Hi Juan,
I see that your new transcript is indeed much faster but is also not editable. I wonder if it would be possible to have the best of both worlds and arrange that, when active, the transcript is editable. For example, selecting the TranscriptWIndow could put it into a mode where the transcript's state was imported into a more conventional editable text morph, and then when the window was exited, reverted to the standard fast output mode. As you can infer I like having an editable transcript. I can do without it, because Squeak's slow transcript is indeed a PITA, but I'm not sure that speed need preclude editability. On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM, J. Vuletich (mail lists) <[hidden email]> wrote: Hi Folks, best,
Eliot |
Hi Eliot,
Yes, it is not editable. The approach you describe is a good idea. There are a few details to take care, like that the Cuis Transcript doesn't do wordwrap, and that's why it can work without the usual text editor machinery. So, maybe this editable Transcript should do no wordwrap, and have an horizontal scrollbar. Most likely there would be 2 models, one like the one in Cuis, that is just a collection of lines, and another that is a regular text model. So those would need to be sync'ed, etc. But it can be done and it would be great. Cheers, Juan Vuletich Quoting Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]>: > Hi Juan, > > I see that your new transcript is indeed much faster but is also not > editable. I wonder if it would be possible to have the best of both worlds > and arrange that, when active, the transcript is editable. For example, > selecting the TranscriptWIndow could put it into a mode where the > transcript's state was imported into a more conventional editable text > morph, and then when the window was exited, reverted to the standard fast > output mode. As you can infer I like having an editable transcript. I can > do without it, because Squeak's slow transcript is indeed a PITA, but I'm > not sure that speed need preclude editability. > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM, J. Vuletich (mail lists) < > [hidden email]> wrote: > >> Hi Folks, >> >> (below) >> >> >> Quoting Ben Coman <[hidden email]>: >> >> On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> >>> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> >>>> On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Ben Coman <[hidden email]> wrote: >>>> >>>> From my limited experience bug hunting, calling #changed: from a thread >>>>> other than the UI thread is a source of evil. There are too many >>>>> assumptions throughout the system that the UI is single threaded. Can >>>>> anyone advise me that is not a proper belief? >>>>> >>>>> Then that implies that a Transcript implementation where #nextPut: >>>>> direct >>>>> calls #changed: >>>>> is not appropriate for use with multi-threaded applications. In Pharo, >>>>> #changed: is only called from #stepGlobal, which is called from >>>>> doOneCycle:. (This came about as a last minute bug fix before Pharo 3 >>>>> release and maybe could use some cleanup. >>>>> >>>>> Separating the UI from Transcript into its own viewer might be a good >>>>> idea, but actually it would not solve Stef's case since his code would >>>>> still be running in the UI thread -- unless the viewer ran in another >>>>> thread, which would have its own complexities. >>>>> >>>>> I think the point about efficiency is significant. The following >>>>> example... >>>>> Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' >>>>> ] ] >>>>> on Squeak 4.5 --> 12749ms >>>>> on Pharo 50029 --> 2ms >>>>> >>>>> This better performance helped me a lot trying to understand the high >>>>> priority timerEventLoop being able to indiscriminately scatter >>>>> Transcript >>>>> tracing through that code. I believe its also probably beneficial for >>>>> working with externally triggered semaphores and timing sensitive race >>>>> conditions. >>>>> >>>>> So we have two mutually exclusive cases: >>>>> * better interactivity, poorer system performance >>>>> * faster system performance, worse interactivity >>>>> >>>>> Which of these is broken depends on your viewpoint. