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From: clipka
Subject: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 13:25:00
Message: <web.49cbb9e38a87b99f93bfb07f0@news.povray.org>
While 3.7 is still in beta stage, I think it is worth already starting to think
about the next generation SDL, which I guess will be the key feature of POV
4.0.

Yes, a lot has been said about this before, but I propose doing some more
systematic brainstorming.

Yes, it will be up to the POV dev team to decide on how the next generation SDL
will be like; however, they may ultimately decide to pick up a proposal drafted
by the POV community, if there is such a thing and it makes sense.


First, to keep discussion focused, I think it is prudent to distinguish between
various aspects:

- Basic paradigms: What very fundamental properties do we want? (For instance,
the question whether to use a conventional OO- or a functional approach would
fit in here, or whether the language)

- Features: What individual features do we want? (For instance, the question
whether to support Garble-Greeble-Jabberwock-trees would fit in here)

- Syntax: How do we want the features to be accessed? (For instance, the
question how to specify vectors would fit in here)

- Implementation: How can the desired features be implemented "under the hood"?

I guess syntax issues are probably not worth paying too much attention to yet,
as they may be significantly dependent on the basic paradigms or the features
to support - except when talking about basic paradigms of the syntax, so to
speak. Likewise, implementation issues may play a role in discussing the
benefits or drawbacks of other aspects, but I guess most POV users will not
give a damn how the thing works inside, provided it does so sufficiently fast.

So first thing to concentrate on is the basic paradigms and features, before
getting lost in syntax and implementation details.


So, here are a few of my thoughts:

BASIC PARADIGMS

* Multithreading Support

POV is going multithreaded. An SDL that allows to multithread parts or maybe
even all of the parsing would be of benefit there. This might be particularly
of importance for animations.

To flesh out a bit what I'm thinking about here, for instance include files
might be parsed in parallel, unless sequential parsing is explicitly requested
somehow; loops might be marked by the scene developer as fit for parallel
processing (I don't think we want to wait for an SDL implementation that can
automatically identify parallelizable loops); the SDL file may be comprised of
blocks with some hierarchy denoting parts that are independent of each other,
and can therefore be parsed in parallel.

To go a bit into implementation, too (contrary to my own recommendation, but
this one is quite independent of other conceptual issues): The parser could be
split into multiple layers; the lower layer would run in a single thread, but
just read in the scene file and include files, tokenize them, and build a
syntax tree from the tokens; the actual execution of the syntax tree could then
be delegated to a host of threads, using it to generate the geometry for the
engine to render. This would also allow a speed advantage for animations, as
the tokenization step would have to be performed just once.

* Object Orientation

I guess when talking about "the" basic paradigm on which to build the language,
we can't really get around OO these days. We obviously want an approach that is
state-of-the-art, but it also needs to be well enough understood to be both
implemented in reasonable time and efficiently usable for the average POVer, so
that leaves us with only OO or a functional approach for all I can see. And all
in all, I guess OO is much more commonly known among the POV community (and POV
developers, for that matter) than functional programming. I bet every advocate
of the functional approach will know a good deal about OO as well, but hardly
vice versa.

However, I think the most important aspect of OO for POV users would be
encapsulation of data & code, while polymorphism may play a minor role, and
inheritance may be quite well done without - provided that the language
natively supports a good set of generic data containers.

As a matter of fact, I guess a prototype-based (aka class-less) approach at
polymorphism and inheritance, like in JavaScript, would do just fine for POV
needs: While making automatic type checking impossible, I guess that's not a
major concern for the size of common POV "projects". The benefit would be a
very low "formalism profile", ultimate polymorphism, and an inheritance-like
mechanism for free.

I also think it is well acceptable for POV to maintain a conceptual distinction
between built-in types (scene entities like objects, textures, etc., but also
natively supported data containers) and user-defined objects.

As a matter of fact, a very easy way to approach this would be to mimick
user-defined entities via a built-in associative array type (aka dictionary aka
map), and just providing a specialized syntax for accessing such arrays (plus
some optimization based on the expectation that the same keys will typically be
used in many entities).

