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 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 cowan@ccil.org > 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" > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "scheme-reports-wg1" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to scheme-reports-wg1+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.