@moliad I agree to work more on the quality of the capture, particularly the sound, than worrying too much about the streaming (the first talk is 12AM for me so I don't think I'll be watching live)
@moliad For the devcon for maybe we could schedule a group chat using something like a google hangout (which supports up to 10 users in a video chat). That way we could say hello face to face. If we did it around 9am on one of the days then it is not too late for Au/Nz people. What do you think?
It's available under /api/ instead of /do/ The returned result is a multi-part value in a simple line oriented format The parts are name/value pairs. The name is on the first line, and the value on the next lines If a number follows a name on the same line, it's the number of lines of the value. If there is no number, the value is just a one-line string value
FYI - Just checked charges for EC2. After the first year of free usage on the micro EC2 instance there is a charge, but it looks ok. $35 for 3 additional years seems like good value. I think it is fair to assume we can keep this instance running for a long time. (or someone else can sign up for another free year)
@moliad I tried to log in using the password I believed I had used to sign up but either I forgot what I'd chosen or it's not working. In any case I emailed you.
@moliad The technical issues which might plague trying to get a good copy of the video taken can be disconnected from the issues of making a live hangout. A Google hangout or Skype session on a laptop resting with its camera nearby can do just fine, especially if people have their own copies of the slide decks to flip through.
I think it will be nice to try the live part for kicks but I'd like to have that be a bonus that someone not involved with the main A/V effort does. Film crews do this when making "behind the scenes" videos...they don't bother the cinematographer and director with getting feeds out of the main gear
They get their own take, and then later cut it together with what the A-team did.
I ordered the 2x lavaliers and some extra batteries. Each has a mono out, so we put that in a stereo joiner and it can be recorded by anything with a stereo line in. For safety I would add a splitter and feed this into a backup laptop that has enough HD space to just record the whole thing. As demonstrated with Doc's Red talk, an audio feed can be used with slides as a worst case backup if something else goes wrong.
I remember one of those devcons where I think Gabriele was presenting and his Mac didn't have an AV out that matched anything that everyone else were using.
Is it all HDMI these days?
And of course at a rebol meet, you can't expect power point slides because everyone tends to write their own presenter software!
@GrahamChiu HDMI and all these standards are just packaging formats. It's like "hey, it's a MOV file, I can play it..." Or "Hey it's a WMV, I can play it...". Then you find out that there are codecs and streams and stuff and all you have is the moral equivalent of a ZIP file standard; a container. The plugs may fit but there's a lot more to it.
Apple is the king of charging you for cables that are like "it's a USB link and a DVI link together, so you have only one cable instead of two" and then a passive component can tear it down. A passive component only a few people in the world bother to buy and they will charge you $50 for
I want to make a bunch of video expos'es on the cable madness, and teach people how badly they're getting scammed. I find it baffling when I just show the average person a stereo or mono headphone cable and they don't know what they're looking at with the bands on the end. They think adapters are somehow magic because "some work and some don't...I paid for a cheap one once and it didn't work, it only had sound in one ear of the headphones..." QED you should buy a gold tipped monster cable.
@GrahamChiu but to answer your question on what kind of video outs you have on a camera, the handheld consumer market often doesn't bother with video out because they expect you to be out in the park or something so they focus on streaming to an internal SD card (or worse, to internal non-volatile memory that you can't remove but need a driver to extract; a trend that I hope has died out by now)
@GrahamChiu When you start talking about HDMI though, my point is, that the connectors are only part of the problem. My monitor runs 2560x1600 at 60fps or whatever, uncompressed, and (a) single-link DVI can't do that so they invented some odd standard of dual-link that's just basically two monitors side by side that happen to be on the same screen, but (b) then they have DisplayPort but the quality of the cable and how much speed you expect it to carry matters
Reichart had an interesting plug design idea that was based on rings and the way the connector went in had some kind of safe tiered system of electrical tolerances, so basically all the connectors were the same they just had different lengths. The deeper you went, the higher the power tolerance; I don't remember the specifics but I thought "well, at least it's safe".
