World: r3wp
[!REBOL3]
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BrianH 17-May-2011 [8707x2] | >> source c c: func [a][native action function! [[throw] :a [any-type!]] ['a] a] |
Those first three values in the source of C are direct references to the functions DO, MAKE and the type function!, so there are no word conflicts. | |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8709] | (just return: in R2) Can you create a function with a return: set-word! in the spec? |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8710] | The type is reserved for future use. If it's an error, the MAKE function! at the end will catch it. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8711x2] | Where did you get this info? |
Interesting example, you gave with W1 and W2. Funny how recursive functions works then!? | |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8713] | From Carl, years ago. Set-words in function specs are supposed to be used for more in R3 later. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8714] | Did Carl write about the set-word! in function spec anywhere? |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8715x2] | There is a bug in CLOSURE though. This line: insert tail bdy to word! :word will have problems with some datatypes. I'll fix it for the next version. |
Set-words in function specs are used by the routine! type now. | |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8717] | It's not so good and almost sad, that Carl used so much energy to include new stuff (like also routine!) instead of concentrating on making the old stuff (from R2) work correctly first. |
GrahamC 17-May-2011 [8718] | And now he's burnt out? |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8719] | R2 has routine!, R3 doesn't. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8720] | I would expect anybody to be burnt out when taking that approach to things. It's like building a skyscraper by loosely make all floors first, then trying ot fix everything. Better to get first floor solid before moving on. |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8721] | Recursive functions in R2 work by pushing the block of values in a context onto a stack during the recursive calls, then popping them off on return. In R2, function contexts are stack-relative, which makes word dereferencing 27% slower relative to object contexts, but function calls in general faster. Closures bind to object contexts, which are recreated with every function call. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8722] | R2 has routine! from what version of R2? |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8723] | Any version with library support. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8724] | :) And when did library support get in? |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8725x2] | I don't know, a little less than 10 years ago? |
Whenever /View/Pro or /Command was invented. | |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8727x2] | Ok, that's old then. |
Does routine! work flawlessly? | |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8729] | Don't know. R2's library support was never flexible enough for me to be able to use. Others seem to be able to make it work. |
Geomol 17-May-2011 [8730x3] | RAMBO holds 15 tickets, when searching for "routine!". 9 are Reviewed, 6 Built. |
Oldest dated 20-Oct-2004, newest 18-Apr-2010. | |
I would say, we desperately needs a replace for REBOL, so all the man-years of work, people have done in creating software with it, isn't wasted. It's not all wasted, nomatter what happens, as many things work and is used, but many would like to move on, I guess. | |
BrianH 17-May-2011 [8733x2] | I prefer to think of a combination of R3 and Red as potentially being that replacement, but other people may have other plans. |
Never mind what I said about the bug in CLOSURE. It's not a bug. | |
Gabriele 18-May-2011 [8735] | Geomol: syntax is insignificant, translating from one to another is easy. Anyway, the problem with a Scheme using REBOL-like syntax is that you give up dialecting (static binding is pretty important for that). |
Geomol 19-May-2011 [8736] | I found an bad effect of not binding words in blocks at all, before the block is evaluated. Functions like LOOP take 2 args, count and block. By not binding the block content before it's evaluated, the count arg local to LOOP is found, if a count var is used in the block. So I guess the REBOL early bind of words is better. |
BrianH 19-May-2011 [8737] | LOOP's count arg is not bound to the block of code, so it is not local. This is why LOOP is the fastest loop. REPEAT is the version of LOOP with a bound local arg. |
Geomol 19-May-2011 [8738] | The backside of REBOL's binding is all the unset words, we start out with. R2 has 1865 unset words registered in system/words. They can be seen with this code: foreach w first system/words [if unset? get/any to lit-word! w [prin [w ""]]] |
Maxim 20-May-2011 [8739x2] | but doesn't this list disapear with the new multi-level booting of R3? since those words are now not sent in the user context but stay in their lower levels? |
but its not a big deal... unset words are created just by loading any word in a block. it just means, I've seen this symbol before and it now has its reserved number in the word list/hash table. any future reference will reuse the same word id (number). | |
Geomol 20-May-2011 [8741x5] | Yeah, they will be reused. But the way, REBOL do it, if you have an application, that do a lot of block parsing for example, with new words coming in all the time, then that global context will just grow and grow. In reality, it will probably come to an end, as there are a finite number of words in a human language, if that's what being parsed. If words were not bound by just being loaded, but only when evaluated (or compiled, if that's the case), then parsing blocks would not produce any unset! words in the global context. But a consequence of this is, that blocks of code being sent to a function (like LOOP), will be able to see the words local to that function, unless the block is first bound outside the function, like count: 1 loop 10 bind [print count] 'count , which will then print the number 1 10 times. |
I just realized, the global context in R2 and the user context in R3 (system/contexts/user) wont grow by this: to block! "some_random_word" but it will grow by this: [some_random_word] | |
The consequence: >> count: 1 >> blk: [print] >> append blk to block! "count" == [print count] >> do blk ** Script Error: count word has no context I wonder, why TO BLOCK! works like this. | |
Maybe that's the way to have blocks of lots of words, which are just data and not bound to anything. | |
So to not exhaust the global context (if that's a problem), we should parse like this: parse to block! "a few words and then some more" to block! "'a 'few 'words to end" | |
Rebolek 20-May-2011 [8746] | AFAIK, to block! doesn't do binding, you have to LOAD the block. |
Kaj 20-May-2011 [8747x2] | Yes |
John, you seem to want to break down the basic principles REBOL is built on | |
Geomol 20-May-2011 [8749] | I'm trying to figure out the basic principles to understand better, what REBOL is. What's good design and what isn't. And what the consequences are of different design. |
Maxim 20-May-2011 [8750] | john, you are in error when you say: "exhaust the global context" the number of words in the global context is irrelevant to exhausting the number of usable words in rebol. the reason is that binding is not what reserves words in master word table. its anything that creates a new word value, bound or not. here is an example, using your own to block! example: >> repeat i 100000 [to-block join "random-word" i] >> probe length? first system/words == 2616 pump up the number to 500000 (in 2.7.8) and it crashes. IIRC this was as low as 32k in older versions ! with each increment of 100000 you will see the rebol process gobble up a few MBs more as it assigns new word-ids to those words. |
Kaj 20-May-2011 [8751x2] | Yes, REBOL is symbolic, so there is an internal table of numeric IDs for every word it ever encountered in the session |
This is an indirection, but different from binding. To abolish that table would mean to keep strings everywhere internally instead of simple numbers. If you want a language to work that way, you should use shell scripting. It's very slow | |
Maxim 20-May-2011 [8753] | yep |
Geomol 20-May-2011 [8754] | I think, there is a third alternative. When we deal with strings, a data structure is made, and we just have a pointer to that. var: "a string" var: none When noone is using the string anymore, memory can be completely cleaned for it. If I do the same with a word: var: 'word var: none I don't see, why memory can't be cleaned just the same. Is it a design flaw, the way it is? |
onetom 20-May-2011 [8755x2] | which suggest using some kind of reference counter for the words, but what would decrement such a reference counter? |
*suggests | |
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