* Full-Fledged Scripting Language

On the paper, the current SDL is just a static scene description language,
extended with a preprocessor language to allow for some limited scripting
capabilities. Personally, I think this distinction is obsolete, and the new SDL
concept should acknowledge that, down to its very core.

* DOM Access

As of now, SDL can only "write" properties of the entities it describes. Some
have pondered the idea of making them readable, too, and I guess although one
can possibly go quite well without, this is a nice idea.

Similarly, users would probably expect properties to be not only writable, but
modifiable as well. Again, I'd consider this a nice idea.

* Integrated

It has been proposed to just provide an API for POV, and have each user choose
the language they prefer most. However, this would make the POV package
incomplete: You couldn't do anything with it without installing another
software (plus going through the hassle of getting your language of choice to
properly interface to the API).

Thus, even if an API would be added to allow for the use of arbitrary languages,
POV should come with its own integrated standard SDL, so you can still just
install it and get going.


FEATURES

* Namespaces

It seems like all major programming languages have acknowledged the benefit of
giving public identifiers from separate modules separate spaces to "live in",
in order to avoid name clashes.

* Container Data Structures

I think a next generation SDL will need more data containers than just arrays,
like:
- dynamic arrays
- associative arrays (aka dictionaries aka maps, kind of like arrays with
non-numeric indices)
- lists (just a bunch of entities that can be iterated over)
- ordered lists (like lists, but with a defined order for iteration; these may
also allow for access by positional index, like an array, but the mapping will
change whenever elements are inserted or removed)
- sets (lists without duplicates)

In addition, some data structure for spatial lookup may be of particular value,
like an octree or kd-tree.

* Data Tuples

Often I'd love to have a function return not only one value, but a pair of them
or even more (e.g. a point and an associated normal vector). The SDL should
provide for a mechanism to handle such cases easily.

* For Loops

Loops like #local i = 0; #while (i < n) ... #local i = i + 1; #end are
commonplace, and they work, but they suck. I want something like a #for i = 0
to n-1 ... #end.

* Foreach Loops

Iterating over all elements of a data container is commonplace, so there should
be an easy syntax for it, something like #foreach myElement in myArray ...
#end.

For data structures mapping keys to elements, the syntax should also allow for
retrieving the key along with the element, like #foreach (myKey,myElement) in
myMap ... #end; iterating over the keys only should be possible, too, like
#foreach (myKey,) in myMap ... #end, but a syntax to retrieve a list of keys
from the data container would do the same job, like #foreach myKey in
myMap.keys ... #end

* Integer values

I'm always worried when doing things with floats that I would normally use
integers for. I confess that it's probably more of a psychological thing, but
still I want integers.

* Vector and Color functions

Being unable to use vectors within functions sucks.

* Consistent functionality in functions

Being unable to use certain built-in identifiers in functions sucks, too.


SYNTAX

* Basically "C Style"

Although it's probably far too early to talk about individual aspects of syntax,
the overall "look & feel" might already make sense to discuss, or at least
gather ideas about.

I think that with so many "C Style" languages out there and enjoying a lot of
popularity (C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript to name just the "major players" that
spring to my mind), it doesn't hurt to go for a similar style, both in overall
"look & feel" as well as various details. Not to mention that the curly braces
will maintain some feeling of familiarity :) (It seems like POV's current SDL
was inspired to some degree by C, too.) Another benefit is that POV itself is
written in C++, so the developers themselves are familiar with the style.

Personally, I'd consider only Perl- and Basic-inspired languages to be
widespread enough to use them as a basis for a new POV SDL; however, Perl is
currently undergoing significant syntax changes itself, and Basic will not gain
many supporters in the POV community I guess - let alone having no similarity
whatsoever with the current SDL syntax.

Well, there would be another option: XML. But I don't think we need to discuss
this here: XML is not particularly pretty to work with directly.

* Consistent

The current SDL is a heap of inconsistency regarding when to place a comma, when
to place a semicolon, where parentheses are used and where not (see e.g. #fopen
vs. #write), and so forth. There should be an easy, consistent style regarding
this.

* Clear distinction of types

The distinction between colors and vectors in the current SDL is to some degree
still a mystery to me; I think the two concepts should be better separated.

Similarly, I think a clear distinction between floats and vectors would be good.


