Dot
Revision as of 16:48, 27 May 2022 by Adám Brudzewsky (talk | contribs)
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The glyph dot or period refers to the .
character. It represents several unrelated concepts, some derived from traditional mathematical notation. The dot is one of the most overloaded APL symbols:
- In all dialects, it is used as decimal separator, for example
3.14
representing . - In all dialects, it is a dyadic operator with function operands, deriving a dyadic function (
X f.g Y
) which is the generalised Inner Product. Specifically, (X +.× Y
) is the dot product. - In all dialects (although deprecated in SAX), dot with a Jot on on its left, forms the Outer Product operator.
- In SHARP APL and NARS2000, the function derived from two functions operands, can also be called monadically and then represents the Alternant (
+.× Y
) which is a generalisation of determinants and permanents. Specifically, (-.× Y
) is the determinant. - In SHARP APL, with a function left operand and an array right operand, called ply, is used for the Power Operator (
f⍣k
in several other dialects). - In dialects that support object oriented programming, for example APLX and Dyalog APL, the dot is used to access members of objects.
- In NARS2000, two immediately adjacent dots,
..
, form a bi-glyph, and represents the Sequence function (represented by the ellipsis,…<⍳0
in dzaima/APL and Extended Dyalog APL).
Due to its use in numeric constants, letting .
be a dyadic operator that takes numeric operands or a function that takes numeric arguments, is potentially problematic or at least confusing:
4.6 4.6 4..6 4 5 6 4...10 ⍝ this parses as 4 .. 0.10 4 3 2 1 4. .10 4 0.1 4 . . 10 SYNTAX ERROR 4 . . 10 ∧
Works in: NARS2000
APL glyphs [edit] | |
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Information | Glyph ∙ Typing glyphs (on Linux) ∙ Unicode ∙ Fonts ∙ Mnemonics ∙ Overstrikes ∙ Migration level |
Individual glyphs | Jot (∘ ) ∙ Right Shoe (⊃ ) ∙ Up Arrow (↑ ) ∙ Zilde (⍬ ) ∙ High minus (¯ ) ∙ Dot (. ) ∙ Del (∇ )
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