More thoughts on scripting vs. functional approaches in org-babel
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@ -332,6 +332,80 @@ level of the console environment will be set *everywhere* inside
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emacs. For this reason I think that it doesn't make any sense to
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worry about session support for emacs-lisp.
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*** Further thoughts on 'scripting' vs. functional approaches
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These are just thoughts, I don't know how sure I am about this.
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And again, perhaps I'm not saying anything very radical, just that
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it would be nice to have some options supporting things like
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receiving text output in the org buffer.
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I can see that you've already gone some way down the road towards
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the 'last value' approach, so sorry if my comments come rather
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late. I am concerned that we are not giving sufficient attention
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to stdout / the text that is returned by the interpreters. In
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contrast, many of our potential users will be accustomed to a
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'scripting' approach, where they are outputting text at various
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points in the code block, not just at the end. I am leaning
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towards thinking that we should have 2 modes of evaluation:
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'script' mode, and 'functional' mode.
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In script mode, evaluation of a code block would result in *all*
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text output from that code block appearing as output in the org
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buffer, presumably as an #+begin_example...#+end_example. There
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could be an :echo option controlling whether the input commands
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also appear in the output. [This is like Sweave].
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In functional mode, the *result* of the code block is available as
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an elisp object, and may appear in the org buffer as an org
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table/string, via the mechanisms you have developed already.
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One thing I'm wondering about is whether, in script mode, there
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simply should not be a return value. Perhaps this is not so
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different from what exists: script mode would be new, and what
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exists currently would be functional mode.
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I think it's likely that, while code evaluation will be exciting
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to people, a large majority of our users in a large majority of
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their usage will not attempt to actually use the return value from
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a source code block in any meaningful way. In that case, it seems
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rather restrictive to only allow them to see output from the end
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of the code block.
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Instead I think the most accessible way to introduce org-babel to
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people, at least while they are learning it, is as an immensely
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powerful environment in which to embed their 'scripts', which now
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also allows them to 'run' their 'scripts'. Especially as such
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people are likely to be the least capable of the user-base, a
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possible design-rule would be to make the scripting style of usage
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easy (default?), perhaps requiring a special option to enable a
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functional style. Those who will use the functional style won't
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have a problem understanding what's going on, whereas the 'skript
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kiddies' might not even know the syntax for defining a function in
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their language of choice. And of course we can allow the user to
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set a variable in their .emacs controlling the preference, so that
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functional users are not inconveniennced by having to provide
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header args the whole time.
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Please don't get the impression that I am down-valuing the
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functional style of org-babel. I am constantly horrified at the
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messy 'scripts' that my colleagues produce in perl or R or
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whatever! Nevertheless that seems to be how a lot of people work.
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I think you were leaning towards the last-value approach because
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it offered the possibility of unified code supporting both the
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single evaluation environment and the functional style. If you
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agree with any of the above then perhaps it will impact upon this
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and mean that the code in the two branches has to differ a bit. In
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that case, functional mode could perhaps after all evaluate each
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code block in its own environment, thus (re)approaching 'true'
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functional programming (side-effects are hard to achieve).
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#+begin_src sh
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ls > files
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echo "There are `wc -l files` files in this directory"
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#+end_src
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*** TODO rework all source codes to use inferior-processes-buffers
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this will involve...
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