Learning resources
|
To facilitate self-study, the resources here are classified by target audience. However, if you get stuck, don't hesitate to request help in a chat room (APL Farm or APL Orchard) or ask a question on Stack Exchange.
It may be beneficial to learn the APL terminology.
For non-programmers
Some of the best resources for somebody new to APL and programming in general are:
Interactive
- The Learn tab on TryAPL
- The Zark APL Tutor
Books
- Mastering Dyalog APL by Bernard Legrand
- APL2 at a Glance by Jim Brown, Sandra Pakin, and Ray Polivka (also in German)
- Learning APL with APLX (also as PDF)
- MENACE in APL (early reinforcement learning project)
- A Practical Introduction to APL 1 & 2 (3 & 4 is for experts)
Text
- APL Wiki's simple examples
- APL a Day: Introduction, Functions, Arrays, Values, Arrays have Shape
- The tutorial from the old APL Wiki
Video series
- APL Quest 2016 by Adám Brudzewsky
- Découvrez le langage APL: parts 1, 2, 3 by Eric Schrafstetter (in French)
- Learn APL with neural networks
- APLtrainer tutorials
- Learn APL: Every single glyph! by Jeremy Howard
Follow one or a couple of these tutorials through and play around a bit. To learn APL the advice is similar to that for learning other languages: have a goal (something you want to accomplish) and try to do it. Along the way you are sure to come across the pitfalls and gotchas of the language, and with time you may come to understand what APL thinking means.
For programmers unfamiliar with APL
This is a list of tutorials and other resources of interest to someone who knows about programming or is familiar with another programming language, but wants to learn more about APL. See also APL Wiki's lists of advanced examples, books, and papers. "Trying APL" has examples for all primitives.
Interactive
- TryAPL online interpreter with lessons
- Zark tutorial
- APL deserves its renaissance too (on John Scholes' Conway's Game of Life)
Text courses
- APL Workshop
- Learn X in Y minutes
- Let’s Learn A Programming Language, part 1, part 2, and FizzBuzz
- Artificial Neural Networks
Video
Books
- Mastering Dyalog APL by Bernard Legrand
- Learning APL by Stefan Kruger
- Getting started in APL by solving Project Euler problems 1 to 50 by Matthias Geiss
- APL2 at a Glance by Jim Brown, Sandra Pakin, Ray Polivka (also in German)
For novice APLers
Besides for APL Wiki's advanced examples, you can hone your APL skill with these materials.
Books
- APL Cultivations by Adám Brudzewsky (edited by Stefan Kruger)
- APL2 in Depth by Norman Thomson and Ray Polivka
- A Practical Introduction to APL 3 & 4
Video series
- Learn APL with neural networks
- Triplets pythagoriciens by OsKaR: A mathematical problem used as an introduction to the expressive power of APL (in French)
Challenges
- APL Exercises by Roger Hui
- APLcart Quiz: Be challenged to write a function for a given task or to explain what a given function does (based on APLcart data)
- APL Crosswords: 1 4 5 — Fill in expressions and snippets to fulfil all the clues
- 2016 Year Game: Find APL expressions involving exactly the digits 2 0 1 6 in that order to equal the numbers 0 to 100
- 2017 Code Golf Challenge: Find the shortest possible APL expression that evaluates 1…52 without using any number or character literals
- Previous years' problems from the APL Problem Solving Competition (phase I problems are available with automated testing)
- Advent of Code: A collection of small programming puzzles
- APL-eusis: A game for honing your ability to "think in APL"
For advanced APLers
Here is a list of "how-to"s on various subjects:
Haven't used APL in a while?
Those who learned APL "in the early days" should note that several implementations have made significant extensions to the language and system in the last decade or two.
General
- Dyalog APL for other APL users (video)
- Assignment
- Control structures
- Namespaces
- Migration level
- User-defined operators
- Error trapping
- Shyness
- Namelists
- Keywords
- Object-oriented programming
- Total array ordering
- Leading axis theory
- Complex numbers
New primitive functions
- GCD and LCM
- Same (
⊢
and⊣
) - Materialise and Index (
⌷
) - Depth and Match (
≡
) - Tally and Not Match (
≢
) - Nub Sieve (
≠
) - Where and Interval Index (
⍸
) - Nest and Partition (
⊆
)
New primitive operators
- Power operator
- Commute and Constant (
⍨
) - At (
@
) - Bind and Beside (
∘
) - Atop and Rank (
⍤
) - Over (
⍥
) - Key (
⌸
) - Stencil (
⌺
) - Variant (
⍠
) - Spawn (
&
)
Lambdas (dfns)
- Intro
- Details
- Operators
- The dfns workspace (collection of categorized utilities with extensive comments and notes)
APL development [edit] | |
---|---|
Interface | Session ∙ Typing glyphs (on Linux) ∙ Fonts ∙ Text editors |
Publications | Introductions ∙ Learning resources ∙ Simple examples ∙ Advanced examples ∙ Mnemonics ∙ ISO 8485:1989 ∙ ISO/IEC 13751:2001 ∙ A Dictionary of APL ∙ Case studies ∙ Documentation suites ∙ Books ∙ Papers ∙ Videos ∙ APL Quote Quad ∙ Vector journal ∙ Terminology (Chinese, German) ∙ Neural networks ∙ Error trapping with Dyalog APL (in forms) |
Sharing code | Backwards compatibility ∙ APLcart ∙ APLTree ∙ APL-Cation ∙ Dfns workspace ∙ Tatin ∙ Cider |
Implementation | Resources ∙ Open-source ∙ Magic function ∙ Performance ∙ APL hardware |
Developers | Timeline of corporations ∙ APL2000 ∙ Dyalog ∙ IBM ∙ IPSA ∙ STSC |