59 KiB
Version -10.0.0
Each function, combinator, or definition should be documented here.
abs
Take an integer from the stack and replace it with its absolute value.
add
Take two integers from the stack and replace them with their sum.
and
Combinator
Short-circuiting Boolean AND
Accept two quoted programs, run the first and expect a Boolean value, if
it's true pop it and run the second program (which should also return a
Boolean value) otherwise pop the second program (leaving false on the
stack.) The quoted programs are run with [nullary].
[A] [B] and
----------------- A -> true
B
[A] [B] and
----------------- A -> false
false
TODO: this is derived in one of the notebooks I think, look it up and link to it, or copy the content here.
Crosslinks
anamorphism
Combinator
Build a list of values from a generator program G and a stopping
predicate P.
[P] [G] anamorphism
-----------------------------------------
[P] [pop []] [G] [dip swons] genrec
Example
The range function generates a list of the integers from 0 to n - 1:
[0 <=] [-- dup] anamorphism
joy? 5
5
joy? [0 <=] [-- dup]
5 [0 <=] [-- dup]
joy? anamorphism
[4 3 2 1 0]
Note that the last value generated (0) is at the bottom of the list. See the Recursion Combinators notebook.
app1
"apply one"
Combinator
Given a quoted program on TOS and anything as the second stack item run the program without disturbing the rest of the stack and replace the two args with the first result of the program.
... x [Q] app1
---------------------------------
... [x ...] [Q] infra first
This is the same effect as the unary combinator.
Discussion
Just a specialization of nullary really. Its parallelizable cousins
are more useful.
Crosslinks
app2
Combinator
Like app1 with two items.
... y x [Q] . app2
-----------------------------------
... [y ...] [Q] . infra first
[x ...] [Q] infra first
Discussion
Unlike app1, which is essentially an alias for unary, this function is not the same as binary. Instead of running one program using exactly two items from the stack and pushing one result (as binary does) this function takes two items from the stack and runs the program twice, separately for each of the items, then puts both results onto the stack.
This is not currently implemented as parallel processes but it can (and should) be done.
Crosslinks
app3
Combinator
Like [app1] with three items.
... z y x [Q] . app3
-----------------------------------
... [z ...] [Q] . infra first
[y ...] [Q] infra first
[x ...] [Q] infra first
Discussion
See [app2].
Crosslinks
appN
Combinator
Like [app1] with any number of items.
... xN ... x2 x1 x0 [Q] n . appN
--------------------------------------
... [xN ...] [Q] . infra first
...
[x2 ...] [Q] infra first
[x1 ...] [Q] infra first
[x0 ...] [Q] infra first
Discussion
This function takes a quoted function Q and an integer and runs the
function that many times on that many stack items. See also [app2].
Crosslinks
*
See mul.
at
See getitem.
average
Compute the average of a list of numbers. (Currently broken until I can figure out what to do about "numeric tower" in Thun.)
Discussion
Theoretically this function would compute the sum and the size in two separate threads, then divide. This works but a compiled version would probably do better to sum and count the list once, in one thread, eh?
As an exercise in Functional Programming in Joy it would be fun to convert this into a catamorphism. See the Recursion Combinators notebook.
binary
Combinator
Run a quoted program using exactly two stack values and leave the first item of the result on the stack.
... y x [P] binary
-----------------------
... a
Discussion
Runs any other quoted function and returns its first result while consuming exactly two items from the stack.
Crosslinks
b
Combinator
Run two quoted programs
[P] [Q] b
---------------
P Q
Discussion
This combinator may seem trivial but it comes in handy.
Crosslinks
bool
Convert the item on the top of the stack to a Boolean value.
Discussion
For integers 0 is false and any other number is true; for lists the
empty list is false and all other lists are true.
Crosslinks
[not]
branch
Combinator
Use a Boolean value to select and run one of two quoted programs.
false [F] [T] branch
--------------------------
F
true [F] [T] branch
-------------------------
T
Discussion
This is one of the fundamental operations (although it can be defined in terms of [choice] as above). The more common "if..then..else" construct [ifte] adds a predicate function that is evaluated [nullary].
Crosslinks
[choice] [ifte] [select]
ccccons
a b c d [...] ccccons
---------------------------
[a b c d ...]
Do [cons] four times.
Crosslinks
[ccons] [cons] [times]
ccons
a b [...] ccons
---------------------
[a b ...]
Do [cons] two times.
Crosslinks
[cons] [ccons]
choice
Use a Boolean value to select one of two items.
a b false choice
----------------------
a
a b true choice
---------------------
b
Discussion
It's a matter of taste whether you implement this in terms of [branch] or the other way around.
