Elias, There is no such thing as a niladic lambda in Dyalog.
In Dyalog "niladic lambda functions [are] not [...] allowed at all. Instead, they [are] interpreted as monadic functions that ignore their argument." So {1} is a monadic function. You can evaluate it by applying it to an argument: {1}0 1 (Actually in Dyalog lambdas are not monadic or dyadic. They are all "ambivalent". If they do not refer to ⍺ then any left argument will be ignored.) Jay. On 7 August 2014 09:09, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com> wrote: > Jay, > > I also noticed that Dyalog does not allow self-evaluation of niladic > lambdas. I.e. the expression {1} on its own does not evaluate to 1, but > rather to something else (it's displayed as {1}, and I'm not sure you can do > anything with it other than assigning it to a variable). > > Regards, > Elias > > > On 7 August 2014 16:00, Jay Foad <jay.f...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On 6 August 2014 14:15, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > My suggestion is that niladic lambda functions will not be allowed at >> > all. >> > Instead, they will be interpreted as monadic functions that ignore their >> > argument. >> >> That's consistent with the behaviour of Dyalog. >> >> Jay. > >