OMG that's awesome, we need more docs about this feature, thank you very 
much Stefan!

El miércoles, 10 de agosto de 2016, 12:02:34 (UTC-5), Stefan Karpinski 
escribió:
>
> julia> [(x, y, z) for x = 1:n for y = x:n for z = y:n if x^2 + y^2 == z^2]
> 6-element Array{Tuple{Int64,Int64,Int64},1}:
>  (3,4,5)
>  (5,12,13)
>  (6,8,10)
>  (8,15,17)
>  (9,12,15)
>  (12,16,20)
>
> On Wed, Aug 10, 2016 at 12:58 PM, Ismael Venegas Castelló <
> [email protected] <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> In order to be a little more specific I wanted to add, that it seems 
>> weird that I can use the variables for the if clause, but not for creating 
>> the other ranges, it's just that I don't know how to express myself 
>> correctly, I hope you can understand me.
>>
>>
>> El miércoles, 10 de agosto de 2016, 11:56:00 (UTC-5), Ismael Venegas 
>> Castelló escribió:
>>>
>>> Is there a way to make reference of the internal variables of an array 
>>> comprehension? I'm trying to improve this Rosetta Code task:
>>>
>>>
>>>    - https://rosettacode.org/wiki/List_comprehensions#Julia
>>>
>>>
>>> const n = 20
>>> sort(filter(x -> x[1] < x[2] && x[1]^2 + x[2]^2 == x[3]^2, [(a, b, c) 
>>> for a=1:n, b=1:n, c=1:n]))
>>>
>>>
>>> In Python it's:
>>>
>>> In [2]: n = 20
>>>
>>> In [3]: [(x,y,z) for x in xrange(1,n+1) for y in xrange(x,n+1) for z in 
>>> xrange(y,n+1) if x**2 + y**2 == z**2]
>>> Out[3]: [(3, 4, 5), (5, 12, 13), (6, 8, 10), (8, 15, 17), (9, 12, 15), (
>>> 12, 16, 20)]
>>>
>>>
>>> I'll update the task with:
>>>
>>> julia> [(x, y, z) for x = 1:n, y = 1:n, z = 1:n if x < y && x^2 + y^2 == 
>>> z^2] |> sort
>>> 6-element Array{Tuple{Int64,Int64,Int64},1}:
>>>  (3,4,5)
>>>  (5,12,13)
>>>  (6,8,10)
>>>  (8,15,17)
>>>  (9,12,15)
>>>  (12,16,20)
>>>
>>> But I tried this and it doesn't work, I wonder why? 
>>>
>>> julia> [(x, y, z) for x = 1:n, y = x:n, z = y:n if x^2 + y^2 == z^2]
>>> ERROR: UndefVarError: x not defined
>>>
>>> Is there a way to do this? Thanks in advance!
>>>
>>
>

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