World: r3wp
[!REBOL3-OLD1]
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BrianH 3-Sep-2009 [17134] | The module docs were good before, but the module system didn't work the way specified. Now it does. |
Pekr 3-Sep-2009 [17135] | So, finally your changes applied? :-) |
BrianH 3-Sep-2009 [17136] | Yeah, and only two words were wrong in the released version :) My bad, not Carl's. The errors caused by the two wrong words are minor. |
Pekr 3-Sep-2009 [17137] | BrianH: is new object creation method already in-place? Does it cover the changes, you were suggesting in the past? Or simply put - what you think should come next? |
BrianH 3-Sep-2009 [17138x3] | The new object creation method is not in place yet, but the R2-style MAKE object! semantics are working, as are the COPY changes. |
Most of the changes I suggested in the past for object! have been implemented using entirely different methods, but they're there. | |
I would prefer that the next version work on the new object spec block and the rest of the copy semantics. The version after that can focus on splitting off the system context. After that, I would love it if the rest of the PROTECT bugs were fixed. | |
Steeve 3-Sep-2009 [17141] | >> ? in USAGE: IN object word Returns the word or block in the object's context. ARGUMENTS: object (any-object! block!) word (any-word! block! paren!) IN allow a list of objects OR a list of words as parameters but not together. IN context [a: b: 1] [a b] == OK IN reduce [context [a: 1] context [b: 2]] 'a == OK But the more powerfull behaviour, to be hable to bind a block with a list of objects is forbidden. IN reduce [context [a: 1] context [b: 2]] [a b] == ** Script error: invalid argument: [a b] Why ???? |
BrianH 3-Sep-2009 [17142] | There's a ticket about that already. "Why?" is that the behavior is undefined (as of yet). |
Steeve 3-Sep-2009 [17143] | don't find the ticket... |
BrianH 3-Sep-2009 [17144x2] | #895 |
It's hard to find a ticket about IN - the word is too common in English. | |
Steeve 3-Sep-2009 [17146] | yep |
Pekr 3-Sep-2009 [17147] | Uf, I have put extensive comment to the R3 release strategy into It came from the outer space blog :-) |
Robert 4-Sep-2009 [17148] | Can some of the R3 gurus answer a couple of questions I have regarding extensions (DLLs). 1. Is it possible to use a mutlti-threaded DLL? R2 can't receive return- data from a multi-threaded DLL. 2. Is it possible to do a callback into R3 so that I can use async calls to the DLL? Or do I still have to use a localhost interface for this? |
Pekr 4-Sep-2009 [17149x2] | No callbacks yet. Max proposed interesting solution - one mezzanine dispatcher for one extension handler. You can see his proposals in R3 Chat realated topic. As for threading - dunno. There are simply still some features missing, e.g. it is not clear how to work with Devices yet, but I only parrot what BrianH said, so better wait for gurus to give you some real answers :-) |
A82 released - other OSes up-to-date now, excluding Extensions .... | |
Henrik 4-Sep-2009 [17151] | It seems OSX A82 is more stable. It can at least launch chat. |
Geomol 4-Sep-2009 [17152] | I've thought a great deal more about shared content within objects. One problem is, they're called objects, because we then think of objects, as we understand them in other languages. If we think of them as contexts instead, then the goal to achieve is to share something between contexts. Do we want to share words or values? If we share values, then we could have one word in one context point to the same value as another words in another context. We can do this today with indirect values (like strings, blocks, contexts, etc.), but not immediate values like integers. I think, it's better to share words between contexts. With this, I mean, that some word in one context should give the same value as the same word in another context, if I so choose. >> same? context1/my-word context2/my-word == true And if I change the value for my-word in one context, then the value for the same word in the other context should change too (if I've specified this word to be a shared word). We can't do this with words representing immediate values in REBOL. So I see too simple solution (simple as in not complex): 1) Either a new type of word, the shared word, is implemented in the language, and this can handle both immediate and indirect values. 2) Or the simple R2 rule is enough. In R2, contexts within contexts are not cloned, but everything else is. We as programmers then have to put our shared words (representing all types of values, both immediate and indirect) inside contexts in our contexts (or using the REBOL terminology: inside objects within objects). (Ah, good to get all this off my chest.) ;-) |
Pekr 4-Sep-2009 [17153] | ... or we work with what we've got, which covers your requests, albeit a bit more complexly, otoh without the need to introduce new word-type :-) As for your second point, I want to have freedom to clone/share anywhere, not just whery system prescribes me to do so (subobject). You can post your comment to R3 Chat, to see what Carl thinks. Hopefully some other ppl will comment here ... especially Max ... where's MAX, when you need him? :-) |
Robert 4-Sep-2009 [17154] | Geomol, regarding 1: Sounds good to me. And maybe we can make a big step forward to lazy evaluation including immediate values. |
Pekr 4-Sep-2009 [17155] | Robert - do you need such lazy evaluation? I mean - even 'alias seems being removed from R3. Don't we have enough of reflectivity? Anyway - anyone who imo wants to propose something, should definitely do so in terms of CureCode or R3 Chat, or Carl WILL NOT know about the request at all, and your only chance here will be BrianH :-) |
