On 5/16/07, bill lam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think that simplicity is more important. such as may be the shortest code in
all programming languages for sorting an array,
   /:~

June Kim wrote:
> My original ideas was printing only the codes on the T-shirt.
>
> However, displaying the result of the code together might be a good
> idea, too.
>
> Thanks.
>
> 2007/5/16, Brian Schott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>        It is not clear to me whether you mean to display
>> both the input phrase and the output result or just one of
>> them. If you mean to display both, then I think my favorites
>> would be Ewart Shaw's oneliner "life", and some part of the
>> following oneliner extracted from the Vocabulary.
>>
>> (<;.3 y) ; ((($$y)$<./$y)<;.3 y) ; (a <;.3 y) ; <(a <;._3
>> y)[(y=: a. {~ (a. i. 'a') + i. 4 4);(a=: 1 1 ,: 2 2)
>>
>> (B=)
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--
regards,
bill
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I imagine this suggestion is nothing new to this group but perl, for
example, has a strong subculture of 'perl poetry' using the keywords
and expressions of that language (extra marks if yur poem is
executable; oddly, it's not a requirement).  As J operators are all
invested with descriptive names, perhaps there is already some concise
executeable literature out there?


--
- michael dykman
- [EMAIL PROTECTED]

- All models are wrong.  Some models are useful.
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