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> Something that runs fast but is incorrect is still incorrect. The fact >>>> that the transcript doesn't output until a world step is possible is a >>>> bug. It forces programs that use the transcript to be rewritten in order >>>> to see transcript output. >>>> >>>> >>> As a point of comparison for correctness, for the following... >>> >>> Transcript clear. >>> [ $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | >>> [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i >>> printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 >>> ]. >>> ] forkAt: 41 >>> >>> Squeak 4.5 gives... >>> $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b5 $c1 $c2 $c3 >>> $c4 >>> $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $d9 $e2 $g2 $h2 >>> $h2 >>> $i2 $k2 $k2 $l2 $n2 $n2 $o2 $o2 $r2 $s2 $t2 $u2 $u2 $v2 $x2 $y2 $z2 $z2 >>> $b7 >>> $f3 $e3 $e3 $g3 $j3 $h3 $i3 $k3 $k3 $m3 $n3 $p3 $p3 $q3 $o3 $s3 $t3 $t3 >>> $u3 >>> $v3 $x3 $y3 $z3 $b8 $f4 $e4 $e4 $g4 $h4 $i4 $k4 $l4 $m4 $m4 $n4 $r4 $q4 >>> $o4 >>> $o4 $s4 $w4 $u4 $u4 $v4 $y4 $y4 $z4 $z4 $f5 $j5 $j5 $g5 $i5 $k5 $l5 $l5 >>> $m5 >>> $m5 $n5 $q5 $o5 $s5 $s5 $t5 $u5 $u5 $x5 $y5 $z5 $f6 $f6 $h6 $h6 $g6 $g6 >>> $k6 >>> $p6 $m6 $r6 $r6 $n6 $o6 $s6 $s6 $w6 $u6 $x6 $x6 $e7 $f7 $j7 $h7 $h7 $i7 >>> $l7 >>> $l7 $k7 $m7 $m7 $q7 $n7 $n7 $o7 $t7 $w7 $w7 $u7 $v7 $x7 $z7 $z7 $e8 $e8 >>> $h8 >>> $g8 $i8 $i8 $l8 $k8 $k8 $m8 $q8 $n8 $n8 $s8 $t8 $w8 $y8 $y8 $u8 $x8 $z8 >>> $f9 >>> $f9 $e9 $h9 $h9 $g9 $p9 $p9 $k9 $r9 $r9 $m9 $n9 $n9 $o9 $t9 $t9 $w9 $v9 >>> $u9 >>> $u9 $z9 $x9 >>> >>> Pharo 50041 gives... >>> $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b6 $b7 $b8 $b9 >>> $c1 >>> $c2 $c3 $c4 $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $e1 >>> $e2 >>> $e3 $e4 $e5 $e6 $e7 $e8 $e9 $f1 $f2 $f3 $f4 $f5 $f6 $f7 $f8 $f9 $g1 $g2 >>> $g3 >>> $g4 $g5 $g6 $g7 $g8 $g9 $h1 $h2 $h3 $h4 $h5 $h6 $h7 $h8 $h9 $i1 $i2 $i3 >>> $i4 >>> $i5 $i6 $i7 $i8 $i9 $j1 $j2 $j3 $j4 $j5 $j6 $j7 $j8 $j9 $k1 $k2 $k3 $k4 >>> $k5 >>> $k6 $k7 $k8 $k9 $l1 $l2 $l3 $l4 $l5 $l6 $l7 $l8 $l9 $m1 $m2 $m3 $m4 $m5 >>> $m6 >>> $m7 $m8 $m9 $n1 $n2 $n3 $n4 $n5 $n6 $n7 $n8 $n9 $o1 $o2 $o3 $o4 $o5 $o6 >>> $o7 >>> $o8 $o9 $p1 $p2 $p3 $p4 $p5 $p6 $p7 $p8 $p9 $q1 $q2 $q3 $q4 $q5 $q6 $q7 >>> $q8 >>> $q9 $r1 $r2 $r3 $r4 $r5 $r6 $r7 $r8 $r9 $s1 $s2 $s3 $s4 $s5 $s6 $s7 $s8 >>> $s9 >>> $t1 $t2 $t3 $t4 $t5 $t6 $t7 $t8 $t9 $u1 $u2 $u3 $u4 $u5 $u6 $u7 $u8 $u9 >>> $v1 >>> $v2 $v3 $v4 $v5 $v6 $v7 $v8 $v9 $w1 $w2 $w3 $w4 $w5 $w6 $w7 $w8 $w9 $x1 >>> $x2 >>> $x3 $x4 $x5 $x6 $x7 $x8 $x9 $y1 $y2 $y3 $y4 $y5 $y6 $y7 $y8 $y9 $z1 $z2 >>> $z3 >>> $z4 $z5 $z6 $z7 $z8 $z9 >>> >>> (start your comparison at $b5) >>> >>> So in one axis Pharo has improved Transcript, but we didn't notice the >>> significance of the use case we lost. >>> >>> cheers -ben >>> >> >> Please take a good look at Cuis' Transcript and consider using it. >> >> By default, the display is updated immediately, but without calling >> Morphic, it can even work with no UI framework at all. It does updates >> faster than Squeak or Visualworks: >> >> Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: >> 'x' ] ]. 763. >> >> But if you want minimum overhead without immediate feedback: >> >> Time millisecondsToRun: [ Transcript showOnDisplay: false. 1000 >> timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ]. Transcript showOnDisplay: true ]. 1. >> "As fast as Pharo" >> >> It is also thread safe, and for Ben's example: >> >> Transcript clear. >> [ >> $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | >> [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter >> printString , i printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 >> ]. >> ] forkAt: 41 >> >> it gives the same result as Pharo. >> >> The fact that the updates are not bound to Morphic also means that it is >> possible to do #show: deep in Morphic logic, without causing infinite loops >> or recursions, and get immediate feedback. It has proved to be a useful aid >> in debugging Morphic code. >> >> Cheers, >> Juan Vuletich >> >> >> > > > -- > best, > Eliot |
In reply to this post by Eliot Miranda-2
The main performance hog is the full redraw of the whole morph for every
