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APL (for A Programming Language, or sometimes Array Processing Language) is an array programming language invented in 1962 by Kenneth E. Iverson while at Harvard University. Iverson received the Turing Award in 1979 for his work. As with all programming languages that have had several decades of continuous use, APL has changed significantly from the original language described by Iverson in his book A Programming Language in 1963. One thing that has remained constant is the interpretive nature of the APL programming environment, a feature much appreciated by its users. Conversely, its initial lack of support for both structured and modular programming has been solved by all the modern APL incarnations. One much criticized aspect still remains, though: the use of a non-standard character set (see Character set below.)
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Over a very wide set of problem domains (math, science, engineering, computer design, robotics, data visualization, actuarial science, traditional DP, etc.) APL is an extremely powerful, expressive and concise programming language, typically set in an interactive environment. It was originally created as a way to describe computers, by expressing mathematical notation in a rigorous way that could be interpreted by a computer. It is easy to learn but APL programs can take some time to understand. Unlike traditional structured programming languages, code in APL is typically structured as chains of monadic or dyadic functions and operators acting on arrays. Because APL has so many nonstandard operators, APL does not have function or operator precedence. The original APL did not have control structures (loops, if-then-else), but the array operations it included could simulate structured programming constructs. For example, the iota operator (which yields an array from 1 to N) can simulate for-loop iteration.
The APL environment is called a workspace. In a workspace the user can define programs and data, i.e. the data values exist also outside the programs, and the user can manipulate the data without the necessity to define a program, for example:
Assign the vector values 4 5 6 7 to N.
Print the values 8 9 10 11
Print the sum of N, i.e. 22
The user can save the workspace with all values and programs. In any case, the programs are not compiled but interpreted.
APL is notorious for its use of a set of non-ASCII symbols that are an extension of traditional arithmetic and algebraic notation. These cryptic symbols, some have joked, make it possible to construct an entire air traffic control system in two lines of code. Indeed, in some versions of APL, it is theoretically possible to express any computable function in one expression, that is in one line of code. You can use the other line for I/O, or constructing a GUI. Because of its condensed nature and non-standard characters, APL has sometimes been termed a "write-only language", and reading an APL program can feel like decoding an alien tongue, except to mathematicians, who find more prolix languages much harder to understand. Because of the unusual character set, many programmers used special APL keyboards in the production of APL code. Nowadays there are various ways to write APL code using only ASCII characters.
Iverson designed a successor to APL called J which uses ASCII "natively". So far there is a sole single source of J implementations: http://www.jsoftware.com/ Other programming languages offer functionality similar to APL. A+ (http://www.aplusdev.org/) is an open source programming language with many commands identical to APL.
Here's how you would write a program that would sort a word list stored in vector X according to word length:
Here's a program that finds all prime numbers from 1 to R:
Here's how to read it, from right to left:
Here's the equivalent in Perl:
APL has always been criticized for its choice of a unique, non-standard character set. The fact that those who learn it usually become ardent adherents shows that there is some weight behind Iverson's idea that the notation used does make a difference. With the popularization of the Unicode standard, which contains an APL character set, the eternal problem of obtaining the required particular fonts seems poised to go away. Nevertheless, some critics attack not the use of a symbolic font, but rather the specific "purely circumstantial" choices that were made during the early implementation of APL, driven by the availability of a special kind of typewriter that would never become mainstream.
Note the mnemonics associating an APL character with a letter : question mark on Q, power on P, rho on R, base value on B, eNcode on N, modulus on M and so on. This makes it easier to type APL on a non-APL keyboard providing you have visual feedback on your screen.
All APL symbols are present in Unicode:
It may be required to significantly reconfigure your browser in order to display Unicode fonts.
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| ∩ | ∪ | ∼ | ≠ | ≤ | ≥ | ≬ | ⊂ | ⊃ | ⌈ | ⌊ | ⊤ | ⊥ | ⋆ | ⌶ | ⌷ |
| ⌸ | ⌹ | ⌺ | ⌻ | ⌼ | ⌽ | ⌾ | ⌿ | ⍀ | ⍁ | ⍂ | ⍃ | ⍄ | ⍅ | ⍆ | ⍇ |
| ⍈ | ⍉ | ⍊ | ⍋ | ⍌ | ⍍ | ⍎ | ⍏ | ⍐ | ⍑ | ⍒ | ⍓ | ⍔ | ⍕ | ⍖ | ⍗ |
| ⍘ | ⍙ | ⍚ | ⍛ | ⍜ | ⍝ | ⍞ | ⍟ | ⍠ | ⍡ | ⍢ | ⍣ | ⍤ | ⍥ | ⍦ | ⍧ |
| ⍨ | ⍩ | ⍪ | ⍫ | ⍬ | ⍭ | ⍮ | ⍯ | ⍰ | ⍱ | ⍲ | ⍳ | ⍴ | ⍵ | ⍶ | ⍷ |
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| Major programming languages (more) | ||
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Ada | ALGOL | APL | AWK | BASIC | C | C++ | C# | COBOL | Delphi | Eiffel | Fortran | Haskell | IDL | Java | JavaScript | Lisp | LOGO | ML | Objective-C | Pascal | Perl | PHP | PL/I | Prolog | Python | Ruby | SAS | Scheme | sh | Simula | Smalltalk | SQL | Visual Basic |
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