World: r3wp
[!REBOL3]
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BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6265] | And even less for regular mezzanines, which generally contain calls to more advanced native functions rather than just minimal arithmetic. |
Sunanda 26-Nov-2010 [6266] | Thanks for the EXTEND vs APPEND vs BIND discussion, guys. It can be useful to have different mechanisms that have their own default behaviours. One use of BIND/NEW is that it allows words to be unset when an object is created: obj: context [bind/new 'word self] ;; this works, and WORD is UNSET! obj: context [word: #[unset!]] ;; this does not work * Script error: word: needs a value * Where: make context * Near: make object! blk |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6267] | APPEND object! word! does the same thing. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6268] | Well, I don't think REBOL suddenly has the speed of C |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6269] | Certainly not for C-like code, agreed. But if you are writing REBOL-like code then you are mostly calling fairly complex functions that are written in very good C, functions like PARSE and APPEND. Most of the code you run in REBOL is actually implemented in C, including the interptreter itself. So in that case REBOL has the speed of the C that it is written in. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6270x2] | I just feel you're overdoing it a bit. If you were to follow that reasoning through, the conclusion would have to be that REBOL has negligable overhead over C. Indeed, that's what some people claim on the web because they heard it somewhere in the community, and that's how REBOL people become known to the outside world as lying or delusional |
Among dynamic languages, REBOL is slow. Not the slowest, but slow. Not that this matters in practice, but that's a whole other set of myths | |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6272] | Perl can also have the same speed as C under similar circumstances. It all depends on how heavy the native functions that you are calling are. But unlike most dynamic languages, REBOL is optimized for hand-optimization and doesn't have a semantic model that even vaguely resembles that of C code, so you can't just transliterate code from another language to REBOL and expect to get the same performance. REBOL is *really* slow for the type of code that requires a compiler to be efficient, but it can be *really* fast at the kind of code that other languages have a lot of trouble dealing with at all because they have to manually implement a lot of stuff that REBOL has built-in in native code. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6273] | I understand your reasoning, but it all comes down to whether you want to be perceived by the outside world as delusional or not |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6274] | It is not a myth that REBOL is fast. It can sometimes be misunderstood though, because people who are familiar with other languages will try to write code in the style of those other languages and expect it to be fast. REBOL code written in REBOL style for tasks that REBOL is suited for can be very fast. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6275] | Very fast doesn't mean anything. For the outside world it does, because they're comparing it to something |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6276x2] | And for other tasks, we have extensions. |
I think that the outside world would consider me delusional for choosing a language that isn't compiled, or (worst sin of all) doesn't have a C-like syntax. Most people think hand-optimization is insane in the modern world. And in some circumstances (and for many programmers) it is a bit crazy. But when you already can hand-optimize and understand the semantic model of the language you are using, and how it is different from other languages, then it's not so crazy. Differences matter. And I only use REBOL where it is appropriate, at least in comparison to the overhead of learning another tool. | |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6278x2] | Rather than focusing on the details and claiming REBOL is fast in details, I would typify REBOL as a slow language that allows you to write fast algorithms |
Algorithms dominate speed over details in almost all programs | |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6280] | It goes the other way too: If you try to write REBOL-like code in most other languages then you will run into a wall. For most you will need to reimplement most of the natives before you can start, if it is possible to do REBOL-like code at all (often not with parsers). And when you do manage to get that code running it is often slower than REBOL code because of the optimization its natives have gone through. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6281] | Yes, Greenspun's tenth rule |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6282] | There are some exceptions to this, languages that have comparable levels of built-in functionality, or more: Common Lisp, or Perl 6 for instance. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6283] | Well, then we're doomed against Perl 6 :-) |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6284] | PARSE rules are comparable to Perl 6 rules, both in speed and functionality. There are tricks you can do in either that you can't do in the other, or in some cases not easily. R2's PARSE outdid Perl 5's regexes, but R3 had to drastically update PARSE to catch up with Perl 6's rules. |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6285] | I never heard Carl mentioning that as the objective :-) |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6286x3] | I was the one who managed the parse proposals project - it was *my* objective. |
There are tricks that you can do with dynamic rules that are provably impossible for static rules to do (patterns that static rules can't recognize). PARSE is a superset of the PEG model, while Perl 6 rules are a superset of recursive descent (LL), and there are patterns that LL can't handle that PEG can. | |
