Dfns & Dops
A dfn (dop)1 is an alternative function definition style suitable for defining small to medium sized functions. It bridges the gap between operator expressions: rank←⍴∘⍴ and full "header style" definitions such as:
∇ rslt←larg func rarg;local...
In its simplest form, a dfn is an APL expression enclosed in curly braces {}, possibly including the special characters ⍺ and ⍵ to represent the left and right arguments of the function respectively. For example:
{(+/⍵)÷⍴⍵} 1 2 3 4 ⍝ Arithmetic Mean (Average) 2.5 3 {⍵*÷⍺} 64 ⍝ ⍺th root 4
dfns can be named in the normal fashion:
mean←{(+/⍵)÷⍴⍵} mean¨(2 3)(4 5) 2.5 4.5
dfns can be defined and used in any context where an APL function may be found, in particular:
- In immediate execution mode as in the examples above.
- Within a defined function or operator.
- As the operand of an operator such as each (¨).
- Within another dfn.
- The last point means that it is easy to define nested local functions.