It's amazing to have @dockimbel walk you through a log analysis and how some debugging was done for GC, inner details of func spec caching, and preview some features in the new GUI console. Even better, he walked me through them in person. That's right, he and @qtxie are here in the U.S. for a deep dive of business and technical work. The days are long, and the coffee is flowing, but we are Red-powered.
Thanks to @lucindamichele for getting the news flowing regularly, and now on to her weekly report.
Last Week In Red
Tell us about yourself and what you'd like to see Red become! Over at https://gitter.im/red/red we have a few questions for you. They're also at the bottom of this message.
More of your input and questions go into documentation: this exchange on Gitter https://gitter.im/red/help?at=5b9813e5728ddf02829371bc prompted a further fleshing out of ways block elements can be accessed: (1) using slash and a numeric index; (2) treating the block as a key/value store (these in addition to originally defined comparative functions like `=, ==, <>, >, <, >=, <=, =?`).
We also saw a number of fixes to the RED Wallet, making it even more stable and flexible in response to data entries. Transactions that are waiting in the pending pool can be edited with greater clarity and simplicity; the wallet now lets you review the amount and address of your transactions.
In Red's Garbage Collection, following the previous week's fixes, some new tests of object recycling were added.
The community project red.specs-public -- a guide to the syntax and semantics governing the language -- added the option to search the repository by datatype.
In his nimble diagramming tool, user @toomasv continues to expand its interactive capabilities, adding a layer for re-sizing of diagram data and further defining shapes.
And here are your questions, go answer them on Gitter, here:
https://gitter.im/red/red?at=5b9af21854587954f99bd32d
1) Do you consider yourself a programmer?
2) Do you consider yourself a software engineer?
3) Do you solve business problems with software?
4) What kind of problems do you solve?
5) What other languages have you used?
6) What is your favorite language, and why?
7) Is "progammer" or "developer" in your job title?
8) Do you think Red should be for "everyone" (e.g., like Visual Basic)?
9) Do you want to use Red for real work, or just fun?
10) What software do you pay for?
We've seen a lot of great responses so far, which tell us about how are people using Red, who they are, which will help us prioritize features. Keep 'em coming, and Happy Reducing!
It's great to see frequent updates from the Red project! Please keep them coming!
ReplyDeleteFantastic! Thanks for the feedback!
DeleteI am very excited about Red language and having more progress reports would definitely be great. It doesn't have to be big, having small pieces of insights (discussions, challenges, weekly development updates etc.) - would make it feel a lot more alive! Anyway, keep up good work on language development.
ReplyDeleteThat's our plan, Vasyl! (Great minds think alike.) We're happy you're liking it.
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