Hum, well... I guess that should suffice for now...


Post a reply to this message

From: Chris B
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 14:37:18
Message: <49cbcb5e$1@news.povray.org>
"clipka" <nomail@nomail> wrote in message 
news:web.49cbb9e38a87b99f93bfb07f0@news.povray.org...
> While 3.7 is still in beta stage, I think it is worth already starting to 
> think
> about the next generation SDL, which I guess will be the key feature of 
> POV
> 4.0.
>
> Yes, a lot has been said about this before, but I propose doing some more
> systematic brainstorming.

A couple of things that I didn't yet see discussed that I think are going to 
need to be added into this discussion at some stage:

Backwards Compatibility
There's a lot of time been invested in tutorials, interfaces, macros and 
objects.
Much of the written information out on the Internet (including the years of 
newsgroup postings) doesn't specify which version it relates to, so if this 
material is rendered largely redundant it's probably going to be wise to 
totally change the product name. Otherwise there's a risk of years of 
confusion that may create difficult barriers to new users.

Inventing New Languages
There are a lot of mature languages about in common usage with comprehensive 
and well designed structures and support channels. It may be better to adopt 
one existing language, providing API/DOM access to the C++ core with 
official support for that language. Enthusiast for other languages could 
then add support for other languages as trends change.

Maybe a solution would be to create an integration layer with native support 
for an enhanced version of the established POV-Ray SDL and, at the same time 
expose the API/DOM. As a particular programming language becomes a popular 
choice for the POV-Ray community in years to come it could become the 
defacto standard and could be added to the short list of officially 
supported languages.

Chris B.


Post a reply to this message

From: Warp
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 14:37:42
Message: <49cbcb76@news.povray.org>
I have written about this years ago already, but here's a quick
recapitulation of what I think would be good for the new scripting
language (and perhaps a few new ideas):

- It must be easily byte-compilable. Preferably to a byte code which may
  be easily JIT-compiled to native machine code in some future version.
  Even without JIT-compiling just the fact of having it in bytecode
  format can make parsing an order of magnitude faster.

- The bytecode will also allow saving scenes in bytecode format for
  faster parsing. (Basically the need to parse the scene is removed
  completely, except for some sanity checks of the bytecode.)

- Currently there's a distinction between parse-time scripting (the SDL)
  and rendertime scripting (user-defined functions, used eg. in isosurfaces).
  Rather obviously no such distinction should be made in the new language.
  Anything you write should be runnable at parse time and at rendertime
  (and also at the post-processing stage).

- Object properties, such as textures, should be fully specifiable using
  the scripting language itself (facilitated by the previous point). In
  other words, you should be able to write, for example, "shaders" with
  the scripting language. This "shader" is evaluated every time that
  certain property of the object (eg. its texture) is needed.
    This would allow eg. writing an AOI patter with the scripting language,
  completely removing the need to add such a pattern to the core renderer.

- Most core renderer features should be available to the scripting language.
  As an example, you should be able to launch a ray from a given point and
  retrieve the color it returns.
    This will allow, among many many things, writing eg. a "portal" shader,
  ie. a texture which shows the image as seen by a secondary "camera"
  somewhere else. I believe megapov has currently such an option. Rather
  than being a core feature, it would be easily implementable with scripting.

- Related to that, the scripting language should be so flexible that many
  current core features can be removed from the core renderer and put into
  libraries.
    Currently there are tons of features in the core renderer which are there
  for the sole reason that you can't implement them with the SDL, and there
  wouldn't be any other reason for them to them to be there (eg. efficiency).
    The core renderer should be as minimal as possible, and only contain
  things which have to be there because of efficiency (it would be way too
  slow to try to implement them in scripting). The smaller the core renderer
  is, the lesser bugs it will have.
    (Another advantage is that bugs in libraries are much easier to fix
  than bux in the core renderer. Also libraries can be modified by the
  user much more easily. Modifying the core renderer is way more laborious
  and error-prone.)

  Related to that last point, an interesting question is how to provide
standard data containers ? la STL. By the previous principle they should
be provided as libraries. This makes them more flexible, easier to modify,
and removes clutter from the core renderer.