single #endEntry send. The morph re-renders all visible lines (see NewParagraph >> #displayOn:using:at:). If the visible lines' were cached on a form (probably one form per line), and only the newly added text were drawn during the update, then I think the performance would be similar to Cuis's implementation's, but without restrictions (text not selectable/editable). Levente On Sat, 9 May 2015, Eliot Miranda wrote: > Hi Juan, > I see that your new transcript is indeed much faster but is also not editable. I wonder if it would be possible to have the best of both worlds and arrange that, when active, the transcript is editable. > For example, selecting the TranscriptWIndow could put it into a mode where the transcript's state was imported into a more conventional editable text morph, and then when the window was exited, reverted to > the standard fast output mode. As you can infer I like having an editable transcript. I can do without it, because Squeak's slow transcript is indeed a PITA, but I'm not sure that speed need preclude > editability. > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM, J. Vuletich (mail lists) <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Folks, > > (below) > > Quoting Ben Coman <[hidden email]>: > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> > wrote: > > > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Ben Coman <[hidden email]> wrote: > > From my limited experience bug hunting, calling #changed: from a thread > other than the UI thread is a source of evil. There are too many > assumptions throughout the system that the UI is single threaded. Can > anyone advise me that is not a proper belief? > > Then that implies that a Transcript implementation where #nextPut: direct > calls #changed: > is not appropriate for use with multi-threaded applications. In Pharo, > #changed: is only called from #stepGlobal, which is called from > doOneCycle:. (This came about as a last minute bug fix before Pharo 3 > release and maybe could use some cleanup. > > Separating the UI from Transcript into its own viewer might be a good > idea, but actually it would not solve Stef's case since his code would > still be running in the UI thread -- unless the viewer ran in another > thread, which would have its own complexities. > > I think the point about efficiency is significant. The following > example... > Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' > ] ] > on Squeak 4.5 --> 12749ms > on Pharo 50029 --> 2ms > > This better performance helped me a lot trying to understand the high > priority timerEventLoop being able to indiscriminately scatter Transcript > tracing through that code. I believe its also probably beneficial for > working with externally triggered semaphores and timing sensitive race > conditions. > > So we have two mutually exclusive cases: > * better interactivity, poorer system performance > * faster system performance, worse interactivity > > Which of these is broken depends on your viewpoint. > > > Something that runs fast but is incorrect is still incorrect. The fact > that the transcript doesn't output until a world step is possible is a > bug. It forces programs that use the transcript to be rewritten in order > to see transcript output. > > > As a point of comparison for correctness, for the following... > > Transcript clear. > [ $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | > [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i > printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 > ]. > ] forkAt: 41 > > Squeak 4.5 gives... > $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b5 $c1 $c2 $c3 $c4 > $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $d9 $e2 $g2 $h2 $h2 > $i2 $k2 $k2 $l2 $n2 $n2 $o2 $o2 $r2 $s2 $t2 $u2 $u2 $v2 $x2 $y2 $z2 $z2 $b7 > $f3 $e3 $e3 $g3 $j3 $h3 $i3 $k3 $k3 $m3 $n3 $p3 $p3 $q3 $o3 $s3 $t3 $t3 $u3 > $v3 $x3 $y3 $z3 $b8 $f4 $e4 $e4 $g4 $h4 $i4 $k4 $l4 $m4 $m4 $n4 $r4 $q4 $o4 > $o4 $s4 $w4 $u4 $u4 $v4 $y4 $y4 $z4 $z4 $f5 $j5 $j5 $g5 $i5 $k5 $l5 $l5 $m5 > $m5 $n5 $q5 $o5 $s5 $s5 $t5 $u5 $u5 $x5 $y5 $z5 $f6 $f6 $h6 $h6 $g6 $g6 $k6 > $p6 $m6 $r6 $r6 $n6 $o6 $s6 $s6 $w6 $u6 $x6 $x6 $e7 $f7 $j7 $h7 $h7 $i7 $l7 > $l7 $k7 $m7 $m7 $q7 $n7 $n7 $o7 $t7 $w7 $w7 $u7 $v7 $x7 $z7 $z7 $e8 $e8 $h8 > $g8 $i8 $i8 $l8 $k8 $k8 $m8 $q8 $n8 $n8 $s8 $t8 $w8 $y8 $y8 $u8 $x8 $z8 $f9 > $f9 $e9 $h9 $h9 $g9 $p9 $p9 $k9 $r9 $r9 $m9 $n9 $n9 $o9 $t9 $t9 $w9 $v9 $u9 > $u9 $z9 $x9 > > Pharo 50041 gives... > $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b6 $b7 $b8 $b9 $c1 > $c2 $c3 $c4 $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $e1 $e2 > $e3 $e4 $e5 $e6 $e7 $e8 $e9 $f1 $f2 $f3 $f4 $f5 $f6 $f7 $f8 $f9 $g1 $g2 $g3 > $g4 $g5 $g6 $g7 $g8 $g9 $h1 $h2 $h3 $h4 $h5 $h6 $h7 $h8 $h9 $i1 $i2 $i3 $i4 > $i5 $i6 $i7 $i8 $i9 $j1 $j2 $j3 $j4 $j5 $j6 $j7 $j8 $j9 $k1 $k2 $k3 $k4 $k5 > $k6 $k7 $k8 $k9 $l1 $l2 $l3 $l4 $l5 $l6 $l7 $l8 $l9 $m1 $m2 $m3 $m4 $m5 $m6 > $m7 $m8 $m9 $n1 $n2 $n3 $n4 $n5 $n6 $n7 $n8 $n9 $o1 $o2 $o3 $o4 $o5 $o6 $o7 > $o8 $o9 $p1 $p2 $p3 $p4 $p5 $p6 $p7 $p8 $p9 $q1 $q2 $q3 $q4 $q5 $q6 $q7 $q8 > $q9 $r1 $r2 $r3 $r4 $r5 $r6 $r7 $r8 $r9 $s1 $s2 $s3 $s4 $s5 $s6 $s7 $s8 $s9 > $t1 $t2 $t3 $t4 $t5 $t6 $t7 $t8 $t9 $u1 $u2 $u3 $u4 $u5 $u6 $u7 $u8 $u9 $v1 > $v2 $v3 $v4 $v5 $v6 $v7 $v8 $v9 $w1 $w2 $w3 $w4 $w5 $w6 $w7 $w8 $w9 $x1 $x2 > $x3 $x4 $x5 $x6 $x7 $x8 $x9 $y1 $y2 $y3 $y4 $y5 $y6 $y7 $y8 $y9 $z1 $z2 $z3 > $z4 $z5 $z6 $z7 $z8 $z9 > > (start your comparison at $b5) > > So in one axis Pharo has improved Transcript, but we didn't notice the > significance of the use case we lost. > > cheers -ben > > > Please take a good look at Cuis' Transcript and consider using it. > > By default, the display is updated immediately, but without calling Morphic, it can even work with no UI framework at all. It does updates faster than Squeak or Visualworks: > > Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ] ]. 763. > > But if you want minimum overhead without immediate feedback: > > Time millisecondsToRun: [ Transcript showOnDisplay: false. 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ]. Transcript showOnDisplay: true ]. 1. > "As fast as Pharo" > > It is also thread safe, and for Ben's example: > > Transcript clear. > [ > $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | > [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 > ]. > ] forkAt: 41 > > it gives the same result as Pharo. > > The fact that the updates are not bound to Morphic also means that it is possible to do #show: deep in Morphic logic, without causing infinite loops or recursions, and get immediate feedback. It has > proved to be a useful aid in debugging Morphic code. > > Cheers, > Juan Vuletich > > > > > > -- > best,Eliot > > |
On 5/9/2015 7:06 PM, Levente Uzonyi wrote:
> The main performance hog is the full redraw of the whole morph for every single #endEntry send. The morph re-renders > all visible lines (see NewParagraph >> #displayOn:using:at:). > If the visible lines' were cached on a form (probably one form per line), and only the newly added text were drawn > during the update, then I think the performance would be similar to Cuis's implementation's, but without restrictions > (text not selectable/editable). > > Levente Transcript writing is slow in VisualWorks and VisualAge as well and neither uses Morphic. My usual workaround is to cover Transcript with another window to avoid the redraws while the heavy activity is happening. I suppose this would work in Morphic as well. This seemed good/simple enough that I never cared to "fix" it. Florin |
On Sat, 9 May 2015, Florin Mateoc wrote:
> On 5/9/2015 7:06 PM, Levente Uzonyi wrote: >> The main performance hog is the full redraw of the whole morph for every single #endEntry send. The morph re-renders >> all visible lines (see NewParagraph >> #displayOn:using:at:). >> If the visible lines' were cached on a form (probably one form per line), and only the newly added text were drawn >> during the update, then I think the performance would be similar to Cuis's implementation's, but without restrictions >> (text not selectable/editable). >> >> Levente > > Transcript writing is slow in VisualWorks and VisualAge as well and neither uses Morphic. > My usual workaround is to cover Transcript with another window to avoid the redraws while the heavy activity is > happening. I suppose this would work in Morphic as well. > This seemed good/simple enough that I never cared to "fix" it. Yes, it's way faster if the window is not visible. I used to collapse it when I wanted better performance, but that's not always an option. Levente > > Florin > > |
In reply to this post by Eliot Miranda-2
Hi Tudor,
On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Tudor Girba <[hidden email]> wrote:
my reputation preceeds me ;-)
While I have an over-full transcript that holds progress over time, notes etc, these could be moved to a workspace. What I really use editablity in the transcript for is to cut-down output. For example, if I'm analysing some jitted code it will get printed out in the transcript (without a lot of retooling) and it is very convenient to cut down the often large amount of output to focus on what I'm interested in. Or I might be trying to fix a bug with repeated runs and again collect relevant data (print outs of objects or stack frames from the simulator) for use as reference points in later runs. Or I might collect some warnings from the Slang SMalltalk-to-C translator. In short, there's a lot of different kinds of data going to the transcript and it can be useful to edit it in place instead of having to copy it elsewhere.
