r3wp [groups: 83 posts: 189283]
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[I'm new] Ask any question, and a helpful person will try to answer.

Anton
10-Mar-2005
[43]
The most elegant solution would be to patch layout so it accepts 
set-paths.
Normand
12-Apr-2005
[44]
Speaking of double bind, I have no clue of the how-to to this clue. 
 In Ocaml we can make co-recursive definitions, also with negation. 
 But when I try this on Rebol, it claims the value before I have 
the time to define it:  a: not b and b: not a.   Interp: ** script 
error, b has no value.  What is the method ?  Or are we out of paradise? 
 I could use that as a form of loop, or a form of lexical closure 
to model some linguistic phenomenas.  But how?  We know the problems 
of complement of complement, but as a function value it should be 
feasible.
JaimeVargas
12-Apr-2005
[45x2]
Do you have an example,  besides:
a: not b
b: not a
In rebol this are executed serially, so the first statement fails 
because b is not defined.
Normand
12-Apr-2005
[47]
A pair number cant be defined without impair. pair is impair +1 and 
impair is pair +1.  So we have to define both at the same time.  
In logic, the negation is a function where true is false and false 
is true.  Not and complement are native to rebol.  If I try a: not 
'b b: not ''a. asking the value of a, :a, does not return not b but 
false.   Something like this does not seem to work.  What I want 
is criss-crossed functions one defined by the other.  In principle, 
Rebol being functionnal.   It should be simple, a one liner, but 
I am too newbee to find the elegant way to do this.
Ammon
12-Apr-2005
[48]
Normand, can you give us the actual code that is tripping you up 
here?  Perhaps with a look I could help you out...
Volker
12-Apr-2005
[49]
Normand, seems you do not define functions, but executes the expressions 
directly?
pair: func[][impair + 1]
impair: func[][pair + 1]
the code makes no sense but rebol accepts it perfectly.
Ladislav
12-Apr-2005
[50x2]
Normand: don't you mean this?:

odd?: func [i] [either i = 0 [false] [even? i - 1]]
even?: func [i] [either i = 0 [true] [odd? i - 1]]
odd? 11
warning: odd? and even? are already defined in Rebol, you might prefer 
to use names like pair? and impair? instead like you wrote above
Normand
28-Apr-2005
[52x4]
Thanks for the answer.  I am aiming in the direction of corecursive 
types, to model a category thing.  So the following works.
Co-recursive types:
>> owed: func [x] [either paid? x [negate x][false]]

>> owed?: func [x] [either all [integer? x negative? x] [true] [false]]
>> paid: func [x] [either owed? x [negate x] [false]]

>> paid?: func [x] [either all [integer? x positive? x] [true] [false]]
>> a: 5
== 5
>> owed a
== -5
>> owed? a
== false
>> owed? b: owed 5
== true
>> a: paid b
== 5
>> paid? a
== true
>> paid? paid -5
Now I need custom types.
--Type inference from a newbee point of view:

What if I wanted to form true (but un-native) datatypes ?  To program 
them, I shall use the same method as other types in Rebol: 

To mention the type as its value : seasoning!: seasoning!, like the 
definition of the type money!: 'money.

Rather, I would like to do type inference as they do, for example 
in ML (I adapt the example from Felleisen's LittleMLer):

So I would need to define a new type and verify the type of a word 
with type?
seasoning!: ('salt or 'pepper)
Unfortunately this does not seems possible 
** Script Error: Cannot use or~ on word! value
** Near: 'salt or 'pepper
In Rebol:
>> source integer!
integer!: integer!
type? 1
== integer!
but
natural!: (0 or natural +1)
Type inference:
seasoning? salt
Would like the answer == seasoning
is-of-type? 'salt seasoning
Would like the answer == true

Am I forced to turn to Ocaml to do this?  I am stuck.  Thanks for 
any help!
Ladislav
28-Apr-2005
[56]
I don't know exactly what you can accept and what not, but this will 
work:

seasonings: [salt pepper]


seasoning?: func [value [any-type!]] [found? find/only seasonings 
get/any 'value]
seasoning? 'salt
Sunanda
28-Apr-2005
[57]
As far as I know it is not possible to define new types.


Not sure that would solve your problem anyway.  A word can point 
to a value that has only *one* type (ignoring the heirarchy -- eg 
block! is also series!). So complex assertions about something would 
not be easy.