  However, there's also a negative side: The STL in modern C++ compilers
is very stable, very well tested and almost certainly bug-free, while
creating equivalents with the new scripting language, no matter how
flexible it might be, is very laborious and will inevitable be ridden
with bugs for years to come. Providing a "wrapper" to the STL in the
scripting as a core feature could be way less work and less error-prone
than trying to re-implement them from scratch using the scripting language.
They will probably also be faster that way (because the container functions
will be compiled, rather than bytecode-interpreted).

  If the scripting language is designed smartly enough, it will actually
not make any difference whether the containers are implemented as libraries
written in the scripting language itself, or whether they are a core
feature (acting as STL wrappers). This allows changing the implementation
of any of them from one approach to the other without breaking any existing
scenes. This is a goal to aim for.

- The design principle of the new scripting language should have some kind
  of "unified object model" approach. With this I mean that core objects
  and user-created objects should work and be usable in the exact same way.
  That is, it doesn't matter whether a "sphere" object is a core feature
  or something which came from a library. In either case you would use that
  "sphere" object in the exact same way (as long as you know its interface,
  of course).
    For example, if you wanted to access (read, change) the texture of the
  object, it would be done with an identical syntax regardless of whether
  the object is a core feature or defined in a library.
    In object-oriented terms, they would have a common base class (even if
  the scripting language wouldn't really use literal inheritance) and you
  can handle any object in the same way.

    And by "object" I don't necessarily mean literally object primitives
  (spheres, boxes), but basically anything povray features (lights, cameras,
  textures, arrays...). In other words, regardless of what it is, it should
  be usable in the same way regardless of whether it's a core feature or
  defined in a library. Of course different types of objects will have
  different interfaces (in OO terms, they will have different base classes),
  and you have to know the "type" of object you have in order to use it
  (eg. handling a sphere is different from handling a texture, for instace,
  as they have different type of data), but the point is that the user
  doesn't have to know if it's a core feature or a library object in order
  to use it (he only has to know its interface).

- As for memory management: Garbage collection (as in the one in Java or C#)
  might be nice, but VERY hard to implement efficiently. If possible the
  scripting language should be designed in a way which makes creating a GC
  engine unnecessary.
    This might mean that the only way to use dynamic memory is through the
  dynamic data containers provided. However, that might be enough for
  almost everything. (After all, most people have done cool things with
  the current array feature, even though it's *really* rigid. The new
  data containers will be much more flexible.)

- The scripting language should also be designed so that it's easy to
  flexibly read, parse and write data files (as well as handle the data
  itself). This would allow writing things like 3DS or OBJ file format
  importers as libraries. (This is an example of something which should
  definitely be a library rather than a core feature.)

-- 
                                                          - Warp


Post a reply to this message

From: Mueen Nawaz
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 15:20:48
Message: <49cbd590$1@news.povray.org>
Chris B wrote:
> Backwards Compatibility
> There's a lot of time been invested in tutorials, interfaces, macros and
> objects.
> Much of the written information out on the Internet (including the years
> of newsgroup postings) doesn't specify which version it relates to, so
> if this material is rendered largely redundant it's probably going to be
> wise to totally change the product name. Otherwise there's a risk of
> years of confusion that may create difficult barriers to new users.

	I doubt a product name change is necessary. However, it should be made
clear all over the place (docs, Web site, etc) that the latest Pov will
break compatibility with anything before v4.

	I personally don't think there's a great need to maintain backward
compatibility as far as syntax/code goes. I think the hope is that the
new SDL will provide "nicer"/"better" ways to do stuff than the old SDL
- and so we wouldn't want people being hampered by tutorials from the
past - but force them to learn the new way of thinking.

	One possibility is to try to find lots of good tutorials, put them onto
the Wiki (if permission can be acquired), and before POV4 is released,
update the tutorials to show how to get each effect using POV4.

-- 
A man attempting to walk around the world DROWNED today...


