Comment

APL allows a comment at the end of a line, separating (optional) code on the left from comments on the right using the lamp glyph, thus forming a line comment:

Alternatives
An alternative way to write a comment is by exploiting that the left function returns ignores its left argument, but then the comment has to be a string:

In fact, the right function can similarly be used to insert a leading or inline comment, although this does undo shyness:

Inline comment extension
APL64 uniquely adds dedicated syntax for inline comments using  and  :

Special comments
In APL*PLUS,  marks a special "public comment" which can be retrieved with a dedicated system function even when the function is locked. This is also used to distinguish internal documentation from other comments.

Other similar patterns, consisting of the lamp glyph followed by another symbol, are occasionally as indicators to various code analysis tools.

Dyalog APL's Simple APL Library Toolkit (SALT) used  as an instruction to load another source file before the current one, although this eventually was superceded by a proper   keyword.