I love APL! Learning APL is really all about learning the idioms and how to apply them. This takes quite a lot of training time. Doing this kind of training will change the way you think.
Alan Perlis quote: "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing." There is some old analysis out there that indicates that APL is naturally very parallel. Willhoft-1991 claimed that 94 of the 101 primitives operations in APL2 could be implemented in parallel and that 40-50% of APL code in real applications was naturally parallel. R. G. Willhoft, Parallel expression in the apl2 language, IBM Syst. J. 30 (1991), no. 4, 498–512. -David Leibs
_______________________________________________ fonc mailing list [email protected] http://vpri.org/mailman/listinfo/fonc
