World: r3wp
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Allen 3-Sep-2007 [806x3] | ? ! |
or using "? datatype!" | |
not as much fun as exploring/learning with your own funcs, but help "?" can do some great things, including matching on datatype "? tuple!" is a quick way to lookup colours. | |
RobertS 4-Sep-2007 [809] | Thanks. And is that colours or colors? ;-) |
Allen 4-Sep-2007 [810] | ; interesting question ... Rebol lets me spell it "colour" if I really want to :-) alias 'color "colour" view layout [label with [colour: red] "hello"] |
btiffin 4-Sep-2007 [811] | Robert; Make sure you check out http://www.rebol.it/romano/and in particular http://www.rebol.it/romano/#sect1.1.anamonitor 3.0 and 2.0. Not something for your average I'm new resident but I have a feeling you'll appreciate Romano's utilities. |
RobertS 8-Sep-2007 [812x6] | Here is one of my first encounters with unset! when working on a tutorial to introduce console Rebol to someone who knows Common Lisp >> m: [1 2 3] == [1 2 3] >> m == [1 2 3] >> probe m [1 2 3] == [1 2 3] >> print mold m [1 2 3] >> mold m == "[1 2 3]" >> type? print mold m [1 2 3] == unset! >> type? mold m == string! >> type? probe m [1 2 3] == block! >> |
the answer is interesting for me as a newbie and lies in >> source probe | |
; the error from trying >> n: print mold m ; natually leads to help print ; and since this fails p: write %tmp.txt :anything" ; with help write ; we get to clarify binding words to values, functions, procedures evaluation and returned values ; I hope to get tutorials prepared for OCaml and Scheme as well as Haskell and Curl, Perl, Python, Ruby and Smalltalk based on my experience as a newbie while I am still a newbie ... | |
; i.e., >> type? write %tmp.txt "newbie" == unset! >> unset? write %tmp.txt "new" == true | |
both English Rebol books call print and prin 'functions' The Rebol docs dictionary lumps all the words together as 'functions' The challenge I have in introducing Rebol in a tutorial is to explain why the second expression fails: >> c: open %temp.txt >> d: close %temp.txt ; when explaining that the last line seen in >> source send ; is not an indication that the function named send returns a value. In many languages procedures can be called functions. Is Rebol one of them? ; not all mathematicians can add and many cannot teach mathematics but can teach naval history. and such. | |
>> c: open %temp.txt >> e: insert c "test" >> close %temp.txt >> type? e ; this is easy to explain to Smalltalker as in ST you cannot assume that a method returns self | |
Gabriele 8-Sep-2007 [818x2] | they are all functions, as the all return a value. some return the value "unset!" which is treated somewhat specially by the interpreter. you cannot set a word to this value unless you use set/any, and you cannot get a word that refers to this value unless you use get/any. |
unset! is mainly used to catch typos (eg. if you write pint instead of print you get an error), and it's used as a return value by functions that don't have anything useful to return. | |
RobertS 9-Sep-2007 [820] | I wil be sure to cover get/any and set/any thanks |
RobertS 12-Sep-2007 [821x10] | ; using a context there is no problem traversing a path into nested blocks. But there is using nexted blocks alone. Here is my first answer to this... >> t1: [a "one" b "two" c "three"] == [a "one" b "two" c "three"] >> t2: [f t1] == [f t1] >> t1/b == "two" >> t2/f == t1 >> t2/f/b ** Script Error: Cannot use path on word! value ** Where: halt-view ** Near: t2/f/b >> pword: func [path 'word /local blk] [ [ return to-path reduce[path :word]] >> do pword t2/f c == "three" ; pword is my first pass at a function to traverse nested blocks which are not in an object; the alternative appears to be blk: get t2/f aPathDeeper: make path! [ blk c ] ; anyone know anoth path to take? |
; the local was a hold-over from an earlier pass at doing this pword: func [ { navigate one deeper into nested blocks using a path} path 'word { must be a valid path refinement} ] [ return to-path reduce[path :word]] | |
; simple nested blocks were not the issue >> t1: [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]] == [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]] >> t1/x == [f "for"] >> t1/x/f == "for" | |
; I only have the issue if I build t2 to hold some functor and a word bound to a block rather than the block, i.e., not >> t1: [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]] == [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]] >> t2: reduce['functor t1] == [functor [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]]] >> t2/functor/c == "three" | |
t2/functor/x/f ; also OK of course | |
; this issue persists >> t2: [functor t1] == [functor t1] >> p3: to-path reduce[ t2/functor 'x] == t1/x >> do p3 == [f "for"] >> p3: to-path reduce[ t2/functor 'x/f] == t1/x/f >> do p3 ** Script Error: Invalid path value: x/f ** Where: halt-view ** Near: t1/x/f ; there seems to be no way to "append'" to a path ?? | |
