World: r3wp
[!REBOL3]
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Oldes 18-Jan-2011 [7121] | fine! |
BrianH 18-Jan-2011 [7122] | I'll add this info to the ticket in a comment and dismiss it. It's actually more powerful than R2 :) |
Oldes 18-Jan-2011 [7123x2] | but not perfect as the case-sensitivity may cause problems...but I can live with it. |
but not perfect as the case-sensitivity may cause problems...but I can live with it. | |
BrianH 18-Jan-2011 [7125x2] | Not when you realize that this is consistent throughout R3, and just don't mix case when you don't need to. |
The trick is that objects and maps are case-preserving rather than case-sensitive, so their fields get the same case as the first instance of the word. Plus, case-insensitivity is a little broken for a lot of languages right now (Unicode case is a complex problem). | |
ChristianE 19-Jan-2011 [7127x2] | Characters are case-sensitive is a pretty misleading description of the difference you've pointed out between SELECT and SELECT/CASE, Brian. I would appriciate SELECT/STRICT over /CASE, /STRICT would even be usefull to imply case sensitivity, at least it seems better suited to express the semantic difference between the refined und the unrefined function call . |
Same for >> find/case [a :a] quote :a == [:a] >> replace/case [a :a] quote :a quote a: == [a a:] >> alter/case [a] [:a] == true DIFFERENCE, UNIQUE and other "set-functions" obviously haven't been subject to change when the treatment of blocks, objects and maps converged: >> difference/case [:a] [a:] == [] >> unique/case [a: a :a] == [a:] >> union/case [a] [:a] == [a] >> intersect/case [a] [:a] == [a] >> exclude/case [a] [:a] == [] In all cases, /STRICT would read at least as well as /CASE, if not better. | |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7129] | Christian, please report the latter cases as bug. |
ChristianE 19-Jan-2011 [7130] | I'm not sure if it isn't by design, at least I wouldn't be surprised if being told so. Anyways, I'd prefer it being a bug, so, added it to CureCode. |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7131] | Given the above discussed behaviour, I would very much prefer /STRICT instead of /CASE as well. But I fear the chance for such thorough naming improvements has long passed. |
Ladislav 19-Jan-2011 [7132] | hmm, you should post it as a separate CC item (wish?) |
Maxim 19-Jan-2011 [7133] | yes, using /CASE for strict word comparison is VERY ugly. the only reason I can think of is that Carl didn't want to add a refinement just for this. |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7134] | Well, if there's sufficient backing in the community, we really should manifest that in the form of a CC wish. |
Ladislav 19-Jan-2011 [7135] | No problem with me |
Maxim 19-Jan-2011 [7136x2] | I'd bet /CASE is not used that much for word comparison in the R3 mezz code. |
(if at all, maybe in r3gui) | |
Ladislav 19-Jan-2011 [7138] | do not think so |
ChristianE 19-Jan-2011 [7139] | Already did (curecode that wish above). |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7140] | #1832 |
Maxim 19-Jan-2011 [7141] | already added my weight behind the /STRICT naming :-) |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7142x5] | The /strict option sounds interesting, and would solve those inconsistencies. However, it would need to be an additional option; /case would need to remain for compatibility reasons. |
I'm not sure it's completely OK though, since there is one part of strict comparison that SELECT/case doesn't cover: binding. >> select/case reduce [use [a] ['a] 1 'a 2] 'a == 1 >> strict-equal? use [a] ['a] 'a == false Nor do we want it to, because SELECT, FIND and other functions to which /strict would apply would generally not be applied to data which could be guaranteed to have the same binding as the value you are searching for. | |
Christian, REPLACE and ALTER are mezzanines that call FIND. You don't need to include them in the examples. | |
A new refinement for considering datatypes would be a good idea (if a bit overhead-inducing), but probably not the name /strict. We have to keep the /case refinement because of the legacy naming rules, but those don't prohibit adding new refinements. | |
The #1832 ticket needs its summary line changed accordingly. | |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7147] | select/a-bit-more-than-case-but-a-bit-less-than-strict-but-definitely-not-equiv-or-same |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7148] | We can't remove /case. So the new option would not have to be a superset of /case, it would be additive. What would you call an option that made it consider datatypes? Keep in mind that this option would only apply to block types, so would be overhead for other types that implement the FIND and SELECT actions. |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7149] | If we can neither remove nor superset /case, it is hardly worth talking about this at all. |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7150] | If we called the option /type then /case would check case, /type would check types, and /case/type would check both. That is what I meant by additive. |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7151x2] | Understood. And for me that's hardly worth talking about. |
Instead of inflicting the pain of having to type /case/type just leaving the current /case behaviour as-is and updating the doc strikes me as more sensible. | |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7153] | I'm OK with having the current behavior of FIND and SELECT, and extending it to the set functions. But if others have problems with that and want /case to just be case, then we may need the extra option. All of this is really a complaint about #1830 being dismissed. |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7154x2] | Orthogonal issues. |
Or alternative solutions, rather. | |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7156x2] | Checking SELECT, it's clear that its behavior is not consistent among different classes of value types either. The simplest solution would be to change #1830 into something that can be undismissed, and then dismiss #1831 and #1832. |
That means expanding the complaint of #1830 and giving it a different justification. | |
Andreas 19-Jan-2011 [7158] | Since you are the one who dismissed it in the first place, feel free to go ahead and do as you deem right. |
BrianH 19-Jan-2011 [7159x2] | Depending on how #1830 is resolved, #1831 and #1832 will either need to be dismissed or rewritten. I'm going to have to defer them until #1830 is decided upon. |
Done. Check out the new http://issue.cc/r3/1830for the whole issue. | |
Maxim 20-Jan-2011 [7161] | pulled myweight. |
Ladislav 20-Jan-2011 [7162x2] | I do not want to use the "immediate value" notion, since it is an "implementation detail" in the sense, thant e.g. Doc's attempt implementation, while attempting to be compatible, has drawn the line differently. |
And, if done properly, you would not be able to discern | |
Andreas 20-Jan-2011 [7164] | So if the new-line attribute is immutable, is that observable? |
Ladislav 20-Jan-2011 [7165] | Yes, the immutability *is* |
Andreas 20-Jan-2011 [7166] | And would that mean that calling the new-line function creates a new copy of the value, toggles the new-line bit, and places that new value in the appropriate slot? |
Ladislav 20-Jan-2011 [7167] | I may not follow what you are after, but is a sign of integers immutable, and is that (according to your opinion) observable? |
BrianH 20-Jan-2011 [7168x2] | In theory the immediate values are supposed to be immutable, and not have multiple references. In practice the value slots are mutable, and the containers of the value slots can have multiple references to them, so the difference is not as cut and dried as that. |
Nonetheless, the newline attribute is no more mutable than tuples or typesets. | |
Andreas 20-Jan-2011 [7170] | I guess that the sign of an integer would be immutable, and probably observably so. |
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