                    /\  /\               /\  /
                   /  \/  \ u e e n     /  \/  a w a z
                       >>>>>>mue### [at] nawazorg<<<<<<
                                   anl


Post a reply to this message

From: clipka
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 15:55:01
Message: <web.49cbdcc1ad59404793bfb07f0@news.povray.org>
Warp <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote:
> - It must be easily byte-compilable. Preferably to a byte code which may
>   be easily JIT-compiled to native machine code in some future version.
>   Even without JIT-compiling just the fact of having it in bytecode
>   format can make parsing an order of magnitude faster.
>
> - The bytecode will also allow saving scenes in bytecode format for
>   faster parsing. (Basically the need to parse the scene is removed
>   completely, except for some sanity checks of the bytecode.)

I guess this boils down to about the same as what I had in mind about separating
what would basically be the tokenizer, and the actual parser. Except that what
you call bytecode, I'd call a serialized "syntax tree"

I don't think, however, that JIT-compiling would make any sense or be an option:

- A JIT-compiler integrated into POV-Ray itself is, quite obviously, no more
than a distant dream.

- Using an external JIT-compiler would require another piece of software (namely
the JIT-compiler) to run POV; I don't think this is acceptable.

- Integration of an external JIT-compiler would pose major architectural
problems, which I guess are better left unaddressed, given the number of other
ideas pending implementation and the desire of users to have them all ASAP.

> - Currently there's a distinction between parse-time scripting (the SDL)
>   and rendertime scripting (user-defined functions, used eg. in isosurfaces).
>   Rather obviously no such distinction should be made in the new language.
>   Anything you write should be runnable at parse time and at rendertime
>   (and also at the post-processing stage).

Yes and no. Obviously the render-time scripting should have exactly the same
syntax as the parse-time scripting, most notably access to the same integrated
identifiers. However, things like generating additional geometric objects, or
even just modifying existing ones, is a definite no-go for render-time code.

Or, to put it in other words: Render-time code should be restricted to read-only
ops. Temp variables would come in handy, but their lifetime and scope should be
limited to the current invocation of the function for a whole bunch of reasons
- the most important being that many POV internals rely on user functions to be
stateless. Throwing this overboard would open up a can of really nasty worms.

> - Object properties, such as textures, should be fully specifiable using
>   the scripting language itself (facilitated by the previous point). In
>   other words, you should be able to write, for example, "shaders" with
>   the scripting language. This "shader" is evaluated every time that
>   certain property of the object (eg. its texture) is needed.
....
> - Most core renderer features should be available to the scripting language.
>   As an example, you should be able to launch a ray from a given point and
>   retrieve the color it returns.

I think these ideas are not realistic in near future, as they require yet
another major architectural change of POV-Ray, and I guess we want a new SDL
earlier. However, it is a good point to keep in mind when designing that
language.

But note also that these shaders, being render-time code, would not be able to
use data caches or stuff alike, due to restriction on statelessness. I'd
advocate that shaders that require stateful operation be written as binary
plug-ins of sort.

> - Related to that, the scripting language should be so flexible that many
>   current core features can be removed from the core renderer and put into
>   libraries.

Given how complex the render engine currently is regarding even seemingly simple
tasks, such as shooting a ray and seeing what color you get, I must conclude
that (a) heading for that goal would definitely be of benefit for the internal
architecture of the render engine, but (b) I'd be prepared for that goal to be
never actually reached.

In addition, I'd advocate not to implement those functions in script code, but
instead have them remain binary modules, albeit separated from the main engine
code more strictly, e.g. as a kind of plug-in.

> - The design principle of the new scripting language should have some kind
>   of "unified object model" approach. With this I mean that core objects
>   and user-created objects should work and be usable in the exact same way.
>   That is, it doesn't matter whether a "sphere" object is a core feature
>   or something which came from a library. In either case you would use that
>   "sphere" object in the exact same way (as long as you know its interface,
>   of course).

This would presume that the SDL in fact provide an interface to define new
geometric entities. These would have to be render-time code.

I don't really think there is much use for such objects, and that instead giving
more flexibility to functions to be used in isosurfaces is the way to go.

>     For example, if you wanted to access (read, change) the texture of the
>   object, it would be done with an identical syntax regardless of whether
>   the object is a core feature or defined in a library.

Yes, that's an important consistency thing. It will probably also make the
parser more lightweight. At the moment, every property for every thing has its
own code snippet in the parser.