PARSE is dynamic PEG - there's nothing else like it (known to Wikipedia at least). | |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6289] | There's a lot in this world that is kept from Wikipedia... |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6290x2] | Nothing publically released in even commercial form then. |
There are a lot of tricks that you can do in REBOL's DO dialect as well that can't be replicated in a compiled language without using self-modifying code. And vice-versa as well. Tradeoffs. But once you choose interpretation then you can optimize the language semantics to make that really efficient. That is why half of what a compiler does is done by LOAD, and optimized REBOL code looks a lot like what the other half of a compiler does. That is why REBOL DO is more comparable to one of Scheme's macro systems than it is to Scheme itself. | |
Kaj 26-Nov-2010 [6292] | Exactly: REBOL's tradeoff is that it's a slow language that allows you to write fast programs |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6293] | R3's DO dialect can be slower than compiled code for certain code patterns, but faster for others, depending on the compiler and language you are comparing it to (many dynamic languages were slower for a lot of code until recently). But you can make things a lot faster if you stop thinking of REBOL as being a language, and start thinking of it as being a library of native functions and datatypes, with a variety of high-level scripting languges built in to script that library, and some built-in functions written in those scripting languages. Plus you can add your own libraries and scripting languages if you like. Looking at things that way is the first step to becoming good at hand-optimizing REBOL. |
Ladislav 26-Nov-2010 [6294x3] | R3 had to drastically update PARSE to catch up with Perl 6's rules. - that is not an objective, that is a statement, as I see it |
such (or worse) problems I have with almost everything stated above | |
and, btw, no update to PARSE was "drastic" in fact | |
BrianH 26-Nov-2010 [6297x4] | That's true, "drastic" is a bit of an overstatement. Almost(?) everything you can do in R3's PARSE you could do in R2 with dynamic parse tricks, DO dialect tricks or a preprocessor. But for the average PARSE user who can't understand the advanced workarounds the new capabilities are just that: new. If you look at idiomatic R3 rules compared to their R2 equivalents then the changes at least *look* drastic. Certainly different enough that for most people PARSE is quite a bit more powerful. |
And it was an objective, from way back when we did the first round of PARSE proposals. At the time I had been following the development of Perl 6, especially their rules enhancements. Some of the PARSE proposals were based on trying to catch up with or show up Perl 6, and others came from tricks that other parser generators like ANTLR could do (like IF). To be fair, it was an unstated objective, at least on the pages. Peta had different objectives of course, like better matching the PEG theoretical model, and those were also good. | |
I'm sure that you had other objectives as well when you got involved in the most recent parse project 6 or 7 months after it started. Were you involved in the first round of parse proposals about 6 years ago? I remember Gabriele making a page for them after they had been discussed for a while, but not whether the initial discussions were here or on the mailing list. | |
Your recent work on the project has been much appreciated. | |
Ladislav 27-Nov-2010 [6301x4] | To be concrete, the resons, why I objected to "drastic" were: 1) R2 parse rules work in R3 2) R3 parse rules either work in R2, or can be translated easily to R2 (using e.g. the http://www.rebol.org/view-script.r?script=parseen.r functions) Thus, everybody - don't be afraid of any "drastic" changes, nothing you learn or prepare in R2 will be lost, in fact. |
When I look at the parse project, I see these changes as very useful: 1) the FAIL keyword - has been used as an idiom and proposed before the parse project started 2) the NOT keyword - has been used as an idiom and proposed before the parse project started 3) the AND keyword - a new and useful addition 4) the QUOTE keyword - used as an idiom and proposed before the parse project started 5) the REJECT keyword - a new and useful addition allowing to stop a parse cycle with a failure 6) the IF keyword - used as an idiom and proposed before the parse project started As far as other improvements are concerned, I do not find them useful, and do not plan to use them, in fact. (YMMV) | |
When I look at the REJECT keyword - the FAIL idiom was used frequently before to obtain exactly the REJECT effect | |
As far as the speed statements go, I perceive them too inconcrete, and, therefore, misleading. | |
Steeve 27-Nov-2010 [6305] | My 2 cents. It appears to me that the new RETURN command is underated currently. It can compete in many places with idioms involving FIND + COPY. |
Ladislav 28-Nov-2010 [6306x2] | This result looks quite unbelievable to me: >> time-block [quote (x:)] 0,05 == 1.983642578125e-7 >> time-block [first [(x:)]] 0,05 == 2.46047973632813e-7 , how is that possible? |
(the only reason, that looks probable to me is, that FIRST calls PICK... | |
Steeve 28-Nov-2010 [6308] | You're right, FIRST and LAST call PICK I discovered it while writing my first scheme in R3. |
BrianH 28-Nov-2010 [6309x3] | That was done to make datatypes and schemes easier to implement and more consistent, and because we dropped reflection with ordinals. |
I agree Steeve, and use PARSE RETURN a lot in adhoc code. I use all of the new addidions quite a bit, except for REJECT, which I had forgotten existed (don't remember the proposal for it). | |
addidions -> additions | |
Pekr 28-Nov-2010 [6312] | There was one wiki/doc/blog/curecode page, describing differences between various possibilities of copying or not stuff during e.g. object construction. Could someone help me to find it? I would like to re-read it ... |
Kaj 28-Nov-2010 [6313x2] | It's on rebol.net, so down, but the bookmark I have was |
http://www.rebol.net/w/index.php?title=Copy_Semantics&redirect=no | |
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