Crosslinks
[branch] [select]
^
See xor.
clear
Clear everything from the stack.
Crosslinks
[stack] [swaack]
cleave
Combinator
Run two programs in parallel, consuming one additional item, and put their results on the stack.
... x [A] [B] cleave
------------------------
... a b
Derivation
[fork] [popdd]
Example
1 2 3 [+] [-] cleave
--------------------------
1 2 5 -1
Discussion
One of a handful of useful parallel combinators.
Crosslinks
[clop] [fork] [map]
clop
Combinator
Run two programs in parallel, consuming two additional items, and put their results on the stack.
... x y [A] [B] clop
--------------------------
... a b
Discussion
Like [cleave] but consumes an additional item from the stack.
1 2 3 4 [+] [-] clop
--------------------------
1 2 7 -1
Crosslinks
[cleave] [fork] [map]
cmp
Combinator
Take two values and three quoted programs on the stack and run one of the three depending on the results of comparing the two values.
a b [G] [E] [L] cmp
------------------------- a > b
G
a b [G] [E] [L] cmp
------------------------- a = b
E
a b [G] [E] [L] cmp
------------------------- a < b
L
Discussion
This is useful sometimes, and you can [dup] or [dupd] with two quoted programs to handle the cases when you just want to deal with [<=] or [>=] and not all three possibilities, e.g.:
[G] [EL] dup cmp
[GE] [L] dupd cmp
Or even:
[GL] [E] over cmp
codi
Combinator
Take a quoted program from the stack, [cons] the next item onto it, then [dip] the whole thing under what was the third item on the stack.
a b [F] . codi
--------------------
b . F a
Discussion
This is one of those weirdly specific functions that turns out to be useful in a few places.
Crosslinks
[appN] [codireco]
codireco
Combinator
This is part of the [make_generator] function. You would not use this combinator directly.
Discussion
See [make_generator] and the
"Using x to Generate Values" notebook
as well as
Recursion Theory and Joy by Manfred von Thun.
Crosslinks
[make_generator]
concat
Concatinate two lists.
[a b c] [d e f] concat
----------------------------
[a b c d e f]
Crosslinks
[first] [first_two] [flatten] [fourth] [getitem] [remove] [rest] [reverse] [rrest] [second] [shift] [shunt] [size] [sort] [split_at] [split_list] [swaack] [third] [zip]
cond
Combinator
This combinator works like a case statement. It expects a single quote
on the stack that must contain zero or more condition quotes and a
default quote. Each condition quote should contain a quoted predicate
followed by the function expression to run if that predicate returns
true. If no predicates return true the default function runs.
[
[ [Predicate0] Function0 ]
[ [Predicate1] Function1 ]
...
[ [PredicateN] FunctionN ]
[Default]
]
cond
Discussion
It works by rewriting into a chain of nested [ifte]{.title-ref} expressions, e.g.:
[[[B0] T0] [[B1] T1] [D]] cond
-----------------------------------------
[B0] [T0] [[B1] [T1] [D] ifte] ifte
Crosslinks
[ifte]
cons
Given an item and a list, append the item to the list to make a new list.
a [...] cons
------------------
[a ...]
Discussion
Cons is a venerable old function from Lisp. Its inverse operation is [uncons].
Crosslinks
[uncons]
dinfrirst
Combinator
Specialist function (that means I forgot what it does and why.)
dipdd
Combinator
Like [dip] but expects three items. :
... z y x [Q] . dip
-----------------------------
... . Q z y x
Discussion
See [dip].
Crosslinks
[dip] [dipd] [dupdip] [dupdipd] [infra]
dipd
Combinator
Like [dip] but expects two items.
... y x [Q] . dipd
-------------------------
... . Q y x
Discussion
See [dip].
Crosslinks
[dip] [dipdd] [dupdip] [dupdipd] [infra]
dip
Combinator
The dip combinator expects a quoted program on the stack and below it
some item, it hoists the item into the expression and runs the program
on the rest of the stack.
... x [Q] . dip
---------------------
... . Q x
Discussion
This along with [infra] are enough to update any datastructure. See the "Traversing Datastructures with Zippers" notebook.
Note that the item that was on the top of the stack (x in the example above)
will not be treated specially by the interpreter when it is reached
again. This is something of a footgun. My advice is to avoid putting
bare unquoted symbols onto the stack, but then you can't use symbols as
"atoms" and also use dip and infra to operate on compound
datastructures with atoms in them. This is a kind of side-effect of the
Continuation-Passing Style. The dip combinator could "set aside" the
item and replace it after running Q but that means that there is an
"extra space" where the item resides while Q runs. One of the nice
things about CPS is that the whole state is recorded in the stack and
pending expression (not counting modifications to the dictionary.)