Anyway digital logic doesn't suffer from these problems, and we spend more time worrying about the protocols these days. I'd rather there be a little smart dongle you can put on the universal plug when you're doing a new setup and it would give you diagnostics on what was going on each end...if there was a speed issue or protocol issue.
If everything were working, you could just remove the intermediary dongle and go use it to diagnose some other connection. The dongles could be relatively expensive, the cables relatively cheap.
But the dongle really just needs to be a computer interface; give the computer enough info. Kind of how old school oscilloscopes don't make sense any more.
Well real cable engineering is more complex than just separating a plus and minus channel from each other in plastic. Coaxial was one of the early clever hacks, and it has been getting more clever. Lots of tricks in shielding etc. to get the speeds. It's not just about the pins connecting on either end with these things.
That said, yes. You were most likely ripped on your last cable purchase; it cost a fraction to make of what you paid. There was a slightly higher amount of sophistication of the factory that made it and commodity markets in Indonesian extension cord factories can't make them. They can make USB 1.0 cables with the same techniques they make extension cords, though. They have existing relationships with distributors they used to sell telephone cords to, who decide to break into the USB market
Then there's Monster Cable. But they warned you--it's in the name! Let no one say there is no such thing as truth in advertising.
Anyway @moliad, the upshot of this conversation is we need to have a systems plan. I bought the Lavaliers and they are 9V powered and should run fine. To me, as the slide decks can be sync'd to good audio, my main issue is to make sure we have good audio and that we run some basic screencasting software to catch the slide decks.
We have due diligence and don't just have the screencasting machine catch the audio, but split it to a backup machine that is just running the audio to pick it up in case there's a problem and the screencasting software locks up or whatever. This machine is monitored by someone in the audience who makes sure the levels are good; like a sound man on a video set.
(I suggested @Adrian might do this. It shouldn't be too much of a distraction from watching the talks in general, this person just listens on headphones.)
(If the headphones sound fine, they don't have anything to do. If there are pops/clicks/problems they twist the gain, and if that doesn't solve it; they maybe do a hand signal to indicate a cut, as on a film set. I doubt we'd have to cut; of course when there are airplanes etc. it can't hurt to pause a talk.)
If we have a copy of the audio track that is already sync'd to the slides, that's super helpful and saves the umpteen hours it would take to line that up manually in a way that isn't uncanny. I'd like to intercut that with some video to keep things lively and give it a personality, but if it doesn't happen... it doesn't happen
And if the screencast solution fails for one or more talk, the backup is that for anything important it's just sync'd from the secondary audio recording.
And if one lavalier fails, we have a backup and the MC just doesn't have their own mic, we take my Snowball Mic set up on my camera's JobyPod and wing a wired mic on a podium for them. They can stand in one place for the introductions/Q&A.
I'll bring the gear and experience for all that, it kind of can't fail unless I die in a car crash en-route to Montreal, or they won't let me across the border because of that time I rented Strange Brew. Then the questions are how to get good video of the speakers to intercut and make the talks more lively.
@GrahamChiu I thought of making "Conference Checklist" but that is fairly broad. I want us to review slide decks for the talks, at least outlines, before we do them. Should that be separate for example?
Should we make a whole separate conference Trello?
And will everyone use it / read it if it gets made?
I think a card for each talk as a kind of review and feedback unit would be good
I mentioned the idea that speakers should not be interrupted with corrections ("No, it's not 516K, it's actually 530K" or whatever). It is not professional, and worse, inaudible on the recording...but the points may be valid. I just don't see why those kinds of things aren't fixed ahead of time.
Well I like the idea of a Trello for the conference and then each talk giver be in the phases of review, and maybe we throw some tasks there for the recording checklists etc.
