bug-apl
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Bug-apl] Non-bug: Help comparing solutions


From: Tobia Conforto
Subject: Re: [Bug-apl] Non-bug: Help comparing solutions
Date: Thu, 6 Mar 2014 01:01:19 +0100

On 5 March 2014 19:12, Daniel H. Leidisch <address@hidden> wrote:

> Jokes aside, while I'm all in favor of such extensions for tacit
> programming (composition, currying, hooks/forks/trains, as in NARS2000,
> NGN, newer versions of Dyalog, J), I think proper lambdas are a much
> more important and fundamental issue.

I feel the same way. Lexical scoped d-fns are what keeps APL a modern language. 
They are much easier and safer to work with, not to mention more powerful. I 
heard on a recent conference video that younger APL programmers don't even 
bother looking at traditional ∇ functions (I certainly subscribe to this view.)

As for tacit programming, I enjoyed reading Backus's FP and FL articles in 
college. But years later, when I had a chance to try that programming style 
with J I found it utterly unusable.

Even the classic example of a fork (+/÷≡) is harder to read than its functional 
version {(+/⍵)÷≡⍵} and it goes downhill from there with longer trains. But 
maybe it's just me being unfamiliar with the syntax.


On 5 Mar 2014, at 12:24, Elias Mårtenson <address@hidden> wrote:

> What is a fork and a train? I've heard the expression before, but I don't 
> know what it is.

They are expressions made by juxtaposing functions by themselves, without any 
explicit arguments. They were invented in J to allow for a programming style 
called function-level or point-free programming (or "point-less" as Wikipedia 
suggests.) They were then ported to Nars2000 to experiment with them in APL.

Two juxtaposed functions (f g) are called a "hook" and if I'm not mistaken, 
they behave like the classical jot composition f∘g which in most interpreters 
means {⍺ f g⍵}. Compare it to "hoof" composition f⍥g as implemented in Nars2000 
(or "paw" f⍤g in Sharp APL) which means {(g⍺) f g⍵}, leaving aside 
considerations about rank, which complicate matters. For completeness, "hoof" 
f⍥g in Sharp APL means something else entirely: {f ⍺g⍵}. Notice how the 
explicit functional syntax {...} is always the clearest and less ambiguous one.

Three functions (f g h) are called a "fork" and behave as {(⍺f⍵) g ⍺h⍵}. Of all 
these, the fork is the only one that has a basis in traditional usage, where 
functions are sometimes applied between other functions in a kind of 
"shorthand" to yield new ones: f + g traditionally means the function {(⍺f⍵) + 
⍺g⍵}. This isn't necessarily a good thing though, given that APL was invented 
to overcome the idiosyncrasies of traditional math notation.

Longer sequences are called "trains", but IMHO they get harder to read as their 
length increases. Notice the different purpose of functions in odd and even 
positions in the trains, but also the qualitative difference between dyadic 
trains with odd and even numbers of functions:

Monadic trains:

          (X A) ≡                  {⍵ X A⍵}
        (B X A) ≡               {(B⍵) X A⍵}
      (Y B X A) ≡           {⍵ Y (B⍵) X A⍵}
    (C Y B X A) ≡        {(C⍵) Y (B⍵) X A⍵}
  (Z C Y B X A) ≡    {⍵ Z (C⍵) Y (B⍵) X A⍵}
(D Z C Y B X A) ≡ {(D⍵) Z (C⍵) Y (B⍵) X A⍵}

Dyadic trains:

          (X A) ≡                     {⍺ X  A⍵}
        (B X A) ≡                 {(⍺B⍵) X ⍺A⍵}
      (Y B X A) ≡             {⍺ Y ( B⍵) X  A⍵}
    (C Y B X A) ≡         {(⍺C⍵) Y (⍺B⍵) X ⍺A⍵}
  (Z C Y B X A) ≡     {⍺ Z ( C⍵) Y ( B⍵) X  A⍵}
(D Z C Y B X A) ≡ {(⍺D⍵) Z (⍺C⍵) Y (⍺B⍵) X ⍺A⍵}

I hope you can see the "point-less" programming style :-)


Tobia


reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]