APL logo: Difference between revisions
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=== Quad APL === | === Quad APL === | ||
This is the design by LdBeth that plotted by the MetaPost program below. It is composed by Quad, And, | This is the design by LdBeth that plotted by the MetaPost program below. It is composed visually by Quad, And, Circle, Up Tack, and forms the stylized "APL". One day he needs an icon for his APL keyboard layout and spent an hour to do the sketching and wrote the code in his favorite font design tool MetaFont, but converted to MetaPost for vectorized output. There might be alternative glyphs, and he will gladly accept any interesting suggestions. | ||
% show bound box | % show bound box |
Revision as of 16:33, 7 October 2021
As of November 2024, APL does not have a logo like many other programming languages do. After a consensus at their September 9th 2021 webinar, BAA will head an effort to adopt a universal vendor-agnostic logo for APL. This article collects draft proposals for the universal APL logo. Feel free to add your own.
To leave feedback on or ideas for the existing proposals, see the Discussion page.
Proposals
Cube Apple
This is a cube, which is a common APL motif, e.g. used for APL2 (including the book APL2 at a glance), APL*PLUS and Dyalog APL. However, one quarter has been modified to resemble a leaf, thus making the cube into an apple, another common association with APL. The leaf is supposed to hint at the Del which symbolises function definition and has been used in application icons for APL+ and APLX. The green colours come from IBM's modern Carbon design to honour IBM's role APL's history. The lettering spells out "APL" while also hinting at APL's usage of special glyphs; here ⍝⍴⌊
which look very close to the forms found in the widespread APL385 Unicode font.
Nested Bitmaps
This logo is a reinterpretation based on the classic APL apple with the leaf styled as a filled Del which symbolises function definition and has been used in application icons for APL+ and APLX. The green colour comes from IBM's modern Carbon design to honour IBM's role APL's history. The apple is subdivided into a rectangular pattern which is supposed to invoke a matrix and the middle row in turn holds three 4-row, 3-column Boolean matrices to spell out "APL" as bitmaps. This matrix of matrices hints at APL's multi-dimensional nested arrays. The logo exists in various variations, and each comes has a version for light backgrounds and one for dark backgrounds.
Script apple
This apple logo is a basic update of IBM's classic "I like APL" promotional, but with the leaf styled as a filled Del which symbolises function definition and has been used in application icons for APL+ and APLX. The colours comes from IBM's modern Carbon design to honour IBM's role APL's history. The script lettering commemorates APL's origins as handwritten notation and at the same time symbolises the ease with which APL is written. On dark backgrounds, the lettering would be produced in white rather than black. The logo also exists as a filled green version.
Parallel Lines
This logo is from the cover of the original edition of Paul Berry's SHARP APL Reference Manual.
Ligatures
This is Jon McGrew's reworks of an original design by Joseph DeKerf that used the ITC Avant Garde font. The original is arguably ambiguously APL/ALP, hence the alternative versions.
Display matrix
This is the output from the classic DISPLAY
function when applied to the matrix 1 3⍴APL
.
Quad APL
This is the design by LdBeth that plotted by the MetaPost program below. It is composed visually by Quad, And, Circle, Up Tack, and forms the stylized "APL". One day he needs an icon for his APL keyboard layout and spent an hour to do the sketching and wrote the code in his favorite font design tool MetaFont, but converted to MetaPost for vectorized output. There might be alternative glyphs, and he will gladly accept any interesting suggestions.
% show bound box prologues := 2; beginfig(1); % edge e=5; a=40;b=28; % misc points m=0.3a;n=0.5b;t=2; % center z0=(e+n,e+0.4a);r=7; % quad z1=(e,e);z2=(e,a+e);z3=(b+e,a+e);z4=(b+e,e); % and z5=(e+t,e+m);z6=(e+n,e+0.8a);z7=(e+b-t,e+m); % pi z8=z0+(0,r);z9=z0+(r,0); z10=z0-(0,r);z11=z0-(r,0); % bot z12=(z1+z4)/2; % draw pickup pencircle scaled 3; draw z1--z2--z3--z4--cycle; draw z5--z6--z7; draw z8..z9..z10..z11..cycle; draw z0--z12; endfig; end