Maybe rethink the need.....Use objects to hold both a value and a 
type:
>> item: make object! [value: 'salt type: 'seasoning]
>> item/type
== seasoning
>> 'seasoning = item/type
== true

You could encapsulate that in a couple of functions and expand the 
scope (maybe make type a block with multiple values)
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[58x8]
Gabriele Santilli has made some custom types. I don't remember having 
fully understood how it works, so I can't tell you how he did it 
! But it can be found here:
http://www.colellachiara.com/soft/YourValues/libs/
custom-types.r is GPL.
(It's really very clever. :)
Just reading the code... Needs a demo.
custom-types.r  needs  standard-actions.r
I'll try to make one.
Hmm, there seems no easy way to make a demo. Gabriele is using an 
include mechanism (prebol.r I think) from the SDK . But it looks 
like
http://www.colellachiara.com/soft/YourValues/main.r
is the starting point.
Gabriele, if you're listening, the header of http://www.colellachiara.com/soft/YourValues/yourvalues.r
contains:
	File: %main.r   ; <-- should be %yourvalues.r   ??
Gosh, it's too hard for me to do in any reasonable time. I suggest 
looking at the code to figure out the method used, then see if you 
can make your own custom types.
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[66x5]
Anton: the header is wrong because that file is generated with prebol 
using main.r
(a version of prebol with some minor modifications.)
about an example: there should be a complex.r in that dir that is 
a bit outdated (lacks support for molding and loading) but should 
be a good start. also template.txt is the starting point to create 
a new type.
you need to use starred actions on them though, i.e. add* instead 
of add, insert* instead of insert and so on, as well as make* and 
to*.
maybe somedaye i'll have the time to finish this stuff and add docs...
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[71]
:) Now I think I remember I asked you that about the File: before 
sometime...
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[72]
but, i'm not 100% sure Normand really needs this. custom types are 
not always the most elegant solution; actually, they are very rarely.
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[73]
What are you up to these days anyway ?
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[74x2]
also, i would really discourage a newbie from using that stuff as 
it is very experimental :-)
finishing the detective version 3, then (don't know if i can say 
that, so i won't.)
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[76x3]
Why not ? :)
I wish I had some understanding of inference rules. Never studied 
Lisp stuff.
I think all those parens scared me away.
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[79]
i don't think common lisp does any type inferencing.
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[80]
That's how much I know. :)
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[81x3]
and, i think an interpreted language would probably have a hard time 
at it, except for simple cases like the seasoning above.
which is elegantly solved as ladislav pointed out anyway.
the only advantage of having a real type in that case is type checking 
in fuction arguments; you don't get that with my custom-types (i 
don't think it is worth redefining FUNC etc. just for this), and 
it's not a big deal actually.
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[84]
Are you actually using the custom types in any apps ?
Gabriele
28-Apr-2005
[85x2]
i'm using something close (i.e. a very dumbed down and specialized 
version of it) in the backend for the portals for the Detective
basically the scripts interface to the mysql db via custom rebol 
values
Anton
28-Apr-2005
[87x3]
I see.
I've just noticed a new global word PATH existing since View 1.2.10, 
an undocumented function.
--> rambo
Volker
28-Apr-2005
[90]
About custom types: thats objects. they work like dynamic OO, no 
static typing and inferencing like ML
Normand
30-Apr-2005
[91]
Thanks for all those suggestions.   I was out for quite a while and 
am very happy of all those remarks. It will help orient my trials&errs. 
 About  objects, dynamic versus static, If I understand it, in Rebol 
it is static?  I never had to use them except to encapsulate the 
whole of an app.  Is there a trick to mimick something dynamic to 
hold changing values?  Maybee a copied block is enough?  I wonder 
because I regularly try to add code to a bibliographic database, 
a kind of a variation on bibtex (never ended, allways in progress), 
And I am not too far from aiming the storage mechanism and wonder 
what I should use to hold something like from 5 to 10 thousand references 
(my actual need is 3.5K)  I used endnotes in the past, but dreamed 
about my own.  It is a lot of work (more than I expected as it is 
my first app).   Up to now I think I will use simply name-value pairs, 
like Carl's cardex.  This kind of data is more like a ragged array, 
the fields and their numbers allways vary, and I may amend their 
list with time.  The idea of using an object would be nice but need 
something where I may add or retract variable names and change their 
values.  By the way, I thank Volker for his edit-tools, that may 
help to add a writing pad.  And his double slider is refreshingly 
new for such and old paradigm as an editor.
BrianH
30-Apr-2005
[92]
The structure of an object is static (which fields in which order), 
but the values assigned to those fields are as dynamic as you want. 
Also, if you want to add or delete fields it is quite easy to create 
a new object with your changes at runtime. If you are just using 
an object as what other languages call a dictionary or hash map, 
you might as well use a block or hash type for your data.