best,
Eliot |
If you disable preference 'Force Transcrip updates to screen' you will get much higher performance. Redrawing is then minimal Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x'] ] 694 Karl On Sun, May 10, 2015 at 4:01 AM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> wrote:
|
On Sun, 10 May 2015, karl ramberg wrote:
> If you disable preference 'Force Transcrip updates to screen' you will get much higher performance.Redrawing is then minimal > Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x'] ] 694 Right, but then it won't update the contents of the morph, while your code is running in the UI process. So you have to fork your process, just like in Pharo. Levente > > Karl > > On Sun, May 10, 2015 at 4:01 AM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Tudor, > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Tudor Girba <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Eliot, > Just a question: Could you describe the situations when you need to have the Transcript editable? > > I am not trying to provoke you, > > > my reputation preceeds me ;-) > > > but to understand use cases. While working on GT I found that it is often possible to support the same use cases with multiple UI solutions. And sometimes considering alternatives leads to > interesting results. > > > While I have an over-full transcript that holds progress over time, notes etc, these could be moved to a workspace. What I really use editablity in the transcript for is to cut-down output. For > example, if I'm analysing some jitted code it will get printed out in the transcript (without a lot of retooling) and it is very convenient to cut down the often large amount of output to focus on what > I'm interested in. Or I might be trying to fix a bug with repeated runs and again collect relevant data (print outs of objects or stack frames from the simulator) for use as reference points in later > runs. Or I might collect some warnings from the Slang SMalltalk-to-C translator. > > In short, there's a lot of different kinds of data going to the transcript and it can be useful to edit it in place instead of having to copy it elsewhere. > > > Cheers, > Doru > > > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 9:32 PM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Juan, > I see that your new transcript is indeed much faster but is also not editable. I wonder if it would be possible to have the best of both worlds and arrange that, when active, the > transcript is editable. For example, selecting the TranscriptWIndow could put it into a mode where the transcript's state was imported into a more conventional editable text morph, and then > when the window was exited, reverted to the standard fast output mode. As you can infer I like having an editable transcript. I can do without it, because Squeak's slow transcript is > indeed a PITA, but I'm not sure that speed need preclude editability. > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM, J. Vuletich (mail lists) <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Folks, > > (below) > > Quoting Ben Coman <[hidden email]>: > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> > wrote: > > > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Ben Coman <[hidden email]> wrote: > > >From my limited experience bug hunting, calling #changed: from a thread > other than the UI thread is a source of evil. There are too many > assumptions throughout the system that the UI is single threaded. Can > anyone advise me that is not a proper belief? > > Then that implies that a Transcript implementation where #nextPut: direct > calls #changed: > is not appropriate for use with multi-threaded applications. In Pharo, > #changed: is only called from #stepGlobal, which is called from > doOneCycle:. (This came about as a last minute bug fix before Pharo 3 > release and maybe could use some cleanup. > > Separating the UI from Transcript into its own viewer might be a good > idea, but actually it would not solve Stef's case since his code would > still be running in the UI thread -- unless the viewer ran in another > thread, which would have its own complexities. > > I think the point about efficiency