@GrahamChiu Can you add one to https://trello.com/rebol? I think you made me an admin on the specific development board, but I don't seem to be listed on the group (lists you & adrian). Maybe you have buttons I don't have there, I don't see create a new one
Speaking of which, I want to publicly do a temperature-check about admin-ing in general. I started this chat room and considering that on the same day @GrahamChiu and @earl were there (plus much longer-standing members of the Rebol community) making them admins was a natural move.
I wanted things to be more inclusive and--indeed--we are here on stack chat regulated by the people who run the site who will decide if someone doesn't play nice. Our "admin" status is something that can be changed; as @GrahamChiu recently demonstrated a room administrator can remove any other room administrator on a whim
But I think these are baby steps in a more general "Trust Exercise". We need robots. They have slightly better trust due to the bonds of artificial friendship. (6 extra seconds of cooperation)
Trello seems to me slightly riskier as a place for institutional knowledge as import; it's not like Wikipedia where you have a full interface to history. What would happen if I went in and wiped all the cards? They probably have (internally) a transactional database that if someone did that they could roll it back, but that interface is not public... nor is the history public.
Well, by contrast, StackOverflow has Q&A edit history, full chat history, etc. And I have pretty good rep and do a lot of volunteer advocacy. So if something bothered me enough they might help me if I complained. (Although, as I've said, they seem to ignore and/or dislike most of my meta-suggestions... so that's probably not based on any true actionable fact. But as yet, my cries for assistance have not been about vandalism, or being removed from the admin list of the room, or whatever.)
Chat comments can be edited for two minutes, that's it. And you can see the edits if you care. Q&A has edit history, publicly viewable (like Wikipedia)
If we paid the support level, they'd probably listen to the person who pays the bill if someone went rogue and messed with things. But free is free. So I've wondered if we should casually invite people to join the Trello, e.g. here in the chat room, if they've not been "around" for a long time.
@GrahamChiu Well, I'm just saying that our choices are a microcosm of a greater question of trust. And I've always wanted to be inclusive and operate on the Wiki principle of Assume Good Faith (until proven otherwise).
I'm just saying one beef I have with Trello is that it's a step further away from StackOverflow (closed source, centralized, but w/strong APIs for data extraction and with an anti-vandalism squad as a necessity) into something closed source where you keep your knowledge and invite people but there's no established chain of power checking or anti-vandalism
But while I am complaining about it, I am pointing out that it has some overlap with the "big questions" about trust that affect governance on rebol.org, rebol.net, etc.
Anyway, original point is: it's easier to assume good faith in a system you can scrape and get back to where you were if worst comes to worst. You can do that with StackOverflow, I don't really see it with Trello.
Is there a way to export my data from Trello to my own computer?
I'm happy to accept any file format, so long as the data is in a file-format that can be parsed, e.g. I'm comfortable with writing a script to extract the data.
(I always try, with any online data I create, to find a way to export...
Hope not, data export should always be free. But I did note it might be worth it to pay them. I like Trello, and like to support good products. I seem to recall it being cheap, and you can make private boards. Remember:
@GrahamChiu Grrr. I wish of business features they wouldn't pick that one.
@GrahamChiu Okay, my idea is we have a column for unreviewed talks (no slide decks), then talks being reviewed (slide decks provided), and finished reviews. I added A/V prep and A/V complete.
I will reiterate my point about this conference. It is partially a party, sure. We all like to party and it is a refresher. But for those who think this is a conference where big decisions will be made, I ask that the decisions be made BEFORE, mostly. Then we can party.
I think it is to be a show of seriousness. A show that Rebol and Red are on the same page (big!) A show that Saphir and Rebol are on the same page (big!). It's time to pull the technologies together and demonstrate awareness of how to thrive in the open source ecosystem, and teach people how to not live in the dark ages of programming.
Over-stressing about getting people live feeds of HD video is far, far secondary to having a nice site where people can watch and understand the cool things people are doing. The ten people who would be watching the video can cope if the laptop isn't going right with the picture of the speaker
I am focusing on getting a good audio feed, and if the decks have been given in advance then it's not a big deal. As I keep rehashing over and over... as decision-making goes, the existing Rebol codebases pale in comparison to what Rebol and Red can do if people get it
Yup, Rebol is good in general at letting you look at your source code as having patterns in it, and not really blocking you from meta-programming any particular part.
