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* [[Ken Iverson]]'s ideas of what APL should look like, realised in [[APL\360]], [[SHARP APL]], [[Rationalized APL]], [[A Dictionary of APL]], and [[J]] | * [[Ken Iverson]]'s ideas of what APL should look like, realised in [[APL\360]], [[SHARP APL]], [[Rationalized APL]], [[A Dictionary of APL]], and [[J]] | ||
* A language which is typically called "APL" by the APL community | * A language which is typically called "APL" by the APL community | ||
* A language that uses the central concepts of Iverson's APL, like [[array]]s as the fundamental datatype, [[glyph]]s to represent [[primitive]] | * A language that uses the central concepts of Iverson's APL, like [[array]]s as the fundamental datatype, [[glyph]]s to represent [[primitive function|primitive functions]] and [[primitive operator|operators]], infix notation, and [[Evaluation order|right-to-left]] evaluation | ||
* Developments adopted by substantial portions of the community of APLers, such as the [[nested array model]]. | * Developments adopted by substantial portions of the community of APLers, such as the [[nested array model]]. | ||
The APL Wiki takes no position on what can be called "APL", and this question is not important to its content (when in doubt, a controversial APL such as [[J]] may be called a "language" rather than an "APL" or "dialect"). Instead, an editor should consider the task of balancing how central a concept is to APL against its prominence and placement in the APL Wiki. See [[#Due weight]] below. | The APL Wiki takes no position on what can be called "APL", and this question is not important to its content (when in doubt, a controversial APL such as [[J]] may be called a "language" rather than an "APL" or "dialect"). Instead, an editor should consider the task of balancing how central a concept is to APL against its prominence and placement in the APL Wiki. See [[#Due weight]] below. |