> - As for memory management: Garbage collection (as in the one in Java or C#)
>   might be nice, but VERY hard to implement efficiently. If possible the
>   scripting language should be designed in a way which makes creating a GC
>   engine unnecessary.
>     This might mean that the only way to use dynamic memory is through the
>   dynamic data containers provided. However, that might be enough for
>   almost everything. (After all, most people have done cool things with
>   the current array feature, even though it's *really* rigid. The new
>   data containers will be much more flexible.)

Yes, I guess this is the way to go. It makes for clear memory handling
responsibilities: The built-in containers do all that's needed; they'll also
care for either copying items, or keeping a reference counter to know when a
shared entity is no longer needed. That should do for most practical purposes
(after all, we're not writing complex business applications in the order of
magnitude of several man-years ;))


Post a reply to this message

From: clipka
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 16:50:00
Message: <web.49cbe9b0ad59404793bfb07f0@news.povray.org>
"Chris B" <nom### [at] nomailcom> wrote:
> Backwards Compatibility
> There's a lot of time been invested in tutorials, interfaces, macros and
> objects.
> Much of the written information out on the Internet (including the years of
> newsgroup postings) doesn't specify which version it relates to, so if this
> material is rendered largely redundant it's probably going to be wise to
> totally change the product name. Otherwise there's a risk of years of
> confusion that may create difficult barriers to new users.

There is some point to this; however, that's why it would be "POV-Ray 4.0", and
not "POV-Ray 3.8".

I don't know anything about POV-Ray 2.0, but I bet tutorials on it would be far
from usable nowadays, too.

Backward compatibility could also be maintained by designing the new language
such that it will be compatible to POV 3.x SDL up to (and including) the
"#version" statement, at which point a legacy parser may kick in.

> Inventing New Languages
> There are a lot of mature languages about in common usage with comprehensive
> and well designed structures and support channels. It may be better to adopt
> one existing language, providing API/DOM access to the C++ core with
> official support for that language. Enthusiast for other languages could
> then add support for other languages as trends change.

This would (a) generate a major problem with POV being unusable stand-alone, (b)
require a major effort to implement a whole mature language (and all its
features, because that's what people would expect), or (c) open up the can of
worms called GPL by integrating an existing language interpreter into the POV
package.

> Maybe a solution would be to create an integration layer with native support
> for an enhanced version of the established POV-Ray SDL and, at the same time
> expose the API/DOM. As a particular programming language becomes a popular
> choice for the POV-Ray community in years to come it could become the
> defacto standard and could be added to the short list of officially
> supported languages.

In my opinion the problem with the current SDL is not only that it is showing
its age regarding the features it offers, but also the syntax: It is far from
consistent with itself (just look at #fopen vs. #fwrite: Why does one have the
parentheses, while the other has not?), and needs an overhaul even in that
respect.

I think a redesigned language would actually be of benefit for new users, as it
will be much easier to learn.

If the basic syntax is sufficiently different, but the scene stuff parameter
names are not changed, I guess there will not be much confusion: It will just
be an (obviously) different syntax to access the same properties.

Those tutorials not dealing with scene stuff properties but instead elaborating
on how to work around the shortcomings of the current SDL will be rendered
obsolete anyway by a next generation SDL, or we'd better not talk about a new
SDL at all.

Re established general-purpose language, note also that Perl is currently
undergoing a major syntax overhaul, so even going for established languages
does not save you from incompatibilities between language versions.

Plus, I'd expect API/DOM access from an established language to usually be a
good deal more cumbersome. So instead of writing something like this:

for(i = 0; i < n; i ++) {
  sphere (<0,i*2,0>, 1) {
    texture {
      ...
    }
  }
}

you would for instance need to write something like this:

for(int i = 0; i < n; i ++) {
  Sphere mySphere = new sphere(new Vector3d(0,i*2,0), 1);
  mySphere.texture  = new Texture(
    ...
  );
  pov.addToScene(mySphere);
}

So, as a scene designer, which would you prefer?

POV scene description is a highly specialized application, and therefore IMO
advocates a special language. Even if it's only for the native support of 3D
vectors and colors: They're just too commonplace to use general-purpose
languages' typically comparatively cumbersome ways of expressing custom-type
"literals".