Well I get into the finer points of C++ metaprogramming and it can blow your mind at times, it's just too bad C++ had such a crufty heritage and the only variant that is really going well is based on that.
I'm new to writing template metaprogramming code (vs. just reading it). So I'm running afoul of some noob issues. One of which is pretty well summarized by this non-SO post called "What happened to my SFINAE?", which I will C++11-ize as this:
(Note: I gave the methods different names only to h...
Well if you want to talk about that, talk to @DocKimbel. Red has more potential in this area.
@Sgeo I was a huge fan when I was in high school, hadn't seen anything like it. It was taking off at the time on unix machines. I ran Linux before people knew Linux was cool, when you installed it off 3.5" floppies and came from a newsgroup. And now I know Linux isn't actually that cool. :-) But open source is.
@Sgeo So you coming to the conference? I'll pay your admission fee!
Oddly I've met both the person who coined "Free Software" and the person who coined "Open Source". These are controversial terms. I think Richard Stallman should have tested his terminology and called it the "Software Freedom Foundation" and saved a lot of trouble, instead of confusing people with "Free as in Freedom, not Free as in Beer".
source: make function! [[
"Prints the source code for a word."
'word [word! path!]
][
if not value? word [print [word "undefined"] exit]
print head insert mold get word reduce [word ": "]
exit
]]
speak-debug: make function! [[message /local err][
if error? set/any 'err try [
to string! write chat-debug-target-url compose/deep copy/deep [
POST
[(header)]
(rejoin ["text=" url-encode message "&fkey=" bot-fkey])
]
] [
mold err
]
]]
Although I am currently back on the market, my listing on mailorderhusbands hasn't been approved yet, though. I might be stuck in the US for a while yet.
@GrahamChiu I identify most strongly with Marcus, because he keeps it real and knows how to discuss his mistakes.
"He spoke with the wisdom that can only come from experience, like a guy who went blind because he looked at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around the country speaking at high schools about the dangers of looking at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it."
I need to think of what to wear for the conference. I have been wanting to recreate the outfit from the Running Man from Something Good. Think that would be good for the Rebol conference MC?
Everything has been easy to find but the hat. That's a hard hat to find.
@rgchris The whole idea of "test suites" keeps coming up with Rebol, and as with many things, there doesn't seem to be a standard. It would be easier to design tests if there were an expression of what correct behavior was that was part and parcel of it.
My first Rebol experience was that Rebol did not have an enumerated type, and I had some bug trying to set up a Qtask installation, and I had to learn Rebol to find out why
It was because they'd not done it with Windows, and for reasons I don't remember, I was on a Windows machine. And line feeds were different, so they had a switch statement and it was trying to go to the next step in some process. And STEP was a word or string of some kind that was not proceeding because it was "foo^M" instead of "foo".
So as Rebol was supposed to be extensible I said "well you need to have a restricted set of possibilities, and the language must enforce it". I was kind of pleased with Enumerated Type for Rebol 2
@rgchris There is test code in it you'll find it under comment / context But the thing is, I don't know what use it is to ask people to hammer on a system that doesn't have built in tests. I had no clue what I was doing, but having talked about regression tests a couple times today it seems the beginning of testing is to build testing in on top of existing challenges, not batter RebolBot with guesses...
@Sgeo Glad you are continuing to take an interest. Sleep well.
Well, I am just continuing an earlier Skype thread with @DocKimbel here in the room, about the importance and need for tests to be part and parcel of the module.
You had a challenge you knew the correct response for, and you posted it in the room, as I read and wondered what form-date did
So I'd say, that, the right place to start is to have a list of inputs and outputs you know are correct. That helps people know what you're doing, so they can intuit what a good test would be. It also helps you test against regressions.
