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Re: [Chicken-users] Tangerine Edition penultimate report: how I voted, h


From: John Cowan
Subject: Re: [Chicken-users] Tangerine Edition penultimate report: how I voted, how you're voting
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2019 19:06:53 -0500

Sorry, left out the voting link this time:  it's http://tinyurl.com/tangerine-ballot for the vote, and http://tinyurl.com/orange-straw-poll for the Orange Edition straw poll (guidance to the editor on what should appear in the next poll).

On Wed, Jan 16, 2019 at 9:27 AM John Cowan <address@hidden> wrote:
Well, there are two weeks to go on the Tangerine Edition ballot (cutoff is 12 noon UTC on Saturday, February 2).  So far, 18 people have voted, including me.  For the Red Edition we had 30 voters, so I hope some of you who haven't voted yet will take an interest and give us your views.  Remember that you don't have to vote on all issues: choosing "No vote" is equivalent to abstaining, which does not affect the outcome, as votes are decided by a majority of the votes cast.

As in the Red Edition, the choice of string library (issue #1) has been the most controversial.  There was no majority vote cast in the Red Edition, so the issue is being reballoted.  Currently, the index-based SRFI 152, which is meant to be a simple basic string library, holds a majority position, but only by a single vote.  There is a strong minority for the original SRFI 13, which is a superset (with a few deviations) of 152.  SRFI 130, which is cursor-based, has only a single vote.  Three write-in votes were cast for SRFI 140, which I excluded from Tangerine because it provides adjustable-length strings.  These, like all other features that can't be implemented (at least minimally) on top of R7RS-small, have been postponed to the Green Edition.  I voted for SRFI 152.

Issue #4, supplementing the Red Edition's SRFI 127 generators with their dual, accumulators, is substantially beating the alternatives of status quo and no library.  Issue #6 is about bitwise operations on integers, and the comprehensive SRFI 151 is dominating the R6RS alternative.  The same thing is happening with fixnums (issue #7) and flonums (issue #8), where SRFIs 143 and 144, both supersets of R6RS, are getting more support than the R6RS alternatives. SRFI 160 is a superset of SRFI 4 that provides homogeneous vectors (issue #10), and it too is winning, though by a lesser margin.  Surprising to me is that for the combinator-based formatting library (issue #11), the combinator-based SRFI 159 is in a majority position over SRFI 48, the traditional template-based (as in Common Lisp) alternative.  Essentially all the remaining issues are yes/no/abstain, and yes is dominant all down the line, though a little less so for ratios (issue #13) and exact complex numbers (issue #16).  I voted with the majority for all of these except exact complex numbers.

So what is happening is that people are voting for more rather than less, as with the Red Edition.  This encourages me that I'm going in a sensible direction with the large language.

-- 
John Cowan          http://vrici.lojban.org/~cowan        address@hidden
It was dreary and wearisome.  Cold clammy winter still held sway in this
forsaken country.  The only green was the scum of livid weed on the dark
greasy surfaces of the sullen waters.  Dead grasses and rotting reeds loomed
up in the mists like ragged shadows of long-forgotten summers.
        --LOTR, "The Passage of the Marshes"


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