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World: r3wp

[!REBOL3]

Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9254]
So, you won't read the docs, but you'll read the source. ;-)
BrianH
19-Jul-2011
[9255]
Yup, because you can do that from the console, with no internet access.
Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9256x2]
I would argue that FIND is far more confusing than SPLIT.
It's a good topic: how do we learn what a function does?
BrianH
19-Jul-2011
[9258]
FIND is more complex than split, but its options are more understandable 
because it isn't dialected beyond its refinements, so you can read 
its docs with HELP. But note that FIND is so complex that it would 
need to be native for that reason alone, let alone the overhead of 
the actual finding.
Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9259]
Native or mezz implementation is irrelevant.
Kaj
19-Jul-2011
[9260]
Hm, I usually don't use a function until I've read the docs, because 
otherwise I'd have no idea how to use it
BrianH
19-Jul-2011
[9261]
I usually don't consider whole applications to be finished until 
they can be used without reading the docs, let alone simple functions. 
But that's just me.
Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9262]
I will have to hire you. I often embed docs right on the main screen, 
even for single-screen apps. Maybe I'm thinking different kinds of 
apps though. What sort of apps are you talking about?
Kaj
19-Jul-2011
[9263]
Apps usually fail to act like I would expect them to, so I have to 
read the manual to find out the limitations
Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9264]
FIND is more complex than split, but its options are more understandable 
because it isn't dialected beyond its refinements,


I disagree. FINDs refinements interact with each other and change 
the behavior of the function, sometimes in unpredictable ways. SPLIT 
uses the power of datatypes to control behavior, with only one refinement 
as an exception.
BrianH
19-Jul-2011
[9265x2]
Docs in the main screen are part of the app, though if they're too 
complex they can slow down the usage of the app. But my work has 
mostly been business apps. I often will make an app suite rather 
than a single complex app, just to make them easier to use. Every 
hour spent making the app easier to use saves you hundreds of hours 
of training. It's worse for consumer apps with competitors, because 
being too hard to use will lose customers.
Native or mezz implementation is irrelevant in R3, agreed, whichever 
is more efficient. But the rationale of SPLIT's dialect seems confusing, 
particularly as it relates to negative numbers. Any reason keywords 
weren't used instead?
Gregg
19-Jul-2011
[9267x6]
I understand the reasoning, and agree completely. I do app suites 
as well, but the main app is then usually a "control center" with 
built in docs.
The original design used negative numbers to skip backwards. I don't 
think I changed the design, but I understand the reasoning behind 
how they work now. Keywords were probably not used as it would have 
complicated the dialect. Well, it would have made it a dialect which 
is really isn't today.
Carl may have done that. He likes that sort of thing.
This brings up a good point though. Do we consider a function dialected 
if the behavior is controlled by datatypes? SPLIT does have the case 
of a block of integers having more fine-grained control, so there 
is a dialect option there that could easily be expanded.
I have to run, an will be offline for a week. I would LOVE to see 
alternate implementations and designs for comparison. We can talk 
a lot, but if we can compare two options side by side, it often makes 
it easier to say which one you like better, rather than discussing 
costs and benefits in the abstract.
Great chat Brian. Stimulating as always. Thanks!
BrianH
19-Jul-2011
[9273x3]
The non-dialected behaviors seem simple enough (for the purposes 
of discussion I've read the docs). The problem is in the dialect, 
especially these:

- "Negative values can be used to skip in the series without returning 
that part:"  Why not use a 'skip keyword for that?

- "Note that for greater control, you can use simple parse rules:" 
 Which ones?

It really is a dialect, but the language is not confusing (first 
case) and not well defined (second case). Using keywords would make 
the dialect easier to understand (and thus use), and potentially 
more efficient to implement using command dispatch.
is not confusing -> is confusing
There is a conceptual conflict between the treatment of splitting 
into parts by length and splitting by delimiter, that has the effect 
of limiting both sets of behavior. It would be better to put the 
delimiter splitting into a separate function called DELIMIT. This 
would allow the dialected variants of SPLIT and DELIMIT to develop 
separately without conflict, and make the SPLIT dialect easier to 
understand. Then you would have two relatively simple functions with 
a clear distinction between them.
Steeve
20-Jul-2011
[9276]
So, You want to split split
BrianH
20-Jul-2011
[9277]
Yup. I'll try to mock something up later this week.
Cyphre
22-Jul-2011
[9278]
BTW doesn't the current  SPLIT have a bug?

