Adverbial tacit programming is a lot of fun, as far as I am concerned;
although a bug in the linear representation can be annoying sometimes.

A good place to start is,

[Jprogramming] A phrase for amendment    Dan Bron
http://www.jsoftware.com/pipermail/programming/2010-November/021172.html

Dan is an excellent teacher; unfortunately, he has not been seen in the
forums for quite a long time.

Afterward, if you still dare :), you might search this forum for posts with
the "adverbial" word in the subject,

Search the forums
http://www.jsoftware.com/forumsearch

I hope it helps.

PS.  Still amazes me that, even with only to basic ways to construct tacit
adverbs ((a a) and (n c) and (c n)), tacit adverbial programming, (just as
verbal tacit programming) is complete.

On Wed, Aug 1, 2018 at 7:37 PM, 'Pascal Jasmin' via Programming <
programm...@jsoftware.com> wrote:

>  that one is harder, though the expression you have is very writtable and
> readable and has good performance.  but the answer,
> /(`%)(`#)(`:6)
>
> an even harder example would be
> 1 : '# %~ u/'
>
>     On Wednesday, August 1, 2018, 6:45:10 p.m. EDT, Piet Google <
> pietd...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>  I’m coming to grips with the  power of programming in adverbs.
>
> At the risk of boring many of you with my elementary questions, I am
> asking advice on the tacit equivalent of
>
> ju=: 1 : 'u/ % #’
>
> This is a made up example containing the gist of a more complicated
> situation I’m trying to program.
> Help much appreciated.
>
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