So you guys watch videos on the Internet, quick poll. Do you like it better when they take questions from the audience and you hear the voices of the people with the questions, or if a moderator comes up after the presenter speaks and picks and chooses the questions?
I think I did a good job of salvaging Doc's Red talk. That took lots... of... time. Unnecessary time. I won't do it again if I'm onsite to make sure it shouldn't take that time for a dozen talks
AND I faced backlash for doing it!
This cannot be how we go forward. We record it, cut it properly.
We publish the videos, I don't spend any more time or money than I need to, to capture them properly. And when they're published they are properly licensed; Creative Commons, and we deploy them at http://recode.rebol.net/2013
Fork - but copyright rights should be respected. The other party claimed, that you took their video, improved on it, but linked it to your links, which represent your point of view on certain rebol directions ....
That site is not governed by any single person, it's more wikipedia like. So if it has a failure mode, the failure mode is the failure of a community, not an individual
I have an account that allows long videos, you have to meet a few basic (but not that hard to meet) criteria
just record it on any camera, decently. I suggest even two cameras (one for presentation, one for presenter), with decent sound ... then we can cut it into whatever format ...
@GrahamChiu - I don't want to be part of any political nonsense, not in small Rebol/Red community.
@pekr Well in this area I know you know what you're talking about... so you know you cannot record with any camera with no light. Quality of sensor is nothing on YouTube, the cheapest camera is good enough usually IF the light is good.
@pekr I waited for Doc's word and complied. The point of contention was only that I had put (before the YouTube cut they impose before "see more") two links; one to the red homepage the other to this room. The request was I link to the esperconsultancy website. I said "If Doc says, I will". He said, I did.
The thing is, that I'm asking we not have a repeat here. I don't want anyone but the speaker to own the content.
And I'm ASKING (but not requiring, besides the whole neurotoxin if you don't agree part) that we come to a nice community consensus that lets the URL that is the public face of the conference not be controlled by some ONE person by fiat.
@GrahamChiu - why not? I have info from the other side (those two guys). Different point of view. For the next time, the solution is simple - all those things need to be settled first, so no such nonsense pop-ups next time. Video was not Doc's, so I am not sure how his word should matter here ...
@pekr Well you are speaking from a very photography aspect... you think the photographer (good or bad) owns the picture. This is neither entirely true or false. It's a perspective.
@HostileFork - I know some stuff about light and cameras. Ppl most often fail exactly in organisational aspects, not thinking ahead. Things tend to be rushed during the day of conference, and then you find out simple stuff blocking you, like missing some cable, cable not being long, "eh, last time it worked" syndrome, etc.
@pekr I'm looking ahead on this, I'll get there early, but I need people to help. I see the idea of having some nice speaker footage to intercut in the video edits as a really nice thing, it's more engaging that way. But I'm not going to kill myself over it. As you've perhaps read, I'm asking more that people don't interrupt the speaker and that if slide decks need be corrected ahead of time, it be done ahead of time instead by an inaudible murmur
@GrahamChiu - OK, as an organiser, and if you are a gues, I can as well tell you - ok, bring your own camera ;-) As I said, those things should be cleared-up ahead! Even with photoshoots. We are just starting, mostly with models we know, yet in one case, human words were not enough and model claimed some other rights later. Next time, some written agreement is needed, or adhering to conference rules - e.g. the condition to license videos as creative commons
@pekr Point taken: In fuzzy areas, things must be made explicit. I'd just like us to explicitly say that the material belongs to the speakers first, the community second, and the person who recorded it third.
There was no artistry or skill in the audio I had to clean up. It was incompetence; apparently with some mitigating circumstance. And I don't mind incompetence. I have a saying though, which is "What is the difference between incompetence and malice?" I decided an answer to that. accountability. Without accountability, incompetence=malice. You probably won't find a way to talk me out of that verdict, though I will listen for a while to see. But sometimes I'm just right.
