Apologies accepted, case closed AFAIAC.

R.E. Boss


-----Original Message-----
From: Chat <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Ben Gorte
Sent: maandag 22 november 2021 21:58
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Jchat] [Jprogramming] x u&.(w`v) y

While cleaning up my Sent folder, I see that my message of 18 Nov was 
inappropriate in several ways.
I apologize to R.E. Boss, to whom I was replying, and to all who were trying to 
read it.

Regards,
Ben

On Thu, 18 Nov 2021 at 12:08, Ben Gorte <[email protected]> wrote:

> [moved from Programming to Chat]
>
> Before Henry gets carried away by poetry perhaps we should reveal 
> that, however noble the quote may look at first sight, the dream in 
> the poem concerns the subject killing his wife (but he doesn't).
>
> hth :-)
> Ben
>
> On Thu, 18 Nov 2021 at 03:56, R.E. Boss <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I am a simple user, you are not only the architect, but also the 
>> implementor.
>> Most of all I consider J as a mathematical  tool, that's the way I 
>> use it anyhow, and in mathematics I would immediately define u&.(w`v) as I 
>> did.
>> What's more, I would extend &, &: en &:. accordingly.
>> Just to have a complete and (IMO) elegant language.
>>
>> But, as a Dutch poet once wrote (and google translated): "but between 
>> dream and deed, laws stand in the way, and practical objections."
>> After all, there is a workaround.
>>
>>
>> R.E. Boss
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Programming <[email protected]> On 
>> Behalf Of Henry Rich
>> Sent: woensdag 17 november 2021 16:35
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: [Jprogramming] x u&.(w`v) y
>>
>> Here's an argument against:
>>
>> The dual [x] u&.v y says 'apply u, but with a different point of view.
>> First transform [x and] y, then apply u, then transform the result 
>> back to the original point of view.'
>>
>> The semidual x u&(a:`v) y says 'u&.v, but the point-of-view business 
>> applies only to y'.  x goes through unchanged.
>>
>> What you propose puts x and y in different spaces to begin with; 
>> presumably w and v transform them to a common point of view, but then 
>> the result is transformed back by  applying BOTH inverses.  I don't 
>> see an application for this, or an easy verbal description of it.
>>
>> Henry Rich
>>
>> On 11/17/2021 10:18 AM, R.E. Boss wrote:
>> >     *&.(>:`<:)/ i.2 3
>> > |domain error
>> > |   *    &.(>:`<:)/i.2 3
>> >
>> >     *&.(a:`<:)/ i.2 3
>> > 1 4 9
>> >     *&.(a:`<:)&.(>:`a:)/ i.2 3
>> > 2 6 12
>> >
>> > so why not define
>> > x u&.(w`v) y
>> >   as
>> > x u&.(w`a:)&.(a:`v) y
>> > ?
>> >
>> >
>> > R.E. Boss
>> >
>> > -------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>
>>
>> --
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