On Sun, 2011-09-04 at 14:23 -0400, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
> On Aug 31, 2011, at 2:33 AM, Chris McCormick wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 11:19:46PM -0700, Miller Puckette wrote:
> >>> I am in favour of having that functionality as part of [list] and
> >>> those names look good to me. For the functionality you describe
> >>> maybe something like [list ascii2symbol] and [list symbol2ascii]?
> >>> Those would also be pretty useful!
> >>>
> >>> I am currently making a [split] abstraction based on Jamie's work.
> >>> I will send it through when I am done - or you can just look at
> >>> symbol2list's source which IOhannes has re-licensed in a message
> >>> to this list for use in Pd:
> >>>
> >>
> >> hmm... another possibility, as in lisp: "list explode" and "list
> >> implode" ?
> >
> > Also good!
> >
> >> My idea is that, once this is in Pd vanilla, the "2/3" -> "2" "3"
> >> type
> >> of split is easy enough to program in an abstraction, but it's
> >> presently
> >> not possible at all; meanwhile, the funtionality I'm describing is
> >> pretty
> >> canonical and hard to split up into finer components in any way I
> >> can see.
> >
> > Ah, ok, so you could do:
> >
> > bat/cat/rat -> 98 97 116 47 99 97 116 47 114 97 116
> >
> > and then you would run through the number list finding 47 ("/") and
> > re-building the separate symbols using the reverse operation.
> >
> > I guess this would be cool because it would also allow you to store
> > proper strings with all kinds of characters in regular Pd arrays,
> > which might be fun. Hmmm, also many other things!
> >
> >> easy enough to program in an abstraction, but it's presently
> >> not possible at all;
> >
> > After looking at Jonathan's ratio splitting abstraction I think this
> > might actually be possible with [makefilename] madness, but it's
> > much uglier than what you propose:
> > <http://lists.puredata.info/pipermail/pd-list/2011-08/090196.html>
>
>
> Definitely check out Bryan Jurish's moocow with its bytes2any and
> any2bytes. They work quite nicely for converting between messages and
> lists of byte floats and are easy to use.I made a vanilla abstraction similar to [byte2any] based on the aforementioned [makefilename] madness. Just for the sake of this discussion. Check the attachment. Roman
byte2string.tar.gz
Description: application/compressed-tar
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