launch: func [
{Runs a script as a separate process; return immediately.}
script [file! string! blank!] "The name of the script"
/args arg [string! block! blank!] "Arguments to the script"
/wait "Wait for the process to terminate"
][
if file? script [script: to-local-file clean-path script]
args: reduce [to-local-file system/options/boot script]
unless void? :arg [append args arg]
either wait [call/wait args] [call args]
]
@MarkI Still on the infix debacle...the one case where I can think of the "reducing" nature being basically a requirement is my idea of making a pathing operator, but it quotes the right hand side. a / b + 2 would work because it needs to quote that b. And if you were to write a / b + c / d you would want that to act as (a / b) + (c / d)
Okay I bet the pipe vs pipe2 thing explains it for @rgchris's case, it's a build configuration issue. I don't know about the Windows. It seems to me that synchronous should be the default, and if I remember correctly the only reason @ShixinZeng made it /WAIT was because there wasn't a good word for /NO-WAIT
It looks like the non-blocking piping didn't show up until pipe2(), and pipe2 isn't available e.g. on @Brett's old NAS.
Basically the thing I did for @Brett made pipe() the lowest common denominator, and demonstrated that version isn't currently working with wait. I think it can be made to work with a minor adjustment.
@MarkI The language essential point is that the pathing operator associates left, and the other language essential point (might) be that it quotes. However, which way the + associates can be considered negotiable.
Though in a sense, depending on how you look at it, it may actually need to associate right because the "end decision" may require the full chain, e.g. if a / b / c: 10 is to act as a/b/c: 10.
We can, with <tight>, cover all cases. It just makes me upset. It makes two kinds of evaluated parameters, and two kinds of quoted parameters, total of 4 classes.
APPLY won't care, and so one could argue "if you're getting a function you don't know anything about, use APPLY, and load its arguments directly...as the function was designed for ergonomic purposes to make source feel nice for people writing left-to-right"
It's only necessary if you want to break out of the WAIT loop periodically—you'd mentioned wanting to send messages after certain intervals. The server doesn't stop, it just doesn't process events until you return to WAIT.
In this case, I set the timer to every 10 seconds.
Can add "/description.xml" [...] to the SWITCH statement if it's to be served from the same location. And replace that print "..." statement within the FOREVER loop with send-multicast-message.
So, that's what my habridge is broadcasting every 10 seconds
The real Philips Hue bridge device, you have to push a button on it and then it broadcasts for a short period. Seems better then flooding the network with useless messages
One quirk: if I use a file as the COMMAND value, I get this—
>> call %rebol
unmanaged series was likely created during evaluator tick: 28809
series guard didn't trigger ASAN/Valgrind trap
:
either not a REBSER, or you're not running ASAN/Valgrind
There is a reason C++ was invented. :-/ The trick here is to try and refactor a Rebol-like thing so enough of it is bootstrapped from a C-like thing to evade a C++-like dependency.
@GrahamChiu You don't exactly exit the webserver though—just take a brief timeout from processing events.
The events are still there waiting for you to come back.
LAUNCH now works. I notice that CALL (no /WAIT) returns a process ID—I'm curious what you can do with this other than use again with CALL with process monitoring commands (e.g. to check if the process is done, or to kill). I guess this is why some folks (@earl @BrianH) were wanting a CALL scheme?
I'm also curious as to the effective difference between CALL and CALL/SHELL.
@rgchris Shell uses getenv("SHELL"), and then runs that as the first arg, then "-c" as the second arg, then whatever you said after that. If you don't use shell, it does a raw execvp() call with the string you gave.
@HostileFork I notice that insists on using a second (or more) string for any arguments, so you can't say call "ls -la", you have to say call ["ls" "-la"] or call ["ls" "-l" "-a"]
@GrahamChiu I don't believe so. If you get a request while outside the WAIT, the event is just queued until you return to WAIT.
It sounds like earl wants the string form to do a parse inside of Rebol, to avoid the overhead of the shell process. If you write a good parse rule, @rgchris, we can put more of CALL into Rebol code and then leave it to calling some call-core, which would ultimately be replaced by the scheme/port.
That would mean for instance that /SHELL would exist in the Rebol code for CALL, but not in call-core.
@HostileFork I notice there's still colour codes weirdness. I have my Rebol 2 prompt set to: "^[[31m^[[5D>>^[[0m^[[4D " <- This does not work in Rebol 3.
@rgchris Well this seems like something worth fixing, so I will look at it and fix it. Also, @ingo wants an option for the console to not lock source. So if you are now looking at it, then you can start thinking about the question of how these options would be set up. We can add the system/console/prompt stuff, but the question I'd ask is "what is system" and how is it that evaluators with no console are differentiated.
@rgchris I mean how, in a multiverse of Rebol evaluators, do these plug-ins (like a "console") keep their settings. One technical thing about objects in Rebol3 is that they are allowed to grow; growing is not the cheapest thing (it detaches an object from any sharing of keylists it has, and a new keylist must be made, the varlist array may need to grow and be copied as well if it was out of capacity).