@HostileFork - I know how time consuming it might be. It just happened three days ago - we were aproached by talented breakdance guys in our region, doing some competition. We provided them our studio, noticing them, we have NO video lights, just strobes, having some modeling lights. They were supposed to bring in guy, who is experienced in video.
Oh well, the guy brought his Nikon, then claimed he has only 1 hour time, then claimed having no free time to cut the video in next 3 weeks, which made it pointless, then asked us not to teach him his stuff, as he studies professional photography for 3 years. After few tries, he gave up.
So with my colleague we did our best, 98% of material was useless, but we adapted - dark scenes used to our advantage, so 2-3 hours shoot, next day 6 hours of making the advert. Done in two days, my first video :-)
@pekr Well I know what you're talking about, remember, I have some high end equipment here too... and yes, it's hard to say whether the "talent" exceeds the "production". It's fussy.
@pekr Sure, it happens when a serious crew shows up, sets the staging the lights in the days before, pays a makeup artist, the "talent" shows and is told everything to do, the result is amazing...
Then the so-called "talent" later claims ownership of the affair, when they were imminently replaceable.
I understand arguments from people who care about copyright and are confused because they live in scarcity environments about that debate. I find it banal, but, at least I understand it.
it still has amateurish aspects, but for the first video advert, I feel comfortable about it, guys are local, but were at Talent competition here in Czech Republic
I personaly did not find any problem with you fixing the video, as I know, how MUCH work it can be. I actually just heard some arguments, and took no side to agree with. As I said - move on ...
Well I'm willing to let it all be bygones, and really the result turned out to be no big deal
It was just changing a link from Doc's red page to an "esperconsultancy" link. He said that was okay.
I chose the links based on my values, but I wasn't even there. Who knows. It is true, the more I hear, that Kaj and co are people making big personal sacrifices for these projects, and they kind of want every attribution they can get.
@RebolBot print "Without Kaj I might not exist, at least not in this timeline, y'know"
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print {Without Kaj I might not exist, at least not in this timeline, y'know}
Without Kaj I might not exist, at least not in this timeline, y'know
The only thing I did was say "I won't do anything you say until I hear from Doc" and politically Doc said "Do what they say" and I said "if you say so, then so I shall"
If he told me to take the video down I would, but if they said that I wouldn't. I guess it's just about one's perception of the percent ownership in a work of art. A hard issue, and one that has invoked many lawsuits and years of battle for certain people.
example dot com is a redirect? :-/ I thought it was supposed to be an example. I want it to be meta; "this is what the internet is, here is what a DOT COM is" etc.
The wikipedia page for ICANN encoded in Arecibo ASCII. O, example dot com, you pain me
@rgchris Not your problem, their problem. I have been wondering about ICANN for a long time. After being bitten by redirects to ORG.COM I find it curious such things are allowed to go on.
I've called up the phone support lines for anonymizing server farms that originate and allow phishing from their domain, and gotten in philosophical discussions with them about why they don't care about the harmful message I got. And I debate whether their indifference or logic is a good reason to say that there is a reason they shouldn't care, vs. going and launching some form of attack on their facility.
Ok, I'll ask this way—I'd appreciate it if someone could pin my 'Form Date' request as it'd be useful to have it tested by anyone else that uses it (if such people exist).
@rgchris Well I know there are some competing test suite standards; the only one I have dealt with was the one from Peter Wood for Red (where is he lately? Is he coming to the conference, or going to watch live via Google Hangout?) but I know there's a test suite in Rebol itself that @earl gets me to run but I haven't actually gotten into the details of it.
He made me run it on the Haiku build so I know it passed most all of it
@GrahamChiu I've wondered if that's how I should get there. The mechanics of travel are seeming daunting, and I reeeeally don't want to cross the border with all my worldly possessions in my car. Gotta shop around for air conditioned and not totally insecure storage for my stuff.
I tested my nice new fanless power inverter with my air mattress the other day. This power inverter is better than the one I got for free from a friend, that people smashed my car window to take... that's all they took. They also riffled through the glove compartment.
