6:09 AM
@rgchris In thinking about your question about reuse of parse rules, the thing that I keep coming back to is the idea that in Rebol, BLOCK! is used as a unit of currency, in places where other composition-based languages would demand a FUNCTION!. One of Rebol's strengths is that each level of recursion doesn't involve explicit parameterization, your intent is conveyed with a "rich" data structure.
It makes things more expressive (not boilerplate f(x(y,z(a,b,c))) indefinitely), but the absence of parameterization via the "call stack" (let's lump in parse rule embedding as its own kind of a "call stack"), puts a lot of pressure on binding, and binding even ignoring its costs to do correctly is a bit of a Rube-Goldberg black art.
Rebol is not a functional language like Haskell, where also IF and other primitives are more or less just compositions within the paradigm. If not for a small detail of lexical prettiness, Haskell could similarly have its conditionals implemented equivalently to a "usermode" Haskell IF.
And PARSE is not an attribute grammar, those areas are studied well. Rebol has more in common with a Turing machine or with anything else in the imperative model.
This gets me a bit torn between a rock and a hard place, because I know that without those kinds of formal methods, you're not going to have a "working" system in the engineering sense of "working". But if we are to adopt this inspired by theory, driven by practice mantra, the question is that if Rebol is going to go up a notch from the place it is now, where's that firepower going to come from.
And your direction of solution to the parse reuse problem falls under the "area of investigation" which virtual binding looks at--you talk about THROW and CATCH, which is really a way of saying that blocks have a missing aspect of reuse when they don't talk about the "call stack" (again using my extended definition of "call stack")
Specific binding, and virtual binding, is about the idea of giving blocks "parameters", which if taken as a formal method of study gets tied up close to attribute grammars.
The good news is: Ren-C has the technical basis to attack scenarios in this vein. Where Red's BLOCK! cell has a "reserved for future use" slot, Ren-C has specifiers and a good model for beaming contextual information down through blocks and linking it up.
The bad news is: I'm not sure exactly what subset of attribute grammars can apply to a mechanical system like this. The best idea I had so far was to say that REFINEMENT! would be a way of accessing contexts which had been augmented via the call stack... so code: [print /foo] would be able to have one block that without a BIND could actually search linked attribute space based on who did the DO CODE.
Bluntly put, do in [foo: 10] code => prints 10, do in [foo: 20] code => prints 20, no binding involved... the code BLOCK! and its bindings never get mutated... an out of band "specifier" threads through the execution path.
Reiterating the good news: this mechanic is already solved...when a "cell" is picked out of an array, it is considered to be "unspecified". The only way it becomes a "specified" value (one which can resolve to a variable in a context) is if something threaded through the call stack gets recombined with it. That something is called a "specifier". Without going into super big details about it, it's neat and it has been working for well over a year.
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9:48 AM
0
Red moved this functionality to split, but I see that it doesn’t work with multiple delimiters as in your case. I will report it as bug. UPDATE: See https://github.com/red/red/issues/3095
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4:15 PM
posted on November 02, 2017 by hostilefork
Because of the careful choices made in arranging the bits of headers of Rebol values, it's possible to know from examining the first byte of a void pointer whether it is a UTF-8 string or a REBVAL*. This adapts the scanner to be able to accept a feed of pointers to UTF-8 strings and Rebol values (as opposed to just one UTF-8 pointer). If a value is encountered in-between tokens, that value…
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5:38 PM
@MarkI ^-- The above is cool...and not so hard a trick (given the header bit stuff having already being worked out). The code that locates tokens just has a little pre-loop which pushes REBVAL* to the stack as it sees them (that's where scan accumulates values for the current array), and when it sees a string it falls through the token locating code.
Error messages and line numbering gets a bit tricky. How many lines does an arbitrary REBVAL* count for? :-/ But since these are all generated code situations, the line numbers aren't that informative anyway...if anything, you want to know the line in the C source file where the generation is happening.
I was curious what would happen e.g. with "/", would it be able to do pathing? But any token must appear fully inside its UTF-8 string component. So you can't--for instance--divide a scan up like ("{abc", "def", "ghi}") and get the STRING! {abcdefghi}. And ("a", "/", "b") produces
a / b
and not the PATH! a/b
.
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