is significant. The following > example... > Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' > ] ] > on Squeak 4.5 --> 12749ms > on Pharo 50029 --> 2ms > > This better performance helped me a lot trying to understand the high > priority timerEventLoop being able to indiscriminately scatter Transcript > tracing through that code. I believe its also probably beneficial for > working with externally triggered semaphores and timing sensitive race > conditions. > > So we have two mutually exclusive cases: > * better interactivity, poorer system performance > * faster system performance, worse interactivity > > Which of these is broken depends on your viewpoint. > > > Something that runs fast but is incorrect is still incorrect. The fact > that the transcript doesn't output until a world step is possible is a > bug. It forces programs that use the transcript to be rewritten in order > to see transcript output. > > > As a point of comparison for correctness, for the following... > > Transcript clear. > [ $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | > [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i > printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 > ]. > ] forkAt: 41 > > Squeak 4.5 gives... > $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b5 $c1 $c2 $c3 $c4 > $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $d9 $e2 $g2 $h2 $h2 > $i2 $k2 $k2 $l2 $n2 $n2 $o2 $o2 $r2 $s2 $t2 $u2 $u2 $v2 $x2 $y2 $z2 $z2 $b7 > $f3 $e3 $e3 $g3 $j3 $h3 $i3 $k3 $k3 $m3 $n3 $p3 $p3 $q3 $o3 $s3 $t3 $t3 $u3 > $v3 $x3 $y3 $z3 $b8 $f4 $e4 $e4 $g4 $h4 $i4 $k4 $l4 $m4 $m4 $n4 $r4 $q4 $o4 > $o4 $s4 $w4 $u4 $u4 $v4 $y4 $y4 $z4 $z4 $f5 $j5 $j5 $g5 $i5 $k5 $l5 $l5 $m5 > $m5 $n5 $q5 $o5 $s5 $s5 $t5 $u5 $u5 $x5 $y5 $z5 $f6 $f6 $h6 $h6 $g6 $g6 $k6 > $p6 $m6 $r6 $r6 $n6 $o6 $s6 $s6 $w6 $u6 $x6 $x6 $e7 $f7 $j7 $h7 $h7 $i7 $l7 > $l7 $k7 $m7 $m7 $q7 $n7 $n7 $o7 $t7 $w7 $w7 $u7 $v7 $x7 $z7 $z7 $e8 $e8 $h8 > $g8 $i8 $i8 $l8 $k8 $k8 $m8 $q8 $n8 $n8 $s8 $t8 $w8 $y8 $y8 $u8 $x8 $z8 $f9 > $f9 $e9 $h9 $h9 $g9 $p9 $p9 $k9 $r9 $r9 $m9 $n9 $n9 $o9 $t9 $t9 $w9 $v9 $u9 > $u9 $z9 $x9 > > Pharo 50041 gives... > $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b6 $b7 $b8 $b9 $c1 > $c2 $c3 $c4 $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $e1 $e2 > $e3 $e4 $e5 $e6 $e7 $e8 $e9 $f1 $f2 $f3 $f4 $f5 $f6 $f7 $f8 $f9 $g1 $g2 $g3 > $g4 $g5 $g6 $g7 $g8 $g9 $h1 $h2 $h3 $h4 $h5 $h6 $h7 $h8 $h9 $i1 $i2 $i3 $i4 > $i5 $i6 $i7 $i8 $i9 $j1 $j2 $j3 $j4 $j5 $j6 $j7 $j8 $j9 $k1 $k2 $k3 $k4 $k5 > $k6 $k7 $k8 $k9 $l1 $l2 $l3 $l4 $l5 $l6 $l7 $l8 $l9 $m1 $m2 $m3 $m4 $m5 $m6 > $m7 $m8 $m9 $n1 $n2 $n3 $n4 $n5 $n6 $n7 $n8 $n9 $o1 $o2 $o3 $o4 $o5 $o6 $o7 > $o8 $o9 $p1 $p2 $p3 $p4 $p5 $p6 $p7 $p8 $p9 $q1 $q2 $q3 $q4 $q5 $q6 $q7 $q8 > $q9 $r1 $r2 $r3 $r4 $r5 $r6 $r7 $r8 $r9 $s1 $s2 $s3 $s4 $s5 $s6 $s7 $s8 $s9 > $t1 $t2 $t3 $t4 $t5 $t6 $t7 $t8 $t9 $u1 $u2 $u3 $u4 $u5 $u6 $u7 $u8 $u9 $v1 > $v2 $v3 $v4 $v5 $v6 $v7 $v8 $v9 $w1 $w2 $w3 $w4 $w5 $w6 $w7 $w8 $w9 $x1 $x2 > $x3 $x4 $x5 $x6 $x7 $x8 $x9 $y1 $y2 $y3 $y4 $y5 $y6 $y7 $y8 $y9 $z1 $z2 $z3 > $z4 $z5 $z6 $z7 $z8 $z9 > > (start your comparison at $b5) > > So in one axis Pharo has improved Transcript, but we didn't notice the > significance of the use case we lost. > > cheers -ben > > > Please take a good look at Cuis' Transcript and consider using it. > > By default, the display is updated immediately, but without calling Morphic, it can even work with no UI framework at all. It does updates faster than Squeak or Visualworks: > > Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ] ]. 763. > > But if you want minimum overhead without immediate feedback: > > Time millisecondsToRun: [ Transcript showOnDisplay: false. 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ]. Transcript showOnDisplay: true ]. 1. > "As fast as Pharo" > > It is also thread safe, and for Ben's example: > > Transcript clear. > [ > $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | > [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 > ]. > ] forkAt: 41 > > it gives the same result as Pharo. > > The fact that the updates are not bound to Morphic also means that it is possible to do #show: deep in Morphic logic, without causing infinite loops or recursions, and get immediate > feedback. It has proved to be a useful aid in debugging Morphic code. > > Cheers, > Juan Vuletich > > > > > > -- > best,Eliot > > > > > -- > www.tudorgirba.com > > "Every thing has its own flow" > > > > > -- > best,Eliot > > > > > > |
