World: r3wp
[Core] Discuss core issues
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Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1970] | try mold/all after and you will see the (hidden) parts |
Geomol 26-Jul-2011 [1971] | Yup! :) |
Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1972] | an index is stored alltogether with any serie |
Cyphre 26-Jul-2011 [1973] | I'm not sure which behaviour is better though. Ie copying whole string vs. just the 'ranges' defined by the series values in the block. |
Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1974] | Don't know, but it would be a problem now, because I use this behavior to hide data in blocks (like absolute identifiers) |
Cyphre 26-Jul-2011 [1975] | My guess is the current copy/deep behaviour can consume too much memory if the strings(or whatever data) are too big. |
Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1976] | You have a point here |
Cyphre 26-Jul-2011 [1977] | Here is another way how to ilustrate it clearly: >> s: "abc" == "abc" >> mold/all copy/deep reduce [next s] == {[#[string! "abc" 2]]} >> mold/all copy next s == {"bc"} |
Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1978] | is that true only for strings ? |
Cyphre 26-Jul-2011 [1979x2] | I think it works same on all series. |
>> s: [1 2 3] == [1 2 3] >> mold/all x: copy reduce [next s] == "[#[block![1 2 3]2]]" >> mold/all y: copy/deep reduce [next s] == "[#[block![1 2 3]2]]" >> mold/all z: copy next s == "[2 3]" >> same? x/1 next s == true >> same? y/1 next s == false >> same? z/1 next s == false >> | |
Steeve 26-Jul-2011 [1981x3] | Ok, I agree, it's a problem for >> same? y/1 next s == false |
the hidden part should not have beeb copied | |
Good point Geomol, you found a new ticket | |
Cyphre 26-Jul-2011 [1984] | yes, the whole serie is copied from HEAD in the copy/deep case...not sure if Carl does that intentionally but could be a bug that can lead to unwanted bigger memory footprint in some scripts imo. |
Maxim 26-Jul-2011 [1985] | Ladislav, typical serialization only takes into account the data traversed (in the order it meets it). in the above example, if the block 2 was encountered first, then it would look like this: #[block 2 [ val3 #[block 1 [ val1 val2 ]] val4] ; shared block containing another shared block #[block 1 ] (I kept the ids, just to make the comparisons easier, but it would have effectively swapped 1 and 2) I built such a system for a project a long time ago (I lost the code, unfortunately). It stored graphics in block formats, and used shared sub-blocks in many objects . So I built a reference-safe load and save which completely made the above invisible... I used tags to refer to blocks, and a tag-based block serialization which was very similar to the above. it was quite specific to my application, but it could have been generalized. I did have to make it a two-step process. if it where internal, it could be done in a single pass. a serialization can be made more persistent (accross several serializations and even sessions), but that is not what REBOL is built for, nor would it be very useful within REBOL's semantics IMHO. |
Ladislav 26-Jul-2011 [1986] | So, shall I understand it, that you actually propose to use this kind format for cyclic blocks? |
Maxim 26-Jul-2011 [1987x2] | unless someone finds a better alternative, I don't see anything wrong with this syntax... maybe it needs a bit more components (like keeping tabs on the index of the block). in fact maybe this is even better: #[block #1 2 [ val1 val2 ]] here an issue type is used for the uid and the integer is used as the block index. |
since this is just managed within LOADing, it shouldn't force the word count to increase, its just a notation. | |
Gabriele 27-Jul-2011 [1989] | I solved the problem of serializing circular blocks etc. a long time ago, by adding DISMANTLE and REBUILD. Eg. see http://www.colellachiara.com/soft/YourValues/libs/persist.r So, it can even be done as a mezz layer above MOLD and LOAD. |
Ladislav 27-Jul-2011 [1990] | I guess, that you meant the DISMANTLE-BLOCK and REBUILD-BLOCK functions. Nevertheless, the source code does not contain the definition of the CUSTOM-TYPE? function. |
Gabriele 28-Jul-2011 [1991] | No, dismantle and rebuild are not defined there specifically, they are defined as actions for custom types (eg. pblock! etc.). But they are based on those two IIRC. http://www.colellachiara.com/soft/YourValues/ |
Pekr 28-Jul-2011 [1992] | I am doing some tel. report automatic checking, and I need an advice - how do I get easily substracted two time values going thru the midnight? >> (fourth 29-7-2011/00:02:00) - (fourth 28-7-2011/23:52:00) == -23:50 If I substract whole date value, it returns 1, it simply counts just dates, not time ... |
Maxim 28-Jul-2011 [1993] | >> difference 29-7-2011/00:02:00 28-7-2011/23:52:00 == 0:10 |
GrahamC 28-Jul-2011 [1994] | this works to a point whereupon you start getting overflow |
Sunanda 28-Jul-2011 [1995] | Overflow happens on dates around 68 years apart -- so probably safe for Petr's intended usage. |
Maxim 28-Jul-2011 [1996] | 68.04 years to be precise ;-) the seconds resolution in 31 bits (power 2 31) / 60 / 60 / 24 / 365.25 |
Pekr 29-Jul-2011 [1997] | Max - thanks :-) I wonder why there is a difference between the 'difference and substraction .... |
Geomol 29-Jul-2011 [1998x3] | You were subtracting 23 hours and 52 minutes from zero hours and 2 minutes. That's -23:50. With difference, the whole date plus time was given, then the difference is positive in this example. |
