Dyalog APL: Difference between revisions

From APL Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Miraheze>Adám Brudzewsky
Miraheze>Adám Brudzewsky
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Dyalog APL was first released by British company [[Dyalog]] Ltd. in 1983 and, as of 2018, is available for AIX, Linux (including on the Raspberry Pi), macOS and Microsoft Windows platforms. It is based on [[APL2]], with extensions to support object-oriented programming and functional programming. Licences are free for personal/non-commercial use.
Dyalog APL was first released by British company [[Dyalog]] Ltd. in 1983 and, as of 2018, is available for AIX, Linux (including on the Raspberry Pi), macOS and Microsoft Windows platforms. It is based on [[APL2]], with extensions to support object-oriented programming and functional programming. Licences are free for personal/non-commercial use.


In 1995, two of the development team - [[John Scholes]] and [[Peter Donnelly]] - were awarded the [[Iverson Award]] for their work on the interpreter. [[Gitte Christensen]] and [[Morten Kromberg]] were joint recipients of the Iverson Award in 2016.
In 1995, two of the development team [[John Scholes]] and [[Peter Donnelly]] were awarded the [[Iverson Award]] for their work on the interpreter. [[Gitte Christensen]] and [[Morten Kromberg]] were joint recipients of the Iverson Award in 2016.


The most important extensions to the original APL language include:
The most important extensions to the original APL language include:

Revision as of 21:17, 18 September 2019

Dyalog APL was first released by British company Dyalog Ltd. in 1983 and, as of 2018, is available for AIX, Linux (including on the Raspberry Pi), macOS and Microsoft Windows platforms. It is based on APL2, with extensions to support object-oriented programming and functional programming. Licences are free for personal/non-commercial use.

In 1995, two of the development team — John Scholes and Peter Donnelly — were awarded the Iverson Award for their work on the interpreter. Gitte Christensen and Morten Kromberg were joint recipients of the Iverson Award in 2016.

The most important extensions to the original APL language include:

  • 1983: Nested arrays: Any element of an array can be another array (APL2)
  • 1990: Namespaces
  • 1995: Keywords (If/Then/Else, Repeat/Until, exception handling, and so on)
  • 1996: Functional programming: dfns provide lexical scope and Dfns
  • 2006: Object orientated programming, allowing integration with OO frameworks and Microsoft .NET
  • 2014: Point-free or "Train" syntax similar to that in the J programming language
  • 2014: Futures and isolates for Parallel computing

External links

Template:APL programming language