In reply to this post by Eliot Miranda-2
Hi Eliot,
Today I woke up with a simple idea: In Cuis' Transcript, once you do "Workspace with contents", keep a reference to that workspace, and add new Transcript stuff to it. This is done afterwards, when Morphic runs again. Immediate Transcript update is not affected. The effect is like having an editable Transcript, with a fast, immediate "preview" in a separate window. I just did a commit to the Cuis Github repo with this (amongst a lot of other changes). Please try it and tell if this simple solution is enough for your needs. OT: BTW, I added a new VMMaker package. It is a verbatim copy of the latest VMMaker in http://source.squeak.org/VMMaker/ . I didn't change a single line of code (except for one method in GeniePlugin that seems to break some compiler limit). It can generate all the plugins. This is all I tested so far. The GUI is not functional, due to the differences in Morphic. But at least there are no Undeclared. Cheers, Juan Vuletich www.cuis-smalltalk.org https://github.com/Cuis-Smalltalk/Cuis-Smalltalk-Dev Quoting Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]>: > Hi Juan, > > I see that your new transcript is indeed much faster but is also not > editable. I wonder if it would be possible to have the best of both worlds > and arrange that, when active, the transcript is editable. For example, > selecting the TranscriptWIndow could put it into a mode where the > transcript's state was imported into a more conventional editable text > morph, and then when the window was exited, reverted to the standard fast > output mode. As you can infer I like having an editable transcript. I can > do without it, because Squeak's slow transcript is indeed a PITA, but I'm > not sure that speed need preclude editability. > > On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM, J. Vuletich (mail lists) < > [hidden email]> wrote: > >> Hi Folks, >> >> (below) >> >> >> Quoting Ben Coman <[hidden email]>: >> >> On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Eliot Miranda <[hidden email]> >>> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> >>>> On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Ben Coman <[hidden email]> wrote: >>>> >>>> From my limited experience bug hunting, calling #changed: from a thread >>>>> other than the UI thread is a source of evil. There are too many >>>>> assumptions throughout the system that the UI is single threaded. Can >>>>> anyone advise me that is not a proper belief? >>>>> >>>>> Then that implies that a Transcript implementation where #nextPut: >>>>> direct >>>>> calls #changed: >>>>> is not appropriate for use with multi-threaded applications. In Pharo, >>>>> #changed: is only called from #stepGlobal, which is called from >>>>> doOneCycle:. (This came about as a last minute bug fix before Pharo 3 >>>>> release and maybe could use some cleanup. >>>>> >>>>> Separating the UI from Transcript into its own viewer might be a good >>>>> idea, but actually it would not solve Stef's case since his code would >>>>> still be running in the UI thread -- unless the viewer ran in another >>>>> thread, which would have its own complexities. >>>>> >>>>> I think the point about efficiency is significant. The following >>>>> example... >>>>> Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' >>>>> ] ] >>>>> on Squeak 4.5 --> 12749ms >>>>> on Pharo 50029 --> 2ms >>>>> >>>>> This better performance helped me a lot trying to understand the high >>>>> priority timerEventLoop being able to indiscriminately scatter >>>>> Transcript >>>>> tracing through that code. I believe its also probably beneficial for >>>>> working with externally triggered semaphores and timing sensitive race >>>>> conditions. >>>>> >>>>> So we have two mutually exclusive cases: >>>>> * better interactivity, poorer system performance >>>>> * faster system performance, worse interactivity >>>>> >>>>> Which of these is broken depends on your viewpoint. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> Something that runs fast but is incorrect is still incorrect. The fact >>>> that the transcript doesn't output until a world step is possible is a >>>> bug. It forces programs that use the transcript to be rewritten in order >>>> to see transcript output. >>>> >>>> >>> As a point of comparison for correctness, for the following... >>> >>> Transcript clear. >>> [ $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | >>> [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter printString , i >>> printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 >>> ]. >>> ] forkAt: 41 >>> >>> Squeak 4.5 gives... >>> $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b5 $c1 $c2 $c3 >>> $c4 >>> $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $d9 $e2 $g2 $h2 >>> $h2 >>> $i2 $k2 $k2 $l2 $n2 $n2 $o2 $o2 $r2 $s2 $t2 $u2 $u2 $v2 $x2 $y2 $z2 $z2 >>> $b7 >>> $f3 $e3 $e3 $g3 $j3 $h3 $i3 $k3 $k3 $m3 $n3 $p3 $p3 $q3 $o3 $s3 $t3 $t3 >>> $u3 >>> $v3 $x3 $y3 $z3 $b8 $f4 $e4 $e4 $g4 $h4 $i4 $k4 $l4 $m4 $m4 $n4 $r4 $q4 >>> $o4 >>> $o4 $s4 $w4 $u4 $u4 $v4 $y4 $y4 $z4 $z4 $f5 $j5 $j5 $g5 $i5 $k5 $l5 $l5 >>> $m5 >>> $m5 $n5 $q5 $o5 $s5 $s5 $t5 $u5 $u5 $x5 $y5 $z5 $f6 $f6 $h6 $h6 $g6 $g6 >>> $k6 >>> $p6 $m6 $r6 $r6 $n6 $o6 $s6 $s6 $w6 $u6 $x6 $x6 $e7 $f7 $j7 $h7 $h7 $i7 >>> $l7 >>> $l7 $k7 $m7 $m7 $q7 $n7 $n7 $o7 $t7 $w7 $w7 $u7 $v7 $x7 $z7 $z7 $e8 $e8 >>> $h8 >>> $g8 $i8 $i8 $l8 $k8 $k8 $m8 $q8 $n8 $n8 $s8 $t8 $w8 $y8 $y8 $u8 $x8 $z8 >>> $f9 >>> $f9 $e9 $h9 $h9 $g9 $p9 $p9 $k9 $r9 $r9 $m9 $n9 $n9 $o9 $t9 $t9 $w9 $v9 >>> $u9 >>> $u9 $z9 $x9 >>> >>> Pharo 50041 gives... >>> $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5 $a6 $a7 $a8 $a9 $b1 $b2 $b3 $b4 $b5 $b6 $b7 $b8 $b9 >>> $c1 >>> $c2 $c3 $c4 $c5 $c6 $c7 $c8 $c9 $d1 $d2 $d3 $d4 $d5 $d6 $d7 $d8 $d9 $e1 >>> $e2 >>> $e3 $e4 $e5 $e6 $e7 $e8 $e9 $f1 $f2 $f3 $f4 $f5 $f6 $f7 $f8 $f9 $g1 $g2 >>> $g3 >>> $g4 $g5 $g6 $g7 $g8 $g9 $h1 $h2 $h3 $h4 $h5 $h6 $h7 $h8 $h9 $i1 $i2 $i3 >>> $i4 >>> $i5 $i6 $i7 $i8 $i9 $j1 $j2 $j3 $j4 $j5 $j6 $j7 $j8 $j9 $k1 $k2 $k3 $k4 >>> $k5 >>> $k6 $k7 $k8 $k9 $l1 $l2 $l3 $l4 $l5 $l6 $l7 $l8 $l9 $m1 $m2 $m3 $m4 $m5 >>> $m6 >>> $m7 $m8 $m9 $n1 $n2 $n3 $n4 $n5 $n6 $n7 $n8 $n9 $o1 $o2 $o3 $o4 $o5 $o6 >>> $o7 >>> $o8 $o9 $p1 $p2 $p3 $p4 $p5 $p6 $p7 $p8 $p9 $q1 $q2 $q3 $q4 $q5 $q6 $q7 >>> $q8 >>> $q9 $r1 $r2 $r3 $r4 $r5 $r6 $r7 $r8 $r9 $s1 $s2 $s3 $s4 $s5 $s6 $s7 $s8 >>> $s9 >>> $t1 $t2 $t3 $t4 $t5 $t6 $t7 $t8 $t9 $u1 $u2 $u3 $u4 $u5 $u6 $u7 $u8 $u9 >>> $v1 >>> $v2 $v3 $v4 $v5 $v6 $v7 $v8 $v9 $w1 $w2 $w3 $w4 $w5 $w6 $w7 $w8 $w9 $x1 >>> $x2 >>> $x3 $x4 $x5 $x6 $x7 $x8 $x9 $y1 $y2 $y3 $y4 $y5 $y6 $y7 $y8 $y9 $z1 $z2 >>> $z3 >>> $z4 $z5 $z6 $z7 $z8 $z9 >>> >>> (start your comparison at $b5) >>> >>> So in one axis Pharo has improved Transcript, but we didn't notice the >>> significance of the use case we lost. >>> >>> cheers -ben >>> >> >> Please take a good look at Cuis' Transcript and consider using it. >> >> By default, the display is updated immediately, but without calling >> Morphic, it can even work with no UI framework at all. It does updates >> faster than Squeak or Visualworks: >> >> Time millisecondsToRun: [ 1000 timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: >> 'x' ] ]. 763. >> >> But if you want minimum overhead without immediate feedback: >> >> Time millisecondsToRun: [ Transcript showOnDisplay: false. 1000 >> timesRepeat: [ Transcript show: 'x' ]. Transcript showOnDisplay: true ]. 1. >> "As fast as Pharo" >> >> It is also thread safe, and for Ben's example: >> >> Transcript clear. >> [ >> $a asciiValue to: $z asciiValue do: [ :c | >> [ 1 to: 9 do: [ :i | Transcript show: c asCharacter >> printString , i printString , ' ' ] ] forkAt: 40 >> ]. >> ] forkAt: 41 >> >> it gives the same result as Pharo. >> >> The fact that the updates are not bound to Morphic also means that it is >> possible to do #show: deep in Morphic logic, without causing infinite loops >> or recursions, and get immediate feedback. It has proved to be a useful aid >> in debugging Morphic code. >> >> Cheers, >> Juan Vuletich >> >> >> > > > -- > best, > Eliot |
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