Yes, you are right. Here are the available symbols: ⍵ - Right-hand argument ⍺ - Left-hand argument ⍹ - Right-hand function (the lambda is an operator) ⍶ - Left-hand function (the lambda is an operator) χ - Index
Regards, Elias On 1 August 2014 10:04, Peter Teeson <peter.tee...@icloud.com> wrote: > Thank you kind gentlemen for helping me move forward with modern APL. > Am I correct in assuming that expressions such as {⍬≡0⍴⍵} are lambdas? > And that the symbols theta and omega are place holders similar to X and Y > in a user defined function? > (all new stuff to me BTW - but very interesting.) > > respect > > Peter > > On 2014-07-31, at 9:51 PM, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com> wrote: > > This is the table I have included in the Emacs mode documentation. I got > the information from the ISO spec, so I hope it's correct: > > 0 (1-R⋆2)⋆0.5 > ¯1 arcsin R 1 sin R > ¯2 arccos R 2 cosin R > ¯3 arctan R 3 tan R > ¯4 (R+1)×((R-1)÷R+1)⋆0.5 4 (1+R⋆2)⋆0.5 > ¯5 arcsinh R 5 sinh R > ¯6 arccosh R 6 cosh R > ¯7 arctanh R 7 tanh R > ¯8 -(¯1-R×2)⋆0.5 8 (¯1-R⋆2)⋆0.5 > ¯9 R 9 Real part of R > ¯10 +R 10 |R > ¯11 0J1×R 11 Imaginary part of R > ¯12 ⋆0J1×R 12 Arc R > > Regards, > Elias > > > On 1 August 2014 06:46, David B. Lamkins <dlamk...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Reshape your datum as an empty vector then match to zilde. If the match >> succeeds then your datum is a number; otherwise a character/string. >> >> I believe that there's a circle function to extract the imaginary part >> of a number, if any. You can test for a nonzero imaginary part. >> >> Finally, you can compare a number's floor to the number itself to >> determine whether the value is integer or real. >> >> Not knowing your application, I have to warn you that you shouldn't use >> these tests to infer anything about APL's storage. All of the numeric >> tests are subject to quad-CT. >> >> On Thu, 2014-07-31 at 15:54 -0400, Peter Teeson wrote: >> > I feel pretty stupid. >> > Looked in the APL2 IBM manual but do not understand how to determine >> the data type of a variable. >> > Neither the primitives nor the Quads sparked the answer in my brain. >> > It must be something pretty obvious but not to me right now. >> > >> > So if I have a function FOO X how do I determine if X is character, >> integer, float, or imaginary? >> > Assuming that it is not a nested array of course. >> > >> > respect… >> > >> > Peter >> > >> >> >> >> > >