, about a database front-end for people who don't speak SQL.
...
@earl something that works. Mac OS X on my wife's old Mac Mini just works, simply.
@pekr Multi-line support is not complicated to add, you can take the code from Red console if you want. IIRC, Kaj has an improved version in his forked console.
@pierre - I naver used Magic server pages, if you mean that old rebol system. Now ppl either use Cheyenne (you need to replace Apache, so that is not always an option, if you run hosted for e.g.), or Quartermaster from Chriss Ross Gill, which is still being supported ...
What you would see is my led screen, my cool studio, but an old house, as I put most of my money into various projects I like :-)
btw - Vienna is not so far away, just some 3 hours. From Brno, where Cyphre, Rebolek and Oldes live, it is under 2 hours I think ...
I am still curious, if there would be any devcon in September or later, in Vienna, imo EU guys could come. Prague would be good too, more centre of Europe, but from here, even further than Vienna ...
this is good style, especially the second, which is more flexible as it allows you to mass-effect all uses of the outer print, without any ambiguity. when using direct binding, it may occur that the word outer-print is redefined or the context changes between two calls to make foo [] and in the...
In Rebol 3 you load code using rebol.r, which is supposed to go in the same directory as the rebol executable. It won't load rebol.r from the user's home directory because files in that directory tend to be writeable by programs running with the user's permissions, which makes it a nice place to ...
During Carl's visit, Discourse was brought up and the possibility of setting that up as a chat to use instead of/in addition to this. Is anyone interested in trying that out. It is, as was mentioned, open source.
I just think that for new people dropping by, this is not really that great - as evidenced by Carl's experience.
FYI, some people here may be happy to know that my new job uses git and github quite heavily, so I've been getting a crash course, even in the command line. It's a rebase shop rather than a merge shop, so that might affect my approach to future contributions :-/
hello guys, i have a parse question. how can i match a slash word in a dialect? >> parse [person / name: string age: number] [word! '/ some [set-word! word!]] ** Syntax Error: Invalid word-lit -- ' ** Near: (line 1) parse [person / name: string age: number] [word! '/ some [set-word! word!]]
@GrahamChiu meaning that the changes you make in your contribution are based on the state of master at the time that you incorporate the contribution, instead of at the time that you fork your branch. Since this is not actually true, you have to rewrite history using the rebase command after you are finished with your changes, resolving any conflicts yourself. This means that only you have the responsibility to merge your code - noone else is doing the merges.
I just had a major task which took 3 weeks, and I had to rebase my changes on the current state of master every day. It was annoying, but at least it was my annoyance, not someone else's.
@BrianH in a busy repo even with rebasing, isn't there a good chance there will be additional changes introduced before a pull-request is accepted by a maintainer? i.e. there could still be some merging that s/he needs to do
@Adrian Sure. If contributor and maintainer/integrator roles are separate, the lines can quickly become blurry.
But the point with separate roles typically is not to avoid all types of merges, but rather to avoid needless mainline-to-descendent merges back-propagating into mainline history.
But even then, "merge races" are nothing unheard of :)
@earl indeed, sorry. okay, it's better if i sleep. so in R2 i cant do this? for now i changed the slash to star in the dialect so this works: >> parse [person * name: string age: number] [word! '* some [set-word! word!]] == true
@Adrian well, there is someone whose job is to merge pull requests, and they won't merge without passing a lot of automated and manual tests, so actual changes to master happen at a fairly regular pace. Plus, everyone else who has been doing pull requests has to rebase too, so it never gets too out of sync.
@RebolBot do/2 parse [person / name: string age: number] compose [word! (to-lit-word first [/]) some [set-word! word!]]
Just looking at Carl's clean-script. It uses load/next which is deprecated in R3. Have to use transcode/next which then means the script has to turned into binary.
Load/next => Transcode/next was a security issue?
BTW, from Carl's visit yesterday: 1. Rebol.net - he wants to hand over 2. Rebol.org is not under his control
@GrahamChiu good question... i just got used to r2 too much. when i tried to do anything in r3 (in the past) nothing worked as expected so i never really looked back at it.
actually i don't even know where can i find a binary of some latest version for the mac
@GrahamChiu not security, a matter of scale. The load function is considered higher-level and more heavy-weight in R3. The transcode function does the lower-level parsing, and is actually called by load internally. There is stuff that load does in R3 that doesn't make sense to do incrementally, so load/next doesn't make sense anymore.
ok, i tried my recent script on r3-gfc51038 and of course it doesn't work. i had the same experience w r3 every time i tried it, so that's why i haven't switched still
tab doesn't work in the console
empty lines are preserved in the command history
then here is this: >> x: read http://google.com ** Access error: protocol error: "Redirect to other host - requires custom handling"
the error in my script seems to be rooted in some scoping changes: $ r3 schema.reb ** Script error: contain? word is not bound to a context ** Where: do expect do either either either -apply- ** Near: do to-word join compare "?" actual expected [[" ok -" desc*]...
i made this little assertion tool: expect: func [ actual '_to_ 'compare expected ] [ print either do to-word join compare "?" actual expected [ [ " ok -" desc* ] ] [ [ "ERR -" desc* newline "Expected to find:" mold expected newline "within:" mold actual newline ] ] ] contain?: func[a b] [found? find a b]
so how can i give a function as a parameter to another function if i dont want to use a get-word? in r2 it's: compare-with: funct ['fn a b] [do fn a b] compare-with < 1 2
It passes the block to the function as arguments. It doesn't evaluate the block in the context of the function.
The apply function does evaluate the arguments in the block using consistent rules though, and ignores the evaluation rules of the function, such as lit-word or get-word arguments. It does type-check though.