World: r3wp
[Core] Discuss core issues
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Henrik 25-Oct-2010 [139] | not if the includes are grabbed from a network resource, such as when running your R3 in a VM inside another OS and the source is stored in that other OS. |
Maxim 25-Oct-2010 [140] | actually there is a way to know if the destination filesystem is case sensitive, but it requires a write operation. |
PeterWood 25-Oct-2010 [141] | Thanks for the explanation, Henrik. |
Maxim 25-Oct-2010 [142x2] | you write two files with different case, using different data. then read the first one, and making sure it doesn't give you the value of the second. |
hehe... just saw sundanda's original post... which basically a play on my above post... it was out of scroll on my view. | |
Izkata 25-Oct-2010 [144] | Ladislav: I was going to suggest something similar as Sunanda, except by using [sort read %.] instead of [what-dir], then checking the first file with alphanumeric characters. That way, if both upper and lowercase do exist separately, they'd show up in the list and can be adjusted for |
Sunanda 25-Oct-2010 [145] | Can you not assume, Ladislav, that you will have read access to user.r? And use reads/info? for variants on that to check? |
james_nak 25-Oct-2010 [146] | Graham, did you figure out the object issues? And are you using or have you tried the xml-object.r script? |
Oldes 25-Oct-2010 [147x2] | Is this prefered result?: >> sort [748x430 68x206 748x194 305x147] == [305x147 748x194 68x206 748x430] |
I take it back.. REBOL cannot have any idea what I want to do, so better to use compare function, like: sort-pairs: func[block-of-pairs][ sort/compare block-of-pairs func[a b][ either a/x < b/x [ 1 ][ either a/x = b/x [ either a/y < b/y [ 1 ][ either a/y > b/y [-1][0] ] ][ -1 ] ] ] ] sort-pairs [748x430 68x206 748x194 305x147] ;== [748x430 748x194 305x147 68x206] | |
GrahamC 25-Oct-2010 [149] | What object issues? |
james_nak 25-Oct-2010 [150] | XML to objects from SUnday |
Steeve 25-Oct-2010 [151] | get-obj-value: func[o [object!] p [path! word!]][attempt[do append to-path 'o p]] Not optimized for speed though... |
GrahamC 25-Oct-2010 [152x2] | hmm... clever |
So why am I walking the path? lol | |
Steeve 25-Oct-2010 [154x2] | Oldes, exactly the use case to use case... case [ a/x < b/x [-1] a/x > b/x [1] a/y < b/y [-1] a/y > b/y [1] 'equal 0 ] |
(except I reversed some stuffs...) | |
Oldes 25-Oct-2010 [156] | yes, that's nice example where to use case:) |
james_nak 25-Oct-2010 [157] | Steeve, that's sweet. "Case" doesn't show up in the dictionary and I had no clue we had such a thing. Very cool. |
Steeve 25-Oct-2010 [158] | not in the dictionnary ? strange... |
james_nak 25-Oct-2010 [159] | http://www.rebol.com/docs/dictionary.html |
Henrik 25-Oct-2010 [160] | I use it a lot. CASE/ALL is also useful. |
Sunanda 25-Oct-2010 [161] | CASE is in the R3 dictionary: http://www.rebol.com/r3/docs/functions.html But you are right -- it should be in the R2 dictionary too. |
Maxim 26-Oct-2010 [162] | anyone know how to submit args when using r2.exe --do "probe what-dir probe system/script/args" --args "r3.exe" the above prints none |
Izkata 27-Oct-2010 [163] | The help says this: -- args Provide args without a script There's a space between the -- and the word args, so I tried this and it worked: rebol --do '? system/script/args q' -- 'arguments here' The help should probably say something like: -- <args> to make it more obvious |
Maxim 27-Oct-2010 [164x2] | doh... ok, I get it. |
thanks. | |
GrahamC 27-Oct-2010 [166] | Isn't this a rather erroneous message ? >> now - 365 == 27-Oct-2009/23:03:45+13:00 >> now - 365.25 ** Script Error: Cannot use subtract on date! value ** Near: now - 365.25 |
Anton 27-Oct-2010 [167] | Yes.. Better might be "Cannot subtract decimal! from date! value." |
amacleod 27-Oct-2010 [168] | email? [name-:-domain-:-com] == true >> email? [name-:-domain]..com == true >> email? [name-:-domain]...com == true Is this a bug? |
Henrik 27-Oct-2010 [169] | The email parser is not very good. |
Rebolek 27-Oct-2010 [170] | You can convert anything to email. |
amacleod 27-Oct-2010 [171] | I was going crazy trying to send to a long list getting errors...finally found the faulty address...how do you validate email then? |
Rebolek 27-Oct-2010 [172] | You should write your own parse rule, it should be failry simple. Probably there's already something on http://www.rebol.org |
Pekr 27-Oct-2010 [173] | Amacleod - there was a discussion on ML or elsewhere, about how useless email dtype is, if it can't work as email RFC suggests. I was told, that I should not mistake datatype, with complicated parser for possible correct emails. I still insist - the datatype is useless that way. I found some grammar, I even posted it back at that time, but I think that someone at RT was simply too lazy to implement it :-) |
Henrik 27-Oct-2010 [174] | the email datatype is not useful for different reasons: it can't be serialized properly. |
GrahamC 27-Oct-2010 [175] | either write your own parser ... or use my smtp challenge :) |
GrahamC 28-Oct-2010 [176] | What would you expect here? >> ?? test3: now test3: == 28-Oct-2010/17:28:36+13:00 >> ?? test3 |
Maxim 28-Oct-2010 [177x2] | none |
or unset | |
GrahamC 28-Oct-2010 [179] | why? |
Maxim 28-Oct-2010 [180] | ?? prints test 3 and now is returned evaluated after so its printed by the console |
GrahamC 28-Oct-2010 [181x2] | so where is the output of ?? test3: |
ahh... on the first line | |
Maxim 28-Oct-2010 [183x6] | >> ?? test3: now test3: <<------ here == 28-Oct-2010/17:28:36+13:00 |
its a common error I make ever so often in code. | |
because ?? is a lit-word argument. | |
(uses) | |
it grabs 'test3: directly, so it never gets evaluated (so it doesn't assign the following value) | |
this is true of all lit-word arguments and is probably why we don't use them often, they brake the visible chain of command. | |
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