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World: r3wp

[I'm new] Ask any question, and a helpful person will try to answer.

BenBran
8-Jan-2009
[1657]
Yes and I need all the help I can get Pekr  :-)
Pekr
8-Jan-2009
[1658]
New to REBOL?
BenBran
8-Jan-2009
[1659]
Read a Dummies book on it about three years ago.  Been watching it 
ever sense.  With R3 coming out, I'm going to give it a serious look.
Pekr
8-Jan-2009
[1660x2]
Good. R3's gonna be cool. There is just still lots of work on it 
:-)
But - we will be able to cooperate and hence influence its development 
...
BenBran
8-Jan-2009
[1662x2]
Yes, thats why I signed up..... so hope to get more involved with 
the development....
time permitting....
Reichart
8-Jan-2009
[1664]
I see, your name is Ben Brannen...

Even before R3 comes out, you will find R2 pretty amazing...
Maarten
8-Jan-2009
[1665]
And you may like thge new English translation of a French book; translated 
by Peter Wood, who is here as well. It's on lulu.com
[unknown: 5]
8-Jan-2009
[1666]
Wanted to say Welcome to Janko and BenBran.
Janko
8-Jan-2009
[1667]
Thanks Paul
[unknown: 5]
8-Jan-2009
[1668]
Your welcome.
Janko
8-Jan-2009
[1669x5]
I have another question about parse, if I may.. I am trying to make 
a parse block that will uppercase all letters after the . ! or ? 
. I did it just for dots, but I can't make it for all 3  ( one alternative 
is to call parse 3 times each time with different separator char. 
The problem can be observed here, and happens because [ A | B | C 
] pattern first looks for A and if it doesn't find a checks B , which 
means it will skip B if A is after B. Is there any way to say "use 
any of those chars - *whichever comes first" ? .. example where you 
can see the  problem:
== true

>> parse "A.B!C.D." [ any [ [thru  "." | thru  "!" ] mark: (print 
mark ) ] ]
B!C.D.
D.

>> parse "A.B!C.D." [ any [ [thru  "!" | thru  "." ] mark: (print 
mark ) ] ]
C.D.
D.
--- in first case it skips the C in second it skips the B ..
this is my code to uppercase after scentences : parse X [ 
				ANY [ [ thru "." | thru "!" | thru "?" ] 
						mark: ( uppercase/part trim mark 1 insert mark " " ) :mark 
				] 
			]
It works if I have just one kind of separator of if I have them in 
this order for example "a.b.c.d!e?" if I have ""a.b.c.d!e?f. "  it 
will skip the ! ? and produce "a. B. C. D!e?f. "
because it will skip over ! and ? to the last "."
Steeve
8-Jan-2009
[1674]
hmm... do this 

parse source [any [["!" | "?" | "."] mark: (do something) | skip 
]]
BenBran
9-Jan-2009
[1675x2]
Thanks Reichart.  Yes a good old Irish name (spelling changed when 
got to America).  If Ihave my numbers rights,  I'm 4th generation 
German/Irish/Swedish American and my daughter can add Spain and Mexico 
to her list.   R2 did keep my interest these years.  I'm somewhat 
at a loss to
oops typo sorry....
Henrik
9-Jan-2009
[1677]
BenBran, you can click the pencil above the text edit field to make 
multiline messages.
BenBran
9-Jan-2009
[1678]
Thanks, Thats much better.
Janko
10-Jan-2009
[1679]
Steeve: I solved it by doing 3 passes , one for each character (.!?) 
. Performance is not that important here as it's a client , but if 
it's possible to do it in one pass I would certanly like to learn 
about it. I will try what you proposed, Thanks!
Oldes
10-Jan-2009
[1680x2]
str: "a.b.c.d!e?f. "
chars: complement charset ".!?"
>> parse str [any chars tmp: to end (uppercase tmp)] str
== "a.B.C.D!E?F. "
>> parse str: "assd.asd!d" [any chars tmp: (uppercase tmp)] str
== "assd.ASD!D"
mhinson
13-Apr-2009
[1682x2]
Hi. I am struggiling to understand parsing & hoping for some pointers.