I suspect the issue is that lucid dreams states exist in alternate universes so you will miss everyone else travelling the same way .. floo powder works better
You know, I sort of decorate my dashboard with broken glass now. And I keep my glove compartment open. The glass is all over still because I want them to know that I know people like them exist... and that I'll never leave anything of value in my car, or even of no value (that power inverter was nothing, < $10)
@GrahamChiu You think I didn't consider it? I had a whole security concept and it wouldn't have drawn much power, in fact, the door opening engages the door light; a very simple modification would notice when the doorlight came on
While criminals could theoretically smash your window and then crawl through the window, I don't think this is their current M.O.
But no, after that yes... I did become all vigilante. I actually really like my car. That was annoying. And life is already annoying. And this is Texas; heavily property-rights based. I could put some kind of murderous lasers in my car.
No Texas court would convict me if my car killed someone who invaded it due to a security based laser system
But, well, one thing led to another and Rebol got open sourced
I got distracted and the "install wifi detector laser signal powered by the door being opened" engineering project never happened. Also, I'm always thinking... like, what if they're the Dukes of Hazzard and they break your window and DON'T open the door
So much for trading uponst the "door opens, light comes on" existing system for your laser deployment.
And I'm absent minded and drink a lot, I might give someone my keys...and the phone battery is dead so I can't disable the lasers... and then, well, a Texas court might convict me if it wasn't someone shattering glass and touching precious mechanical property
Anyway, there's been lots of breakins in my garage but none into my car since I leave the glove compartment open and have my dashboard decorated with the broken glass from before
Trying to send a message. "I hate you. And oh, I think about the last time someone broke into my car. If you break in, a loud alarm will beep as this car freaks out. Maybe no one will hear it. But as you can tell, I don't leave anything in it. I didn't have anything in it BEFORE either, but now you can see... with the open glove compartment, and the dash I decorated with the broken glass..."
I think I've figured out my TRY-ELSE function for R3:
try-else: func [
"Tries to DO a block, returns its value or DOes the fallback block."
'block [block!] fallback [block!] /local reason
][
either error? set/any 'reason try :block bind :fallback 'reason [:reason]
]
try-else [something][do something else with 'reason]
@GrahamChiu I have got R3 Call redirection working (interactive but simulated). It leverages R2 because I couldn't replace that part with R3, someone else may know better.
funct: make function! [[
"Defines a function with all set-words as locals."
spec [block!] {Help string (opt) followed by arg words (and opt type and string)}
body [block!] "The body block of the function"
/with "Define or use a persistent object (self)"
object [object! block! map!] "The object or spec"
/extern words [block!] "These words are not local"
][
unless find spec: copy/deep spec /local [append spec [
/local
]]
body: copy/deep body
append spec collect-words/deep/set/ignore body either with [
Mostly, support for those functions is not yet implemented for many URL schemes.
All three mentioned functions use QUERY as the underlying action to obtain the information needed. So it's a matter of the implementation for a particular URL scheme also properly implementing full QUERY support.
Do any of the REBOL 3 gurus here know why the modified?, exists? and size? functions fail on R3 when targeting a URL?
These functions work fine on local files.
I am very familiar with R2, but R3 behavior seems strange at times. I am using stock code compiled from the Dec 12, 2012 open source re...
exists?: make function! [[
{Returns the type of a file or URL if it exists, otherwise none.}
target [file! url!]
][
select attempt [query target] 'type
]]
I haven't been able to get anyone from my group to take the Mac Pro and commit to doing our PPC Rebol builds. I'll see if I can get anything for it, and if not, donate it to someplace that is teaching like... mouse skills or something. If we continue to think it's important to make those builds, maybe someone can just get an old PPC powerbook. (I used to have one of the first 17" ones, and sold it for like $150 a few years ago.)
Over the last days, I have tried to read systematically through this chat, but... No. Impossible... I'll just check the starred posts, see if I missed any major event.