Subtract on dates give you number of days. Subtract on times give you number of hours, minutes and seconds. Difference on dates (incl times) give you number of hours, minutes and seconds. | |
Maybe subtract on dates should only give days, if time is not given, else work as difference? | |
Henrik 4-Aug-2011 [2001] | I have a COPY/DEEP question: When doing a COPY/DEEP, the first level requires that the argument must be a series!, port! or bitset! But when doing a /DEEP, I imagine that COPY traverses a series for elements and uses a different process than for the first level to determine whether the element can be copied. If it can't, it silently passes the value through. Why can't we do that on the first level as well? |
Gregg 4-Aug-2011 [2002] | Just so you can puT COPY everywhere, without caring about the type? |
Henrik 4-Aug-2011 [2003] | I'm not really sure I want to, but I think it's interesting that there is a difference between the first level and other levels. |
Gregg 4-Aug-2011 [2004] | It makes sense to me. Copy what can be copied. I like having the type check at the top level. |
Henrik 4-Aug-2011 [2005] | I do dislike having to do: either series? var [copy/deep var][var] thing. Generally the programming needed for absolutely deep copy a value is too elaborate. |
Gregg 4-Aug-2011 [2006] | I don't do that very often. If I did, I would just wrap it. |
Geomol 4-Aug-2011 [2007x2] | I try to think of situations, where I would need to do that. I also don't think, I do it often. But it's an interesting idea. I try to come up with some situations, where I need to copy a value, that can sometimes be a series, sometimes not. Hmm... |
Let's see: I need to copy a value, and it can be any value, so copy should work on any value. I don't see a flaw in that. I wonder, if it has come up before? | |
Steeve 4-Aug-2011 [2009x2] | Well I'm not against that, for sure. It's an,old debate. I dislike annoying type checking errors messages. My point is that if a primitive function can't deal with a data type, the data should just pass thru silently. But other peoples will object that error messages are favored for educationnal purposes... Uh !? But year after year, I see that more and more functions have been corrected to be tolerant. A good example is REDUCE |
And yeah Geomol, COPY should act just like REDUCE. if the input is not a serie, it should just return it. It would save lot of useless checking code in our script. And lot of others functions should behave like that | |
Geomol 4-Aug-2011 [2011] | There is a lot of type checking in REBOL. I feel too much sometimes. Calling many functions involve two types of type checking, as I see it. Take ADD. Values can be: number pair char money date time tuple If I try call ADD with some other type, I get an error: >> add "a" 1 ** Script Error: add expected value1 argument of type: number pair char money date time tuple I can e.g. add pairs: >> add 1x1 1x2 == 2x3 and issues: >> add 1.1.1 1.2.3 == 2.3.4 But I can't add a pair and an issue: >> add 1x1 1.2.3 ** Script Error: Expected one of: pair! - not: tuple! So that's kinda two different type checking. First what the function takes as arguments, then what actually makes sense. If the user also need to make type checking, three checks are then involved. It could be, the first kind isn't done explicit for natives, and that it's kinda built in with the second kind. But for non-native functions, the first type checking is done: >> f: func [v [integer!]] [v] >> f "a" ** Script Error: f expected v argument of type: integer |
Geomol 8-Aug-2011 [2012] | Does anybody know the reason, BACK was called that and not PREV? |
Gregg 8-Aug-2011 [2013] | Perhaps because it's a complete word, rather than an abbreviation? |
Geomol 8-Aug-2011 [2014x2] | Yeah, probably that. As not having english as my first language, I'm not sure, but isn't previous opposite of next and back opposite of forward? Or can back be opposite of next? |
(Or maybe backward is opposite of forward to be real correct?) | |
Sunanda 8-Aug-2011 [2016] | English is probably too lenient. to say for sure :) If you do a websearch for.... "next back" button ....You'll see next and back are a common choice of names for navigating. |
Gregg 8-Aug-2011 [2017] | 'Previous is more formal, but depends on usage. e.g. "Go to the previous slide" versus "Go back one slide". |
Geomol 8-Aug-2011 [2018] | Thanks! |
Geomol 11-Aug-2011 [2019] | I came across a funny thing with binding. We've learnt, that the binding of words in a block is done, when the words are put into the block. This little example with two functions illustrate that: blk: [] f: func [ v ][ insert blk 'v g v ] g: func [ v ][ if v = 3 [exit] print ["v:" v] probe reduce blk g v + 1 ] F puts the word V into the block, then calls G, that has its own V. When G reduce the block, we see the original value of V from F, even if Gs V is changed: >> f 1 v: 1 [1] v: 2 [1] Then I tried this next function, which puts V in the block in the start, then call itself with changed V value: f: func [ v ][ if v = 3 [exit] if v = 1 [insert blk 'v] print ["v:" v] probe reduce blk f v + 1 ] >> clear blk == [] >> f 1 v: 1 [1] v: 2 [2] This time, we see the latest version of V. The first V, which has the value 1, was put in the block, and it's still there somewhere in the system, but we get the V value from the latest F. Is this a problem or a benefit, or is it just a bit strange? |
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