Instead, the SDL can fairly well go without various other common features of
all-purpose languages, like event handling, exception handling, inheritance,
sophisticated regular expressions, dynamic memory handling (provided the basic
data containers are good enough), reflection (except maybe some rudimentary
stuff), template classes, interface declarations, and a good deal more, that
really make those languages complicated to implement.

To summarize: No, I don't think it would be prudent to continue extending the
existing SDL after POV 3.9999.


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From: Warp
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 17:24:03
Message: <49cbf273@news.povray.org>
clipka <nomail@nomail> wrote:
> I guess this boils down to about the same as what I had in mind about separating
> what would basically be the tokenizer, and the actual parser. Except that what
> you call bytecode, I'd call a serialized "syntax tree"

  I don't think it's necessary to keep any kind of "syntax tree" data in
any form once the scene file has been parsed and compiled into bytecode.
The bytecode can be very straightforward asm-like series of opcodes and
their parameters. The advantage of this is that it's very fast to interpret
(which can be important at rendertime), and even JIT-compile.

> I don't think, however, that JIT-compiling would make any sense or be an option:

  I don't see why not. Many scripting languages have that.

> > - Currently there's a distinction between parse-time scripting (the SDL)
> >   and rendertime scripting (user-defined functions, used eg. in isosurfaces).
> >   Rather obviously no such distinction should be made in the new language.
> >   Anything you write should be runnable at parse time and at rendertime
> >   (and also at the post-processing stage).

> Yes and no. Obviously the render-time scripting should have exactly the same
> syntax as the parse-time scripting, most notably access to the same integrated
> identifiers. However, things like generating additional geometric objects, or
> even just modifying existing ones, is a definite no-go for render-time code.

  Not "same syntax". The one and only scripting language, down to the bytecode
compiler and bytecode interpreter.

  There may be additional limitations for the rendertime code, but
that doesn't mean it has to be separate from the compile-time code.

  It makes no sense to create two scripting languages with two compilers
and two interpreters. That will only be more work and very confusing for
the users (even more than the current SDL / user-defined function
distinction).

> > - Object properties, such as textures, should be fully specifiable using
> >   the scripting language itself (facilitated by the previous point). In
> >   other words, you should be able to write, for example, "shaders" with
> >   the scripting language. This "shader" is evaluated every time that
> >   certain property of the object (eg. its texture) is needed.
> ....
> > - Most core renderer features should be available to the scripting language.
> >   As an example, you should be able to launch a ray from a given point and
> >   retrieve the color it returns.

> I think these ideas are not realistic in near future, as they require yet
> another major architectural change of POV-Ray, and I guess we want a new SDL
> earlier.

  POV-Ray 4 was supposed to be a complete rewrite anyways. If it is, then
it should be done properly.

> In addition, I'd advocate not to implement those functions in script code, but
> instead have them remain binary modules, albeit separated from the main engine
> code more strictly, e.g. as a kind of plug-in.

  That sounds to me like it will only make the whole system more complicated,
not simpler.

  A simple core engine (only things which require speed should be there),
a simple script interpreter. Everything else as libraries written in the
scripting language. Let the complexities be inside the libraries, not in
the core engine.

> This would presume that the SDL in fact provide an interface to define new
> geometric entities. These would have to be render-time code.

> I don't really think there is much use for such objects, and that instead giving
> more flexibility to functions to be used in isosurfaces is the way to go.

  I consider those sentences contradictory.

  "There's no use for user-defined objects. Instead, we should enhance
the properties of usef-defined objects (isosurfaces)."

  I'd say no: Don't clutter the already cluttered features with even more
clutter. Instead, make a clean simple implementation which can be used for
the same thing, but with more flexibility.

-- 
                                                          - Warp


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From: clipka
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 26 Mar 2009 23:30:00
Message: <web.49cc46e2ad594047c1f4baa40@news.povray.org>
Warp <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote:
> > I don't think, however, that JIT-compiling would make any sense or be an option:
>
>   I don't see why not. Many scripting languages have that.

Damn it, Jim, POV is a raytracer, not a general-purpose IDE - and our human
resources are limited.

>   POV-Ray 4 was supposed to be a complete rewrite anyways. If it is, then
> it should be done properly.