So is it the case that each plug in registers itself as a new "field" of a system object? Or are things enumerated another way? Do you navigate to the "console module" somehow and talk to it?
@rgchris I think the thing to do is, if possible, survey what other systems do and see where the trends have gone. Look at how big systems do their settings; I feel the same way about modules, versioning.
I come from a mindset where things have GUIDs, and you just have big GUID tables, and you never get anything confused...but you kind of do get things confused. That's the OLE/CORBA universe.
@rgchris I really do want to have the final word on PRINT here, and I really am believing auto-spacing has to go. One thing that you might like is an idea I had which is that _ not be legal as a function argument. So it would be like a BAR!... it would evaluate to itself, and break up expressions.
This means that print ["The value is" _ x _ "of x."] would have an error if x was, say, a function that took a character or a string.
When you consider modifications to REDUCE which leave | in place, and then the idea that _ doesn't participate in REDUCE either, then I think it makes an interesting story about the space/newline analogues in ANY-ARRAY!.
And when you consider | being handled as newline in stringifications like PRINT, I think how it all adds up is a cohesion that will be favorable.
@GrahamChiu Abstractly maybe, but they seem to not like home networking or consumer type stuff. Sounds like they expect you to work in corporate IT of some kind. networkengineering.stackexchange.com/help/on-topic
@GrahamChiu What do you think if the _ BLANK! type can't be passed as an arg directly to function (must say blank and lookup through a word) and if auto-spacing in PRINT dies, where _ is treated as space and | is treated as newline.
If it is the pervasive "blank" value type, it makes a lot of sense.
It's the analogue to space in blocks. Then bar is the analogue to newlines. Both are linear sequences that have this need to convey separations which take up slots, in strings they are "whitespace characters" but it's like giving blocks their own "whitespace"
That was BrianH's argument for NONE! in general, that you had blocks that were being processed positionally, and so it was needed that compose [blah blah (something-evaluating-to-none)] actually put the NONE! value in that third slot, because it might be important.
And while maybe Rebol people aren't used to _ it's not that unheard of, being in Haskell as a placeholder, for instance--arguably in the same spirit. "I want something positionally here but I don't want to name it"
I find it to be semiotically conveyant of a blank.
I don't find that to be semiotically conveyant of a blank. R3-Alpha allowed just plain # to be a NONE!, and I don't find that semiotically conveyant of a blank either.
print ["The value is" # x]
You can still write print ["The value is" space x] if you are so inclined, or print ["The value is " x] or various other things.
But I think print ["The value is" _ x] is viable, and that if you start thinking of _ as acting as an expression barrier you start actually adding value and reliability.
People who haven't warmed up to BAR! yet should try it, I think BAR! is a true success story.
@GrahamChiu In the end, I'm sure you could say ☐: barrierize does [blank] or something.
User-level expression barriers will exist; but they won't be as cheap.
@GrahamChiu Well this is one way of looking at the question of what do you want a NONE!/BLANK! to look like. See it through the lens of "it's the ?" in print ["The value is" ? x].
It could even be ?. We haven't dedicated it to other things.
It could be a lone colon. print ["The value is" : x]. It could be a lone caret. print ["The value is" ^ x].
We could scrap the idea of | as newline, and say that if you want a newline inside a print you mention it explicitly, and then it's print ["The value is" | x]
But to me, _ as BLANK! and being the block analogue of a space, with | as BAR! and being the block analogue of a newline, just seems sensible. Everything requires acclimation, and I believe (without a suitable test audience) that this is very learnable and that the REJOIN-y universe it is contrasting with is much less so.
adjective: 'nice
better: true
print [
"Wouldn't it be" _ adjective "r" _ "if we had control?"
|
(unless better ["No!"]) (if better ["Yes!"])
]
I think evaluative blanks, however, should opt out. Only source blanks are spaces.
No one is stopping you from using space, and perhaps even the Rebmu-ish SP will make it into the box. (Rebmu itself might make it in the box, for compression.)
I kind of want to outlaw TAG! and ISSUE! and URL! from being literals in PRINT, because it seems to me that print-y dialects like FAIL could use these more effectively.
Do you really need to say print ["The tag is" _ <tag> _ "in source? Why not {<tag>}"]?
By restricting the print language to not use these, then things that are print-like have more options open to them, without surprising those used to print.
Of course, when things are evaluative by default, you don't know if print [foo <tag>] is trying to use tag as a parameter or not.
@GrahamChiu Maybe you can recruit some echoers with the lure of programming them without a .jar file
@GrahamChiu In fact, if you post under an amazon-echo and Rebol tag on SO, with some of your code, you might entice some followers of that tag to get curious.
@rgchris Can you explain why you expect "^[[31m^[[5D>>^[[0m^[[4D " to work? The instructions are (escape [31m) => "set graphics mode, foreground red", then (escape [5D) => "cursor backward 5 columns, clip to left margin", then ">>", then (escape [0m) => "all attributes off", then (*escape [4D) => "cursor backward 4 columns, clip to left margin"
Perhaps what's happening here is that your Rebol2 prompt was perhaps having to print over an existing prompt, or something? If you just get rid of the cursor control instructions, it works.
