Hello!

  Thanks, John!

  You did not answer where the list of names comes from within Factor, but at 
least I can google for the names I need, knowing they are in the Unicode 
standard. Here's the resulting piece of code I've been working on:

: filter-text ( text-length -- string )
    read
    { CHAR: \r } { CHAR: \n } replace
    [
        {
            { CHAR: \t [ t ] }
            { CHAR: \n [ t ] }
            [ CHAR: space >= ]
        } case
    ] filter >string ;

  Looks nice to me.

  Thanks again for your help. 

22.02.2016, 17:23, "John Benediktsson" <mrj...@gmail.com>:
> CHAR: works with all named Unicode code points. In the listener use tab 
> completion to see, for example:
>
> CHAR: ex<TAB>
>
> Where <TAB> is press the tab key for tab completion.
>
>>  On Feb 22, 2016, at 6:07 AM, Alexander Ilin <ajs...@yandex.ru> wrote:
>>
>>  Hello, Jon!
>>
>>   Thank you for the reply!
>>
>>   I've looked through the documentation you suggested, and that's exactly 
>> what I need.
>>
>>   I have a follow-up question regarding CHAR:. In the documentation there is 
>> a line in the Examples section:
>>
>>   CHAR: exclamation-mark
>>
>>   It works. However I can't seem to find the definition of the 
>> exclamation-mark word. I made a search in file contents, and it seems to 
>> only exist in the core\syntax\syntax-docs.factor, and in the factor.image 
>> files.
>>
>>   Where does it come from? Because I'd like to see the full list of words 
>> available for use with CHAR:.
>>
>>   Thanks.
>>
>>  22.02.2016, 16:52, "Jon Harper" <jon.harpe...@gmail.com>:
>>>  Hi,
>>>
>>>  The exact answer would be
>>>  http://docs.factorcode.org/content/article-literals.html , for
>>>  example:
>>>  CONSTANT: CR-char-code 13
>>>  CONSTANT: LF-char-code 10
>>>  { 13 13 10 10 } ${ CR-char-code } ${ LF-char-code } replace
>>>
>>>  However, in this case you can also use the "CHAR:" parsing word
>>>  { 13 13 10 10 } { CHAR: \r } { CHAR: \n } replace
>>>
>>>  regards,
>>>  Jon
>>>  Jon
>>>
>>>>  On Mon, Feb 22, 2016 at 2:25 PM, Alexander Ilin <ajs...@yandex.ru> wrote:
>>>>   Hello!
>>>>
>>>>     The following code works the way I want it to:
>>>>
>>>>   { 13 13 10 10 } { 13 } { 10 } replace
>>>>   -> { 10 10 10 10 }
>>>>
>>>>     But when I tried to use named constants, it no longer works:
>>>>
>>>>   CONSTANT: CR-char-code 13
>>>>   CONSTANT: LF-char-code 10
>>>>   { 13 13 10 10 } { CR-char-code } { LF-char-code } replace
>>>>   -> { 13 13 10 10 }
>>>>
>>>>     I realized, that probably the issue is that by constructing sequences 
>>>> with { } I somehow didn't give the words a chance to push their values 
>>>> instead of themselves.
>>>>
>>>>     What would be the correct way to use named constants for such a use 
>>>> case?
>>>>
>>>>   ---=====---
>>>>    Александр
>>>>
>>>>   
>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>>
>>>  
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>>>  Monitor end-to-end web transactions and take corrective actions now
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>>
>>  ---=====---
>>  Александр
>>
>>  
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>  Site24x7 APM Insight: Get Deep Visibility into Application Performance
>>  APM + Mobile APM + RUM: Monitor 3 App instances at just $35/Month
>>  Monitor end-to-end web transactions and take corrective actions now
>>  Troubleshoot faster and improve end-user experience. Signup Now!
>>  http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=272487151&iu=/4140
>>  _______________________________________________
>>  Factor-talk mailing list
>>  Factor-talk@lists.sourceforge.net
>>  https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/factor-talk
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Site24x7 APM Insight: Get Deep Visibility into Application Performance
> APM + Mobile APM + RUM: Monitor 3 App instances at just $35/Month
> Monitor end-to-end web transactions and take corrective actions now
> Troubleshoot faster and improve end-user experience. Signup Now!
> http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=272487151&iu=/4140
> _______________________________________________
> Factor-talk mailing list
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---=====---
 Александр

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