If the intention is to do a *complete* rewrite, then why waste time on a 3.7,
which already is a major architectural overhaul?

>   A simple core engine (only things which require speed should be there),
> a simple script interpreter. Everything else as libraries written in the
> scripting language. Let the complexities be inside the libraries, not in
> the core engine.

No, Sir. We're talking about an application that is performance-hungry anyway,
so there should be a way to implement certain things in binary code, yet
separate from the core engine to keep that simple. Otherwise, we will sooner or
later end up with stuff that *does* need speed, and gets hacked into the core
just because there's no clearly defined way to interface binary stuff to it
properly.

Rather do it the other way round: Provide an interface for binary add-ons, then
implement the script language as such an add-on.

Scripting most parts of the software is ok when performance is not paramount,
like e.g. a web browser: You want it to be fast, but more importantly you want
it to be safe, comfortable etc., and you probably can't tell the difference
whether a page takes 0.5 or 0.6 seconds to load. You can tell the difference,
however, whether an animation takes 5 or 6 days to render.

>
> > This would presume that the SDL in fact provide an interface to define new
> > geometric entities. These would have to be render-time code.
>
> > I don't really think there is much use for such objects, and that instead giving
> > more flexibility to functions to be used in isosurfaces is the way to go.
>
>   I consider those sentences contradictory.
>
>   "There's no use for user-defined objects. Instead, we should enhance
> the properties of usef-defined objects (isosurfaces)."

Isosurfaces provide a simple, single-function interface to define objects.
Internally in POV, however, the interface is much different, and consists of
multiple methods: One to compute ray-object intersections, one to perform an
inside test, one to compute the surface normal for a given point, and so forth.
So when I hear "user-defined objects", I think of exposing *that* interface.

To me, isosurfaces are just that: Isosurfaces. A hard-coded shape that just
happens to be very flexibly parameterizable.


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From: Kenneth
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 27 Mar 2009 03:05:00
Message: <web.49cc7959ad594047f50167bc0@news.povray.org>
"clipka" <nomail@nomail> wrote:

> * For Loops
>
> Loops like #local i = 0; #while (i < n) ... #local i = i + 1; #end are
> commonplace, and they work, but they suck. I want something like a #for i = 0
> to n-1 ... #end.
>

I hope I'm not weighing in with some 'simpleton' comments here (I'm definitely
NO computer scientist), but the way I approach discussions of a proposed new
SDL language is strictly from the standpoint of 'comfortable usability.' As
basically a non-programmer (except with the SDL), I would want to see a
language that made 'simple sense' as to its syntax. For example: The #while
loop is easily understood, simply from the fact of its name. Using #for instead
seems a bit 'obtuse' as to its meaning (except among programmers, of course!)
But that's the point: If the new language is to have 'non-programmer'
adherents, then its syntax should be 'obvious' as to what it does, and easily
understood. (Of course, there are plenty of current SDL terms that probably
don't fall into that category, yet we've all learned to use them.) I guess my
basic concern is not to alienate new users (or even old ones) with new syntax
that seems strange, or rather, non-obvious as to its meaning.

Of course, I could be the 'odd-man-out'; perhaps the majority of POV-Ray users
*do* actually come from some kind of programming background, where 'odd' syntax
terms are of no consequence.

Ken W.


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From: Warp
Subject: Re: Next Generation SDL Brainstorming
Date: 27 Mar 2009 03:57:38
Message: <49cc86f1@news.povray.org>
Kenneth <kdw### [at] earthlinknet> wrote:
> The #while loop is easily understood, simply from the fact of its name.

  I beg to differ. I once wrote a long page dedicated solely to explaining
how the #while loop does and doesn't work, because misunderstandings are
so common:

http://tag.povray.org/povQandT/whileloops.html

  For many non-programmers it's not at all obvious how they work, which
is the reason why mistakes are common, and often a source of obscure errors
for which questions get posted to the newsgroups. Especially nested loops
tend to cause confusion. For a programmer and for people who have used the
while loops it's simple, but for someone who has never used them it might
not be.

  A simple for-loop removes most if not all the confusion.

  And it's not like the for-loop would *replace* while-loops.

-- 
                                                          - Warp


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