BrianH 4-Sep-2009 [17156x5] | Robert: 1. The extension interface is currently single-threaded, but that shouldn't affect what the DLL does inside itself. 2. Devices are the standard R3 method of handling asynchronous behavior. Though the extension interface currently doesn't support the creation of devices, that is intended to be supported next. Maxim's callbacks may be supported too, but what you are talking about is a job for devices. |
Geomol, the main problem with sharing is doing it in a manageable way. The advantage of using explicitly shared contexts is that you can know where your values are and distingish them from non-shared values. Your idea about a different word type for shared values won't work because words don't actually contain anything. All values are stored in contexts, blocks or type-specific containers. All values "assigned to words" are contained in contexts, no exceptions. Even function words are associated with contexts. The question is which one. R3 has two context types already: - object!: Similar to system/words in R2, though for some internal instances (like error!) expansion is blocked. Direct reference. - function!: Not expandable, stack-relative reference. Task and recursion safe. Closures have object-style contexts, with a new instance created with every call (with bind/copy overhead on the code block, sort-of). | |
There will be ways to make object word references more task-safe, but that isn't implemented yet. Focus on that: it's the real problem. | |
Robert, you can do lazy evaluation using functions that replace themselves with their results. Anything more requires a full language semantics overhaul, and might not be possible in an interpreted language. What do you hope to accomplish? | |
Most algorithms that would benefit from laziness are done in REBOL using code blocks or get-word parameters. | |
Steeve 4-Sep-2009 [17161] | Btw, who is Robert ? Geomol ? |
BrianH 4-Sep-2009 [17162] | Right-click on their names. They've been here for a while :) |
Steeve 4-Sep-2009 [17163x2] | Sorry, i was seeking the post related to laziness from Robert and didn't found it.... |
I was wondering if Geomol was Robert | |
BrianH 4-Sep-2009 [17165] | Geomol is John. Robert's laziness post starts with "Geomol, regarding 1". |
Steeve 4-Sep-2009 [17166x2] | yep, found it now |
Sort of... lazy: funco [code][does reduce [first back stack/block 2 to-paren code]] c: context [ a: lazy [b + c] b: lazy [c + 5] c: 2 ] >>probe c ==make object! [ a: make function! [[][ a: (b + c) ]] b: make function! [[][ b: (c + 5) ]] c: 2 ] >> c/b == 7 >>probe c >>make object! [ a: make function! [[][ a: (b + c) ]] b: 7 c: 2 ] >>c/a ==9 >> probe c ==make object! [ a: 9 b: 7 c: 2 ] | |
BrianH 4-Sep-2009 [17168x2] | I was thinking named functions assigning results to their names, but with debug access that way will work too :) |
I used a similar method to write the ONCE function. | |
Geomol 5-Sep-2009 [17170x6] | Steeve, who are you? Robert: http://www.colellachiara.com/devcon05/robert.html Me: http://www.colellachiara.com/devcon05/john.html |
Brian wrote "Your idea about a different word type for shared values won't work because words don't actually contain anything." Don't say, it won't work. It can be made to work, if the will is there. I can think of many different possible implementations of REBOL with the current behaviour, we see. As I don't know, how exactly REBOL is implemented (I guess, only Carl does), I won't go in detail how to do, what I propose. Anyway, I personal feel, it might NOT be worth the efford to implement, what a programmer would observe as shared words. The C code will be more complex, and it will probably hit performance to some degree. Shared contexts within contexts as in R2 is probably just fine. Only problem (as I see it) in R2, is that it's difficult to not share contexts within contexts. But the R3 possibility to copy contexts can solve that. I think, the current R3 implementation of contexts (objects) and the copy semantics is far too complex. | |
Someone named Nick suggested having make/deep: http://www.rebol.net/cgi-bin/r3blog.r?view=0239#comments This could remove the need for copying contexts: new-object: make/deep old-object [ ... ] instead of what we have to do now: new-object: make copy/types old-object any-type! [ ... ] | |
But the /deep refinement for make would only be used with objects, and it's maybe not ok to add a refinement to a function, if it's only to be used with one certain type of argument? | |
If not, then it could be solved with a new function: make-deep, make-new to something. | |
From time to time I ask myself, why I write so much about all this. It's because I care for the language, and I see many stange implementation decisions, and that's not good. | |
Steeve 5-Sep-2009 [17176] | Geomol, my question was poorly worded. I was wondering why Brian called you Robert (i didn't see the previous post from Robert) |
Geomol 5-Sep-2009 [17177x2] | Ah, ok! :-D |
Oh my, it's not even enough to just copy/types, I have to do copy/deep/types to get a completely new object: new-object: make copy/deep/types old-object any-type! [ ... ] Does that look simple? No! | |
Steeve 5-Sep-2009 [17179] | you just need to make a wrapper. >>make-full: funco [obj spec][make copy/deep/types obj any-type! spec] Is this such a pain in the ass ? ;-) |
Geomol 5-Sep-2009 [17180] | Yeah! I then need to remember to include this function in all my code. It would be better, if the language just did it right in the first place. ... time to make my own language. ;-) |
Steeve 5-Sep-2009 [17181] | Ask Brian for a mezzanine :-) |
Robert 5-Sep-2009 [17182x2] | Lazy: Let's assume I have a quite complex evaluation graph with 100 input parameters. Think of it like an Excel spreadsheet. Now what I want is that if one parameter changes, that all dependent parts are re-evaluated. Like Excel does it. |
Maybe a constraint solver is the better word | |
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