From
⊇ @
|
From (⊇
or @
and also called Select, or, humourously, Sane Indexing) is a primitive function that selects multiple major cells of its right argument using an array of indices given by its left. The primitive often offers additional functionality for a nested left argument, which varies from one language to another. It appears in SAX (as @
), Extended Dyalog APL, dzaima/APL, and Kap (as ⊇
), J (as {
), and BQN (as ⊏
).
Common usage
Select is commonly used to reorder the major cells of an array. For example, the following shuffles any array into random order:
Shuffle←?⍨∘≢⊇⊢ Shuffle 'abcdef' fbdcea
Without Select, one would have to write Shuffle←⊢⌷⍨∘⊂?⍨∘≢
. In this meaning, Select might be written as ⌷⍨∘⊂⍨
or ⌷⍤0 99
in Dyalog APL (where 99 exceeds the system's maximum array rank).
In a case where the left argument is a permutation vector for the right argument, the functionality can rightfully be called Permute.
Select especially cleans up expressions for reordering. An ascending sort can be represented as ⍋⊇⊢
and "sort by" can be written as ⊇⍨∘⍋
:
'abcde' ⊇⍨∘⍋ 3 1 4 1 5 bdace
Extensions
Scatter-point
In A Dictionary of APL, J, and SAX, a boxed left argument indicates that each element will be used independently to select a cell of the argument. The behavior on a single element is very similar to APL's Index function. {
has a left rank of 0, so that results are mixed together and those with different shapes may be padded with fills.
]a =. 4 4$(a.i.'A')}.a. ABCD EFGH IJKL MNOP 0 3 2 { a ABCD MNOP IJKL (0 0;3 3;2 3) { a APL
In APL this extension can be defined as ⌷⍨∘⊃⍨⍤0 ∞
thus allowing both the above usage and "scatter point indexing":[1]
History
From ({
) was introduced in 1983 by Rationalized APL. This description introduced the characteristic feature of selection of multiple cells simultaneously, along with scatter-point indexing and the ability to exclude rather than include indices using a third level of boxing. It was expanded slightly in A Dictionary of APL to allow negative indices and was paired with monadic Catalogue, giving the same meaning for {
now used in J. Roger Hui expressed his support for the new definition with a presentation at APL87,[2] and it was included in J from the earliest drafts in 1990—a limited version had even appeared in Arthur Whitney's one-page interpreter prototype.
SHARP APL followed A Dictionary of APL and used {
, but this was later deprecated, programmers being told to use @
instead.[3]
The name Select and glyph ⊇
were introduced by Extended Dyalog APL, and subsequently adopted by dzaima/APL and Kap. In addition to including it in Extended and the later Dyalog APL Vision, Adám Brudzewsky described Select as a possible future Dyalog APL primitive in a presentation at Dyalog '22.[4]
BQN uses the name Select like Extended Dyalog APL but takes the direction of the glyph ⊏
, as well as negative indexing, from J. For a nested left argument it uses a new extension: instead of viewing nesting as elaboration of each element of the left argument, it instead treats it as providing a list of left arguments to select from multiple axes of the right argument. This extension provides the functionality of APL's Index not by requiring the left argument as a whole to be enclosed but by requiring that each of its elements be an array.
See also
External links
Documentation
- J: Dictionary, Nuvoc
- SAX
- BQN
Publications
References
- ↑ Richard Park. Selecting from Arrays. Dyalog Webinar. 16 Apr 2020. (Presented in the form
((⊃⊣)⌷⊢)⍤0 99
.) - ↑ Roger Hui. Some Uses of
{
and}
at APL87. - ↑ Soliton Associates Limited. SHARP APL for UNIX Language Guide. Deprecated Primitives: Braces. 2000.
- ↑ Adám Brudzewsky. Filling the Core Language Gaps. Dyalog '22. 2022-10-13.