>> p4: to-lit-path [t1 x/f] == 't1/x/f >> do p4 ** Script Error: Invalid path value: x/f ** Where: halt-view ** Near: t1/x/f >> t1/x/f == "for" | |
; this works >> p4: to-lit-path 't1/x/f == 't1/x/f >> do p4 == "for" ; but it is no help if t am trying to pass in the path the I wish to "extend" deeper | |
>> p4: to-path "t1/x/f" == t1/x/f >> do p4 ** Script Error: Invalid path value: t1/x/f ** Where: halt-view ** Near: t1/x/f >> type? p4 == path! >> get first p4 ** Script Error: get expected word argument of type: any-word object none ** Where: halt-view ** Near: get first p4 ; using get first or get second or get last usually is handy diagnosing what is reported as a path but in fact fails as a path | |
>> p4: to-path 't1/x/f == t1/x/f >> get first p4 == [a "one" b "two" c "three" x [f "for"]] | |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [831x3] | ; If I'm understanding this correctly, you are trying to resolve a single path to a value in nested blocks (I'll take the liberty of reimaging the example): path: 'language/en/one language: [en english] english: [one "one" two "two"] resolve path ; == "one" |
; I'd look at this in two ways -- a) set up the blocks so the path works with 'do: language: reduce ['en english] resolve: :do resolve path ; == "one" | |
; or b) step through the path and resolve each value in turn: resolve: func [:path [path!] /local wd val][ wd: first path: copy path remove path val: get wd while [all [block? val not tail? path]] wd: first path remove path val: val/:wd if word? val [val: get val] ] val ] | |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [834] | I am trying to compare what I can do in Rebol to what I can do in another language with functors What hamstrings me is that a path cannot be extended unless the blocks are literally nested or in an object I am hoping some one will da ythat in R3 path! is more like a series! path: this/thing path: append path 'what rez: path |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [835x2] | (sorry, missed an opening bracket in 'while) |
path: 'this/thing append path 'what probe path probe to-block path | |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [837x3] | sorry what is a bad choice make that 'whatever |
bind to two valid paths compose with one word nested in a block you can append all you want type? is path and the path will not be valid | |
my little pword func was the shortest thing I could build | |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [840x2] | path: join 'language/en 'one probe resolve path path: join 'language/en 'two probe resolve path |
The path is not valid, so long as you are trying to resolve it with 'do. | |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [842x4] | why should that be so? |
the path is just word1/word2 and then is just word1/word/word3 Only word1 ever binds to a value | |
word1/word2/word3 ; guy can't even type ... | |
The path! that my 'pword func returns responds as expected to 'do | |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [846] | Iin your example (again, if I understand correctly), 'do (or default behaviour) resolves each stage in the path. So, with a given path -- t2/f/b -- it'll go t2/f == 't1-- but this is just a word, not the value associated with the word. It's equivalent to this: val: 't1 val/b |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [847] | But is any valid deep path only the forst word has to have a value associated with it. e.g. block/tag1/tag2/tag3 |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [848] | Only if you're evaluating with 'do. |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [849] | Even if I am doing result: constructedPath |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [850] | That's sort of the same as evaluating with 'do. |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [851] | What should the behavior of 'join and 'append' and 'insert be when passed a path and a word? |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [852] | What I'm getting at is there are limitations in the default handling of paths. But paths are series and you can evaluate them however you want to. |
RobertS 13-Sep-2007 [853x2] | Yes, get first path is a godsend |
Here is what Carl has said: Of course, not to discourage anyone, but we're going to be careful and choosy about what becomes part of R3. We've got our standards. We still value small, fast, and smart. REBOL is about getting great advantage and leverage from a well-designed tool, not about becoming yet another bloated and hard-to-manage computer language. | |
Chris 13-Sep-2007 [855] | join foo/bar 'ton -- will try and evaluate foo/bar then append 'ton join 'foo/bar 'ton -- will give you 'foo/bar/ton |
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