Where can I get the Factor Listener used in this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_0QlhYlS8g?
The one I downloaded from the project site is different and less convenient
to use.
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Cheers,
missingfaktor http://twitter.com/#!/missingfaktor.
When you stand for what you believe in, you can
On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 5:16 AM, missingfaktor
rahul.phulore@gmail.comwrote:
Where can I get the Factor Listener used in this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_0QlhYlS8g?
The one I downloaded from the project site is different and less
convenient to use.
The listener you get now
What about it is less convenient?
IIRC, one of the main motivations for the change was to show what the stack
looks like between computations, rather than just the current values.
On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 5:16 AM, missingfaktor
rahul.phulore@gmail.comwrote:
Where can I get the Factor
I want to write a word group-by that has following stack effect and
behavior:
Signature:
: group-by ( seq quot -- alist ) (group-by-impl) ;
Input:
{ hello hola ball scala java factor python } [ length ]
group-by
Output:
H{
{ 5 { hello scala } }
{ 4 { hola ball java } }
{ 6 { factor
Do it step by step - think about the steps you need to take.
I would first sort the array by length.
Then I would group them by length (look at the monotonic-split word for that).
That would be very close to what you want.
On Nov 19, 2011, at 12:49 PM, missingfaktor wrote:
I want to write a
You can look at math.statistics:collect-by as a reference:
USE: math.statistics
{ hello hola ball scala java factor python } [ length
] collect-by
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All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure
You might also be interested in this blog post, which walks through how to
build a group-by word:
http://re-factor.blogspot.com/2011/04/group-by.html
On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 10:19 AM, Joe Groff arc...@gmail.com wrote:
You can look at math.statistics:collect-by as a reference:
USE: