Most verbs don't need parentheses.  Why isn't  =:  a verb?

Also along these lines, explain this:

   f=:i
   nc <'f'
3
   g=:j
   nc <'g'
1
 
Does that explain my question?

Linda   

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ric Sherlock
Sent: Saturday, February 09, 2013 3:57 AM
To: Programming JForum
Subject: Re: [Jprogramming] A tale of two nouns

Linda, I'm not really sure what point you are trying to make. f and g are
both literal lists. h is a verb and nothing ever gets assigned to i .

Are you thinking the primitive ( =: ) is a combination of the verb ( = ) and
the conjunction ( : ) ?

On Feb 9, 2013 9:24 PM, "Linda Alvord" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>    f =: '=:'
>
>    nc <'f'
>
> 0
>
>    g =: '= :'
>
>    nc <'g'
>
> 0
>
>    h =: *:
>
>    h 7 11
>
> 49 121
>
>    i = : *:
>
> i = :*:
>
>    i 7 11
>
>
>
>    i 7 11
>
> |value error: i
> |       i 7 11
>
>
>
>  f  and  g  are both nouns,  but they aren't the same noun.
>
>
>
> Is  f  really a noun?  If  "is"  is a verb, isn't  "=:" a verb?
>
>
>
> Linda
>
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