I have read everything I can find but still cant seem to use parsing 
for basic extraction of information from a number of lines (or even 
a single line).  This is what I am trying to do & would love sme 
help or links to documentation I may have missed please.


lines: {junk wanted line1 contentA rubbish
junk notNeeded line2
wanted line three content B rubbish
}
;I want to extract
;wanted line1 contentA
;wanted line three content B


;That is to say everything between "wanted" up to "rubbish" but including 
"wanted"

Thanks, /\/\
Another (maybe foolish) question please.



I am trying to use this script to help me understand the use of parsing 

to extract data from files. If I paste the script into my REBOL/View 
console it pastes in the script ok, but the examples do not work.


This seems very common with a lot of the scripts in this library 
and is a problem I have been fighting with for several days.

This is what I get.
>> ini: parse-ini-file %/c/windows/win.ini
** Script Error: Out of range or past end
** Where: parse-ini-file
** Near: append last current-section parsed-line/1
append
>> 


Am I pasting the script & examples to the wrong type of console or 
something?

I feel it must be something I am doing as so few of the example scripts 
work for me.

Thanks, /\/\
Graham
13-Apr-2009
[1684x2]
You need to provide some rules for what you want and what you consider 
rubbish.
there has to be a pattern that you recognize to determine what is 
what.
PeterWood
13-Apr-2009
[1686x2]
>> extract: copy []

== []

>> parse lines [any [["wanted" copy temp to "rubbish" (append extract 
temp)] | skip ]]
== true
>> extract

== [" line1 contentA " " line three content B "]
Have you read this - http://www.codeconscious.com/rebol/parse-tutorial.html
mhinson
14-Apr-2009
[1688]
Hi, thanks very much for the fast replies. 

I have read the parse-tutorial and it seems very good for understanding 
how to create rules that will match patterns, however I only found 
one brief section that described using "copy" to extract the data 
from the line, rather than just confirming that a match was found 
(or not). I tried to use the copy examples but evey time I modified 
them I ended up with errors as I don't really understand how they 
work.


Peter, thanks for your example, it does almost what I want but the 
result in 'extract' does not contain the part of the string matched 
by "wanted". In my simple example I could just append the word "wanted", 
but in a real world case I would be using a patern match to find 
the "wanted" key word.


I also want to develop the code further to search for a different 
set of matches if the first set is found, in your example I am unclear 
where the block is that is performed if the string is found.  

Thanks very much for your help. /\/\
Geomol
14-Apr-2009
[1689]
There's a bit about COPY in PARSE here:
http://www.rebol.com/docs/core23/rebolcore-15.html#section-7.3
Pekr
14-Apr-2009
[1690]
mhinson - dunno if somebody already replied to you, but 'copy works 
quite fine. The trouble is, when you change parsed string in paren. 
You have to put markers there, and return to correct position ...
PeterWood
14-Apr-2009
[1691x3]
Mike: A small change will include wanted:

>> extract: copy []
== []   

>> parse lines [any [[copy temp ["wanted" to "rubbish"] (append extract 
temp)] | skip ]]
== true
>> extract
== ["wanted line1 contentA " "wanted line three content B "]
The code that is executed in a parse rule is enclosed in parentheses 
().

So the parse rule that finds wanted.... is

 copy temp ["wanted" to "rubbish"] (append extract temp)


The copy copies the part of the input that matches from the start 
of "wanted" to the start of "rubbish". 


Then the Rebol code (append extract temp) is executed. (I would normally 
write the Rebol as - insert tail extract temp - as it is faster than 
append in Rebol 2.)
You can also insert Rebol code at the start of the parse rules to 
perform intialisaton


parse lines [(extract: copy []) any [[copy temp ["wanted" to "rubbish"] 
(insert tail extract temp)] | skip ]]
sqlab
14-Apr-2009
[1694x2]
another solution

>> rule: [(wanted: copy [] ) any [to "wanted" copy line to "rubbish" 
(append wanted line)] to end]
better

rule: [(wanted: copy [] ) any [to "wanted" copy line to "rubbish" 
(append wanted line) skip ] to end]
mhinson
14-Apr-2009
[1696x2]
Thanks very much Pater & sqlab. those examples both do exactly what 
I was thinking.

