2024-02-24 00:10:40 thought about writing some helper words to it, but decided to keep it manual for now, or at least avoid rolling my own until i see some examples of how other people commonly do it. thanks, i'll check that out 2024-02-24 00:31:56 actually, now that i think of it, is there any good reason not to just save and restore the context stack on load boundaries? 2024-02-24 00:57:38 took about 15 minutes to implement. i think i dig this 2024-02-24 00:59:17 it lets you set up a contect that the loaded source can inherit, and that's free to modify it or sanitize it all it wants, and then when it returns it's restored to the way it was before you called load 2024-02-24 01:01:02 seems like the right balance of simple mechanism and behavior left up to convention 2024-02-24 01:12:06 zelgomer: The standard search order stuff is crying for things like this, it's definitely no good at being used directly 2024-02-24 01:12:24 PACKAGE is quite simple but effective as well 2024-02-24 01:23:10 hello everyone 2024-02-24 01:26:43 hello goren 2024-02-24 01:27:59 hello 2024-02-24 01:30:48 Anything interesting? 2024-02-24 01:46:34 playing around with forth, as usual 2024-02-24 01:47:19 of course :-) 2024-02-24 21:03:38 I just browsed the first few chapters of Feynman's Lectures on Physics - it's neat noticing how he emphasizes that the important part of it all isn't the actual resulting equations, but rather the "reasoning process" by which we get there. I've always been all about wanting to understand foundations. 2024-02-24 21:12:41 I think my favorite part of physics is statistical mechanics. It's just beautiful watching how you can start with nothing more than Newton's F=ma, apply it to a huge ensemble of particles statistically, and watch all of the relationships of thermodynamics emerge. So it explains more or less everything, like car engines and so on. All from F=ma and the behavior of numbers.