>> split "1,2,333,4444,5555" #","
== ["1" "2" "333" "4444" "5555" ""]

Note the last empty string in the result.
Kaj
22-Jul-2011
[9279]
Yeah, that's annoying. I vaguely remember finding out that it was 
designed this way
Henrik
22-Jul-2011
[9280]
Carl asks whether anyone has looked at the WAIT problem under Linux?
Robert
22-Jul-2011
[9281]
And if anyone has a clue where the problem could come from.
Pekr
22-Jul-2011
[9282]
That seems like a message from a different planet :-) It's been quite 
long time, since someone worked with R3 imo. Is there any related 
ticket?
Kaj
22-Jul-2011
[9283]
A message about WAITing is quite appropriate ;-)
Maxim
22-Jul-2011
[9284]
delightfully ironic that its Carl asking us about waiting  :-D
Ladislav
22-Jul-2011
[9285]
It's been quite long time, since someone worked with R3
 - certainly true, if you replace "someone" by "I, Pekr"
GrahamC
22-Jul-2011
[9286]
I suspect Pekr is referring to the R3 core development vs R3GUI ...
Pekr
25-Jul-2011
[9287]
Ladislav: it really does not matter, how accurate is my message or 
your reply. If we want to be 100% correct, than you are of course 
right :-) My message was a general claim meaning, that even in the 
time of active R3 development, there were not many ppl using R3, 
and there was even less ppl using R3 actively under linux imo (which 
is quite logical, as for a long time R3 was primarily developed for 
Windows only). 

Is there any related ticket

 was important part of the message re possible WAIT problem underl 
 Linux. The only possibly related is http://curecode.org/rebol3/ticket.rsp?id=1861&cursor=2


So - before I download R3 for Linux, drop it to my linux server, 
and spend my time experimenting, my question could translate as - 
what should be the mentioned problem with WAIT under Linux all about?
Henrik
25-Jul-2011
[9288]
The fix seems to be under way by Carl himself.
Pekr
25-Jul-2011
[9289]
Good to hear that. Could someone please remind me, what was/is the 
status of hostkit repositories? IIRC, there was some experimental 
version from Carl, then IIRC some ppl established their own repos. 
Which one's the official one?
Andreas
25-Jul-2011
[9290x2]
Pekr, the official hostkit sources are the one available for download 
from rebol.com (http://www.rebol.com/r3/changes.html).
The WAIT-related ticket is cc#913: http://issue.cc/r3/913
Pekr
25-Jul-2011
[9292]
ah,I saw the ticket, but that's OSX related, no? Carl was asking 
about the Linux,but maybe those two OSes share the same WAIT symptoms, 
as can be seen in the comments ...
Andreas
25-Jul-2011
[9293]
That ticket is for Linux as well: every platform without an event 
device is experiencing that issue. That is every platform but Win32, 
at the moment. I would have changed the ticket title already, if 
I could.
Pekr
25-Jul-2011
[9294]
Hmm, so chances are, that Core might finally get some event/timer 
mechanism, even if used without the GUI? :-)
Andreas
25-Jul-2011
[9295]
R3/Core for Win32 already has the foundations for such a mechanism 
(the aptly named event device).
Geomol
26-Jul-2011
[9296x2]
Apropos serilization and constructs, we discussed in the "Core" group. 
Is this expected behaviour?

>> make string! #[true]       
== "true"
*serialization*
Maxim
26-Jul-2011
[9298x3]
would you expect something else? each little type conversion has 
its own idiom.
IMHO converting to string usually is meant to be used more like FORM 
than anything else.
there are some details which make the datatype conversions different 
than other forms... such as block to string.
Gregg
29-Jul-2011
[9301x2]
Cyphre, my fix for the SPLIT bug is above in this thread, which prompted 
the long discussion on it.
Brian, DELIMIT means something very different to me. My DELIMIT func 
inserts delimiters.


I don't have a problem with using a 'skip keyword. As I said, the 
current behavior wasn't the original design and may be Carl's doing. 
Check with him on that.


There is a conceptual conflict between the treatment of splitting 
into parts by length and splitting by delimiter...

 -- I don't see that, but I'm biased. I'm always happy to see alternative 
 designs.
BrianH
31-Jul-2011
[9303]
I checked a half-dozen online dictionaries to get that definition 
of DELIMIT. Perhaps you're checking different dictionaries.
The conceptual conflict:

- Dialected splitting has incompatible dialects, which makes both 
more limited than they should be.

- Splitting a block based on a delimiter of one of the types used 
by length-based splitting isn't allowed.