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{{Built-in|Not|~}} is a [[Primitive function|primitive]] [[monadic]] [[scalar function]] that returns the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negation logical negation] of a [[Boolean]] argument—that is, 0 if the argument is 1 and 1 if it is 0. In some languages, such as [[J]], it is extended so that Not <source lang=apl inline>x</source> is equivalent to <source lang=apl inline>1-x</source> while in others, such as [[K]], it is extended so that Not <source lang=apl inline>x</source> is equivalent to <source lang=apl inline>0=x</source>.
{{Built-in|Not|~}} is a [[Primitive function|primitive]] [[monadic]] [[scalar function]] that returns the [[wikipedia:Negation|logical negation]] of a [[Boolean]] argument—that is, 0 if the argument is 1 and 1 if it is 0. In some languages, such as [[J]], it is extended so that Not <source lang=apl inline>x</source> is equivalent to <source lang=apl inline>1-x</source> while in others, such as [[K]], it is extended so that Not <source lang=apl inline>x</source> is equivalent to <source lang=apl inline>0=x</source>.


== Examples ==
== Examples ==

Revision as of 16:46, 18 November 2019

~

Not (~) is a primitive monadic scalar function that returns the logical negation of a Boolean argument—that is, 0 if the argument is 1 and 1 if it is 0. In some languages, such as J, it is extended so that Not x is equivalent to 1-x while in others, such as K, it is extended so that Not x is equivalent to 0=x.

Examples

      ~ 0 1 1 0 1
1 0 0 1 0

Attempting to negate a non-Boolean argument usually results in a DOMAIN ERROR. In some languages it may instead subtract the argument from one.

      ~ 0 0.5 1
DOMAIN ERROR
      ~0 0.5 1
      ∧

Properties

Not is the only Boolean function of a single argument which depends on that argument (it is not constant) and is not trivial (the same as Identity). Not is its own Inverse.

History

A Programming Language negates arrays using an overbar symbol like , matching a convention sometimes used in mathematics. In APL\360 the current symbol ~ was chosen, also due to its use in mathematics. Mathematical usage has arguably diverged from APL in this respect, as the negation of a variable is now more often written , using the symbol Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle ¬} , when a prefix operator is desired.

The arithmetic extension ~x 1-x was introduced to the array langauge family by J. For arguments in the interval this extension may be seen as a probabilistic interpretation of negation.

Extensions

Extension Languages
None APL\360, APL2, APLX, SHARP APL, Dyalog APL, GNU APL, ngn/apl, dzaima/APL
1-⍵ J
0≠⍵ K

External links

Lessons

Documentation


APL built-ins [edit]
Primitives (Timeline) Functions
Scalar
Monadic ConjugateNegateSignumReciprocalMagnitudeExponentialNatural LogarithmFloorCeilingFactorialNotPi TimesRollTypeImaginarySquare RootRound
Dyadic AddSubtractTimesDivideResiduePowerLogarithmMinimumMaximumBinomialComparison functionsBoolean functions (And, Or, Nand, Nor) ∙ GCDLCMCircularComplexRoot
Non-Scalar
Structural ShapeReshapeTallyDepthRavelEnlistTableCatenateReverseRotateTransposeRazeMixSplitEncloseNestCut (K)PairLinkPartitioned EnclosePartition
Selection FirstPickTakeDropUniqueIdentityStopSelectReplicateExpandSet functions (IntersectionUnionWithout) ∙ Bracket indexingIndexCartesian ProductSort
Selector Index generatorGradeIndex OfInterval IndexIndicesDealPrefix and suffix vectors
Computational MatchNot MatchMembershipFindNub SieveEncodeDecodeMatrix InverseMatrix DivideFormatExecuteMaterialiseRange
Operators Monadic EachCommuteConstantReplicateExpandReduceWindowed ReduceScanOuter ProductKeyI-BeamSpawnFunction axisIdentity (Null, Ident)
Dyadic BindCompositions (Compose, Reverse Compose, Beside, Withe, Atop, Over) ∙ Inner ProductDeterminantPowerAtUnderRankDepthVariantStencilCutDirect definition (operator)Identity (Lev, Dex)
Quad names Index originComparison toleranceMigration levelAtomic vector