I now need to try & understand how this relates to the parse-tutorial 
& hopefully I will be able to start using the principles myself.

Thanks again.
Hi again. Sorry to be asking questions again so soon.

I started using the syntax suggested with success, but in my input 
file I find the first key word is only valid if it is right at the 
start of the line.

I have been searching through the documentation for the last hour 
& failed to find any references to "start of line" or similar. (like 
^ in reg expressions).


I wondered if there was any document to help people convert from 
regular expressions to Rebol parse expressions too please?

Thanks, /\/\
Pekr
14-Apr-2009
[1698x3]
Regexp is quite different beast, and there are no single rules for 
translation to REBOL's parse. However - what do you mean by the beginning 
of the line? Is it the first char right after the end-of-line?
btw - do you use parse/all? I prefer to use parse with the refinement, 
because using plain 'parse ignores whitespaces, and I don't like 
when the engine messes with things instead of me :-)
Could you please post few lines of your input file?
sqlab
14-Apr-2009
[1701]
thry this

rule: [(wanted: copy [] ) any [copy line ["wanted" to "rubbish" ] 
(append wanted line) | thru newline] ]
mhinson
14-Apr-2009
[1702]
Hi, 
Pekr,

I appreciate that the concept for parsing is different to the use 
of regular expressions, but there are some things that do map from 
one to the other & I wondered if any table of those things existed. 
 As a noob sometimes the hardest questions to get answered are the 
ones where the answer is that there is no concept such as that sought 
by the noob. e.g. how do you grow strawberries in the sea?
 

The first match must be at the begining of the line. If it was the 
first line in the set then it would not be after a new line, but 
other cases it would be.


I will use parse/all from now, I like the extra control you describe.


here a few lines of a test input, the script I am hoping to develop 
is to parse the config files from Cisco devices in order to extract 
the layer 2 & 3 information together with the interface names & descriptions.

lines: {interface FastEthernet0
 description The connection to the printer
!
interface FastEthernet1
!
interface Vlan1
 description User vlan (only 1 vlan allowed)
 no ip address
!
interface Dialer0
 description Outside
 ip address negotiated
!
interface BVI1
 description Inside
 ip address 192.168.0.1 255.255.255.0
!
ip sla 3
 icmp-echo 217.0.0.1 source-interface Dialer0

ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 Dialer0

interface ATM0.1 point-to-point
 no ip redirects
 no snmp trap link-status
 pvc 0/38
  pppoe-client dial-pool-number 1
 !
}


; sqlab, your change to use "thru newline" does what I wanted in 
this case which is good.

; my next step is to try & understand the "or" construct properly 
as the code below dosn't quite cut it.

wanted: copy []
interface: ["interface" [to #"^/" | to "point-to-point"]]

parse lines [any [[copy temp interface (insert tail wanted temp)] 
| thru newline ]]
foreach line  wanted [print line]

; thanks very much for your help, /\/\
Pekr
14-Apr-2009
[1703x2]
I am far from parse guru, but above rule (while works) looks weird 
:-) Why to produce interface rule that way? The line is ending with 
line terminator anyway, no?

parse/all lines [
  any [
    [ "interface" copy int-name to newline
       (print int-name)
       newline
     | skip
    ]
  ]
]
... this is really simpler, no subrule to ruin your brain is needed 
...
sqlab
14-Apr-2009
[1705]
I am not sure that I understand your intention.

Do you want just  interface ATM0.1, then you have to switch the order 
of your interface rule, as the condition to  #"^/" (newline)  is 
already true and done, and your cursor behind  "point-to-point".
As the first part is true, the second will never be done.
Pekr
14-Apr-2009
[1706]
should point-to-point be filtered out? Then the rule would be a bit 
different ..