Crosslinks
[dipd] [dipdd] [dupdip] [dupdipd] [infra]
disenstacken
The disenstacken function expects a list on top of the stack and makes
that the stack discarding the rest of the stack.
1 2 3 [4 5 6] disenstacken
--------------------------------
6 5 4
Discussion
Note that the order of the list is not changed, it just looks that way because the stack is printed with the top on the right while lists are printed with the top or head on the left.
Crosslinks
[enstacken] [stack]
div
See floordiv.
divmod
x y divmod
------------------
q r
(x/y) (x%y)
Invariant: qy + r = x.
down_to_zero
Given a number greater than zero put all the Natural numbers (including zero) less than that onto the stack.
Example
3 down_to_zero
--------------------
3 2 1 0
Crosslinks
[range]
drop
Expects an integer and a quote on the stack and returns the quote with n items removed off the top.
Example
[a b c d] 2 drop
----------------------
[c d]
Crosslinks
[take]
dupdd
[dup] the third item down on the stack.
a b c dupdd
-----------------
a a b c
Crosslinks
[dup] [dupd] [dupdip] [dupdipd]
dupdipd
Combinator
Run a copy of program F under the next item down on the stack.
a [F] dupdipd
-------------------
F a [F]
Crosslinks
[dupdip]
dupdip
Combinator
Apply a function F and [dup] the item under it on the stack.
a [F] dupdip
------------------
a F a
Derivation
a [F] dupdip
a [F] dupd dip
a [F] [dup] dip dip
a dup [F] dip
a a [F] dip
a F a
Discussion
A very common and useful combinator.
Crosslinks
[dupdipd]
dupd
[dup] the second item down on the stack.
a b dupd
--------------
a a b
Crosslinks
[dup] [dupdd] [dupdip] [dupdipd]
dup
"Dup"licate the top item on the stack.
a dup
-----------
a a
Crosslinks
[dupd] [dupdd] [dupdip] [dupdipd]
enstacken
Put the stack onto the stack replacing the contents of the stack.
... a b c enstacken
-------------------------
[c b a ...]
Discussion
This is a destructive version of [stack]. See the note under [disenstacken] about the apparent but illusory reversal of the stack.
Crosslinks
[stack] [disenstacken]
eq
Compare the two items on the top of the stack for equality and replace them with a Boolean value.
a b eq
-------------
Boolean
(a = b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [ge] [gt] [le] [lt] [ne]
=
See eq.
!=
See ne.
!-
Not negative.
n !-
----------- n < 0
false
n !-
---------- n >= 0
true
Discussion
Return a Boolean value indicating if a number is greater than or equal to zero.
first
Replace a list with its first item.
[a ...]
--------------
a
Crosslinks
[second] [third] [fourth] [rest]
first_two
Replace a list with its first two items.
[a b ...] first_two
-------------------------
a b
Crosslinks
[first] [second] [third] [fourth] [rest]
flatten
Given a list of lists, concatinate them.
Example
[[1 2] [3 [4] 5] [6 7]] flatten
-------------------------------------
[1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7]
Discussion
Note that only one "level" of lists is flattened. In the example above
[4] is not unquoted.
Crosslinks
[concat] [first] [first_two] [fourth] [getitem] [remove] [rest] [reverse] [rrest] [second] [shift] [shunt] [size] [sort] [split_at] [split_list] [swaack] [third] [zip]
floordiv
I don't know why this is called "floor" div, I think it rounds its result down (not towards zero or up.)
a b floordiv
------------------
(a/b)
Discussion
All the division commands need to be revisited when the "numeric tower" for Thun gets nailed down.
Crosslinks
[divmod]
floor
Return the largest integer <= x.
Discussion
This function doesn't make sense (yet) to have because there are (as yet) only integers in the system.
fork
Combinator
Run two quoted programs in parallel and replace them with their results.
... [F] [G] fork
----------------------
... f g
Discussion
The basic parallelism combinator, the two programs are run independently.
Crosslinks
[cleave] [clop] [map]
fourth
Replace a list with its fourth item.
[a b c d ...] fourth
--------------------------
d
Crosslinks
[first] [second] [third] [rest]
gcd2
Compiled GCD function.
Discussion
See [gcd].
