Function axis
In many APLs the behavior of a function may be modified using bracket notation, for example ⌽[2]
to Rotate along the second axis. Axis specification was a feature of Iverson notation and was ubiquitous in early APLs; many newer APLs which adhere to leading axis theory reject the use of axis specification in favor of the Rank operator because it is a fully general operator while the behavior of functions with axis must be defined for each function separately.
Functions with Axis
The following monads may allow an axis:
- Mix accepts a list of axes to specify where the axes of argument elements will be placed in the result.
- Ravel accepts a list of axes which are combined, or a single fractional number to add a length-1 axis.
- Enclose accepts a list of axes. Each subarray along these axes is enclosed.
- Split accepts a single axis, and encloses each vector along that axis.
- Reverse reverses along the specified axis.
The following dyads may allow one:
- Scalar dyadics accept a list of axes to override conformability rules: it specifies , for each axis in the lower-rank (or left, in case of a tie) argument, which axis in the other argument it is paired with.
- Catenate combines along the selected axis, adding a new axis if a non-integer axis is given.
- Rotate rotates the right argument along the selected axis.
- Replicate and Expand work on the specified right argument axis.
- Take and Drop modify the selected right argument axes.
- Squish takes axes to specify which axis of the right argument corresponds to each left argument element.
- Partition and Partitioned Enclose have complicated and different behavior.
Additionally, reduction and scan operators may admit axis specification. In Dyalog APL, a slash with axis retains its function-operator overloading: it can be applied as an operator or as a dyadic function (Replicate or Expand). Template:APL programming language