Thanks, Dave. Instructions below look good enough to me for the VOTE. Will kick that off later today.
Phil > On Oct 29, 2015, at 5:56 AM, Dave Brosius <dbros...@apache.org> wrote: > > git clone g...@github.com:NormanShapiro/Naomi.git > git checkout gh-pages > > > if you like, I already have a fork on github of it, I can merge gh-pages into > master, and delete the gh-pages branch, and then the repo will be obviously > just a one branch project. > > > > > >> On 10/28/2015 08:19 PM, Phil Steitz wrote: >> I am not seeing any -1s on this, so I would like to proceed with a >> VOTE to accept the code and start the IP clearance process. For >> that I need a definitive snapshot of somewhere that I can point to >> for the VOTE and clearance docs. My git-foo is pretty limited. Can >> someone suggest a stable URL that we can use to identify the code >> that we will be accepting, should the VOTE pass? >> >> Thanks! >> >> Phil >> >>> On 10/25/15 12:25 PM, dbrosIus wrote: >>> +1 and git please >>> >>> -------- Original message -------- >>> From: Phil Steitz <phil.ste...@gmail.com> >>> Date: 10/25/2015 3:15 PM (GMT-05:00) >>> To: Commons Developers List <dev@commons.apache.org> >>> Subject: Re: Proposed Contribution to Apache Commons, >>> >>>> On 10/2/15 12:08 PM, Gary Gregory wrote: >>>> Well, a champion can volunteer to shepherd this through our incubator I >>>> suppose, >>> OK, I will volunteer to do this. I propose that we start this as a >>> Commons Sandbox project. To do that, we need a VOTE to accept the >>> code, a software grant and the IP clearance form [1] submitted to >>> the Incubator PMC. We can use either git or svn for the new sandbox >>> repo. >>> >>> Any objections? Any preference for git or svn? >>> >>> Phil >>> >>> [1] http://incubator.apache.org/ip-clearance/ip-clearance-template.html >>> >>> >>>> like CommonsRDF, which seems pretty inactive ATM. There is also >>>> the issue of "donate and forget" vs. staying plugged in the community. >>>> >>>> I just do not have the extra FOSS cycles to dig into the code ATM to see >>>> what's under the hood. >>>> >>>> Gary >>>> >>>>> On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 12:01 PM, Phil Steitz <phil.ste...@gmail.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> On 10/2/15 11:46 AM, Gary Gregory wrote: >>>>>> I do not have time to dig into this one ATM but I'd like to give my 2c. >>>>>> >>>>>> Does this project introduce a new RE-like language or is it an API >>>>> wrapper >>>>>> for REs? It sounds like it is both. >>>>> It looks to me like what it says it is, which is an alternative to >>>>> REs, which IMO is a nice idea. Less "pattern matching language" and >>>>> more objects expressing matching intent. End result is less >>>>> developer thought required to accomplish a common task. Seems to >>>>> fit nicely in Commons to me. >>>>> >>>>> Phil >>>>>> A project like this I could see in Commons if the project was split into >>>>> an >>>>>> API module and modules for different pattern matching languages, where >>>>> the >>>>>> standard Java RE would be the reference example. Naomi (I love the name >>>>>> BTW, someones wife or daughter?) would be another implementation module. >>>>>> With both under its belt, the project would be on fairly solid footing >>>>>> (granted I do not know Naomi). You could even imaging implementations >>>>> that >>>>>> would accept a JXPath or a SQL WHERE clause. >>>>>> >>>>>> If the project is only meant to introduce a new RE-like language, then a >>>>>> TLP would be probably more appropriate. >>>>>> >>>>>> 2c, >>>>>> Gary >>>>>> >>>>>> On Thu, Oct 1, 2015 at 11:58 PM, Henri Yandell <flame...@gmail.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 29, 2015 at 5:42 PM, Phil Steitz <phil.ste...@gmail.com> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On 9/29/15 3:55 PM, Gary Gregory wrote: >>>>>>>>> Norman, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hello and welcome to Apache Commons. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> It's not clear to me why Naomi is better than regular expressions. >>>>>>>> Pointing >>>>>>>>> to Javadocs is not the best way to get traction. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Your project would be better served by having some documentation on >>>>>>> your >>>>>>>>> front page with an example driven tutorial. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Is Naomi faster than REs? >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> What can I do in Naomi that REs can't do? And vice-versa. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Examples of this on your front page would help you at least get folks >>>>>>> to >>>>>>>>> consider learning a brand new way of doing things... >>>>>>>> +1 >>>>>>>> The code in SimpleExamples starts to get to this. Looks interesting >>>>>>>> and powerful. Either here or on the github readme you should take a >>>>>>>> stab at explaining a little more how hard problems using regex get >>>>>>>> easier with naomi, illustrated with some simple examples. Then >>>>>>>> maybe with help from community members here, you can develop some >>>>>>>> overview / getting started docs that help people get into the code. >>>>>>> +1. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Reading SimpleExamples, my summary would be a boilerplate description of >>>>>>> "It replaces the arcane regular expression language with an API". It >>>>>>> reminds me of command line argument parsers. Perl had/has a great >>>>> regular >>>>>>> expression like command line argument parser, but it was cryptic and you >>>>>>> either loved it or hated it. Then along came Commons CLI, args4j and all >>>>>>> the others, providing a more OO/procedural API instead of its own mini >>>>>>> language. Not as 'powerful' (in that you had to type more), but simpler >>>>> (in >>>>>>> that you didn't have to learn a new lingo and didn't have to juggle >>>>>>> multiple languages inside one context (a source file)). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I definitely need that user manual. It's hard, with a brain trained on >>>>>>> regular expressions, to read 'Pattern greek3=new >>>>> CharSequencePattern("?")' >>>>>>> and realize (I think) that it means a literal ? character. It's also the >>>>>>> primary way it'll be successful. You need that educational path that >>>>>>> explains what a ExplicitCharClass is for, rather than randomly clicking >>>>> on >>>>>>> javadoc :) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> There'll also be much debate to be had I suspect. Is "a-e" too complex, >>>>>>> compared to "abcde" or "a","e". Which parts of regex are worth >>>>> supporting, >>>>>>> vs not. Can I mix bits of regexp with bits of Naomi? new >>>>>>> ExplicitCharClass("a-eg-p"). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Random.... I'd like the idea of varargs for automatic and'ing. ie: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> new ExplicitCharClass("a-p", "!f") [and is a not char class too >>>>>>> complex?]. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Continuing on my summary, as I peruse the code a little more, I'd go >>>>> with: >>>>>>> "Build a regular expression via an API, not an arcane language of its >>>>> own". >>>>>>> I'd love to see that grow to: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> "Express regular expressions as objects, or mix and match objects with >>>>> that >>>>>>> arcane mini language we all love or loathe". >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hen >>>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>>>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org >>>>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org >>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org >> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org