Crosslinks
[gcd]
gcd
Take two integers from the stack and replace them with their Greatest Common Denominator.
Discussion
Euclid's Algorithm
ge
Greater-than-or-equal-to comparison of two numbers.
a b ge
--------------
Boolean
(a >= b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [eq] [gt] [le] [lt] [ne]
genrec
Combinator
General Recursion Combinator.
[if] [then] [rec1] [rec2] genrec
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[if] [then] [rec1 [[if] [then] [rec1] [rec2] genrec] rec2] ifte
Discussion
Note that this definition includes the genrec symbol itself, it is
self-referential. This is possible because the definition machinery does
not check that symbols in defs are in the dictionary. genrec is the
only self-referential definition.
See the Recursion Combinators notebook.
From "Recursion Theory and Joy" by Manfred von Thun:
"The genrec combinator takes four program parameters in addition to whatever data parameters it needs. Fourth from the top is an if-part, followed by a then-part. If the if-part yields true, then the then-part is executed and the combinator terminates. The other two parameters are the rec1-part and the rec2-part. If the if-part yields false, the rec1-part is executed. Following that the four program parameters and the combinator are again pushed onto the stack bundled up in a quoted form. Then the rec2-part is executed, where it will find the bundled form. Typically it will then execute the bundled form, either with i or with app2, or some other combinator."
The way to design one of these is to fix your base case [then] and the
test [if], and then treat rec1 and rec2 as an else-part
"sandwiching" a quotation of the whole function.
For example, given a (general recursive) function F:
F == [I] [T] [R1] [R2] genrec
If the [I] if-part fails you must derive R1 and R2 from: :
... R1 [F] R2
Just set the stack arguments in front, and figure out what R1 and R2
have to do to apply the quoted [F] in the proper way. In effect, the
genrec combinator turns into an [ifte] combinator with a quoted copy of
the original definition in the else-part:
F == [I] [T] [R1] [R2] genrec
== [I] [T] [R1 [F] R2] ifte
Tail recursive functions are those where R2 is the i combinator:
P == [I] [T] [R] tailrec
== [I] [T] [R [P] i] ifte
== [I] [T] [R P] ifte
Crosslinks
[anamorphism] [tailrec] [x]
getitem
Expects an integer and a quote on the stack and returns the item at the nth position in the quote counting from 0.
Example
[a b c d] 2 getitem
-------------------------
c
Discussion
If the number isn't a valid index into the quote getitem will cause
some sort of problem (the exact nature of which is
implementation-dependant.)
Crosslinks
[concat] [first] [first_two] [flatten] [fourth] [remove] [rest] [reverse] [rrest] [second] [shift] [shunt] [size] [sort] [split_at] [split_list] [swaack] [third] [zip]
grabN
Expect a number on the top of the stack and [cons] that many items from under it onto a new list.
Example
a b c d e 3 grabN
-----------------------
a b [c d e]
grba
A weird function used in [app2] that does this:
... 1 2 3 4 5 grba
-------------------------------
... 1 2 3 [4 3 2 1 ...] 5
It grabs the stack under the top item, and substitutes it for the second item down on the stack.
Discussion
This function "grabs" an item from the stack along with a copy of the stack. It's part of the [app2] definition.
Crosslinks
[app2]
>=
See ge.
>>
See rshift.
>
See gt.
gt
Greater-than comparison of two numbers.
a b gt
--------------
Boolean
(a > b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [eq] [ge] [le] [lt] [ne]
help
Accepts a quoted symbol on the top of the stack and prints its documentation.
[foo] help
----------------
Discussion
Technically this is equivalent to pop, but it will only work if the
item on the top of the stack is a quoted symbol.
--
See pred.
-
See sub.
hypot
x y hypot
---------------------------
sqrt(sqr(x) + sqr(y))
Discussion
This is another function that has to wait on the numeric tower.
Crosslinks
[sqrt]
id
The identity function.
Discussion
Does nothing. It's kind of a mathematical thing, but it occasionally comes in handy.
ifte
Combinator
If-Then-Else combinator, a common and convenient specialization of [branch].
[if] [then] [else] ifte
---------------------------------------
[if] nullary [else] [then] branch
Crosslinks
[branch] [loop] [while]
ii
Combinator
Take a quoted program from the stack and run it twice, first under the top item, then again with the top item.