I guess the question we all have to consider is on the balance of things, considering that PRINT isn't really a dialect, how comfortable are we with x: 10 | str: copy [] | append str ["the value is" x] | insert str ["the value is" x] | str => "the value isxthe value isx", and basically every implicit system conversion of blocks to strings being unspaced...then having PRINT be different.
It feels a little bit less dicey if PRINT is out in usermode, where you can SOURCE it and change the behavior easily. When you add it up with the legacy compatibility and the upsides of auto-spacing, then the relative literacy of print unspaced [...], it seems more palatable.
But the point I want to make is that there's a problem, in that things like FAIL which are dialects, can't fall back on the same logic. If I say fail [<unexpected-type> "The value was" x "and the type was expected as" y], and FAIL has some kind of specialized processing, there isn't anywhere to throw in that UNSPACED because it would flatten things down to a string; and lose attributes of the block.
So it isn't just APPEND, JOIN, INSERT, etc. that are going to be out of sync with PRINT, it's going to likely need to be anything that "speaks block" and doesn't have a place to put the spaced/unspaced distinction.
So that's where looking for solutions that are systemically biased to non-auto-spacing comes from, which would ask the user of print to lean to print spaced [...] if that's what they wanted.
@HostileFork I'm sure this has been discussed, but I just noticed that either false a: 1 b: 2 evaluates both the true and false branch. What's the rational?
@ShixinZeng How would it not? If you don't put things in a block, then they will be evaluated. condition: false | if condition (print "this always runs" [code here that only runs if condition is true])
Just the way things work. No block, then no opportunity to suppress evaluation.
@ShixinZeng Depends on how you look at it. result: either false a: 1 b: 2... it picked a result from two choices. You're confusing the evaluation that happens to get an argument from the evaluation once the argument is ready.
Once either ran, with its arguments fulfilled, it did exactly as it should.
The argument fulfillment process for non-quoted arguments may perform evaluations. The exception is if it's quoted. But you don't necessarily want to quote the arguments to things like if or either... they might be products of evaluation. if condition code
It's a building block, and we've discussed ideas like "training IF" where the training IF would require all conditions to be in a GROUP!, and all bodies to be in a BLOCK!, and that might help people avoid writing if [a > b] [...] or other things that might be tricky.
@GeekyI Anything in particular confusing? You make a block of code and supply values for some arguments. If you don't supply a value, it's fulfilled ordinarily.
apo: specialize 'append [only: true] ... now apo is a function that acts like append/only.
@GeekyI Yes, the words you assign in specialize 'some-function [arg1: ... arg2: ... arg3: ...] are words from the spec.
I've wondered if there should be such a thing as "set-integer!" which you could use to do it positionally, so specialize 'some-function [1: ... 2: ... 3: ...] but, lots of things would have to happen for that to work.
@HostileFork I see, so basically IF/EITHER follows the same evaluation process as any other functions: the arguments should be evaluated (unless it's asked not to) before the function is evaluated.
print [to set-word! item "=>" mold get item]
print [to set-word! item _ "=>" _ mold get item]
print spaced [to set-word! item "=>" mold get item]
print [to set-word! item " => " mold get item]
print [to set-word! item space "=>" space mold get item]
If PRINT does not auto-space, the last 4 are all still possibilities. The second has the potential to offer the benefit of communicating that item isn't a function, by allowing the BLANK! to be a barrier--or that is the concept.
Had another look at this while I'm actually awake and think it goes like this
Echo from port 192.168.1.6 sends a SEARCH message to the broadcast address of 239.255.255.250:1900
I'm now supposed to reply with a UDP message to Echo's address. So, somehow I need to discover Echo's address and open port. Wireshark says it's 192.168.1.6:5000 but this port can clearly change.
So, does anyone know how I can get Echo's address and port from inspecting its broadcast message?
How do you get the IP of the sender of a Multicast UDP packet? The current code is setup in a synchronous/blocking manner (see note below). Here is the code:
private void receive()
{
string mcastGroup = SetMcastGroup();
s = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketTyp...
And I guess the same applies to me. I would open a udp connection to the broadcast address, and get a query and examine it to see if the sender IP address and port are there.
@rgchris I don't know that it would be outrageously difficult to make a console:// scheme that gave notice when keys were hit.
@giuliolunati The way the evaluator is currently written, the moment has passed for WORD! by the time the + runs. The reason you can lookback quote a SET-WORD! is because it is being held in the frame and is waiting for the right hand side to evaluate, so you can look at it before the evaluation.
One of the reasons between trying to come up with a true "general theory of infix/enfix" that @MarkI and I go on about is to generalize things so stuff like this can work. You should, hopefully be able to do it, once it is settled.
@giuliolunati There will be some "paradoxes", e.g. what would quote a + b do in your example? In the model I'm suggesting, the forward direction would override, so quote a would win and you'd get an error because + could not also quote.
@giuliolunati I have written some code that does this already, but there are issues with it. I really want it to be possible. You might try using a BLOCK! or ISSUE! or something that doesn't evaluate in the meantime.