Even when you apply v to the entire y, you must first split y into cells so that it can be applied to v.   Every verb operates on cells whose rank is no higher than the rank of the verb.

In other words, the splitting is not part of u@:v - it is part of executing v itself.

Henry Rich

On 3/28/2020 2:58 PM, 'Sergey Kamenev' via Programming wrote:
My comments relate to the third column of the diagram.

1. I don’t understand why it is written on the diagram that Y should be splitted into cells
 if the verb V should be applied to the whole argument Y.

2. The diagram says the verb V must apply individually to each cell Y,
and at the top of the page it says that the verb must apply to the entirety argument Y.

28.03.2020 21:41, Henry Rich пишет:
I don't see what's wrong with the picture.  Can you be specific?

y must always be split into cells, regardless of whether you use & or &: .  The difference comes in whether you collect the results before applying them to u .

Henry Rich

On 3/28/2020 2:36 PM, 'Sergey Kamenev' via Programming wrote:
Health to all!

Page:
https://code.jsoftware.com/wiki/Vocabulary/ampco

Written at the top of the page:
Applies verb v to each argument in its entirety, and then applies verb u to the result(s) of v

The diagram says about &: (bottom to top):

* split y into cell
* apply v to each cell

Nice day!
Sergey Kamenev
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