... a [Q] ii
------------------
... Q a Q
Example
It's a little tricky to understand how this works so here's an example trace:
1 2 3 4 [++] • [dip] dupdip i
1 2 3 4 [++] [dip] • dupdip i
1 2 3 4 [++] • dip [++] i
1 2 3 • ++ 4 [++] i
1 2 4 • 4 [++] i
1 2 4 4 • [++] i
1 2 4 4 [++] • i
1 2 4 4 • ++
1 2 4 5 •
Discussion
In some cases (like the example above) this is the same effect as using [app2] but most of the time it's not:
1 2 3 4 [+] ii
--------------------
1 9
1 2 3 4 [+] app2
----------------------
1 2 5 6
Crosslinks
[app2] [b]
i
Combinator
Append a quoted expression onto the pending expression.
[Q] . i
-------------
. Q
Discussion
This is a fundamental combinator. It is used in all kinds of places. For
example, the [x] combinator can be defined as dup i.
infra
Combinator
Accept a quoted program and a list on the stack and run the program with the list as its stack. Does not affect the stack (below the list.)
... x y z [a b c] [Q] infra
---------------------------------
c b a Q [z y x ...] swaack
... [a b c] [F] swons swaack [i] dip swaack
... [[F] a b c] swaack [i] dip swaack
c b a [F] [...] [i] dip swaack
c b a [F] i [...] swaack
c b a F [...] swaack
d e [...] swaack
... [e d]
Discussion
This is one of the more useful combinators. It allows a quoted
expression to serve as a stack for a program, effectively running it in a
kind of "pocket universe". If the list represents a datastructure then
infra lets you work on its internal structure.
Crosslinks
infrst
Combinator
Does [infra] and then extracts the [first] item from the resulting list.
inscribe
Create a new Joy function definition in the Joy dictionary. A definition is given as a quote with a name followed by a Joy expression.
Example
[sqr dup mul] inscribe
Discussion
This is the only function that modifies the dictionary. It's provided as a
convenience, for tinkering with new definitions before entering them into
the defs.txt file. It can be abused, which you should avoid unless you
know what you're doing.
le
Less-Than-or-Equal-to comparison of the two items on the top of the stack, replacing them with a Boolean value.
a b le
-------------
Boolean
(a <= b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [eq] [ge] [gt] [lt] [ne]
<=
See le.
<>
See ne.
<
... a <{}
----------------
... [] a
Discussion
Tuck an empty list just under the first item on the stack.
Crosslinks
<<
... b a <{}
-----------------
... [] b a
Discussion
Tuck an empty list just under the first two items on the stack.
Crosslinks
<<
See lshift.
<
See lt.
loop
Combinator
Expect a quoted program Q and a Boolean value on the stack. If the value is false
discard the quoted program, otherwise run a copy of Q and loop again.
false [Q] loop
--------------------
true [Q] . loop
--------------------------
. Q [Q] loop
Discussion
This, along with [branch] and [fork], is one of the four main combinators
of all programming. The fourth, sequence, is implied by juxtaposition.
That is to say, in Joy F G is like G(F(...)) in a language bassed on
function application. Or again, to quote the Joy Wikipedia
entry,
In Joy, the meaning function is a homomorphism from the syntactic monoid onto the semantic monoid. That is, the syntactic relation of concatenation of symbols maps directly onto the semantic relation of composition of functions.
Anyway, [branch], [fork], amd [loop] are the fundamental combinators in Joy. Just as [branch] has it's more common and convenient form [ifte], [loop] has [while].
Crosslinks
[branch] [fork] [while]
lshift
a n lshift
----------------
(a×2ⁿ)
Crosslinks
[rshift]
lt
Less-Than comparison of the two items on the top of the stack, replacing them with a Boolean value.
a b lt
-------------
Boolean
(a < b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [eq] [ge] [gt] [le] [ne]
make_generator
Given an initial state value and a quoted generator function build a generator quote.
state [generator function] make_generator
-----------------------------------------------
[state [generator function] codireco]
Example
230 [dup ++] make_generator
---------------------------------
[230 [dup ++] codireco]
And then:
[230 [dup ++] codireco] 5 [x] times pop
---------------------------------------------
230 231 232 233 234
Discussion
See the "Using x to Generate Values" notebook.
Crosslinks
[codireco]
map
Combinator
Given a list of items and a quoted program run the program for each item in the list (with the rest of the stack) and replace the old list and the program with a list of the results.
Example
5 [1 2 3] [++ *] map
--------------------------
5 [10 15 20]
Discussion
This is a common operation in many languages. In Joy it can be a parallelism combinator due to the "pure" nature of the language.
Crosslinks
[app1] [app2] [app3] appN [fork]
max
Given a list find the maximum.
Example
[1 2 3 4] max
-------------------
4
Crosslinks
[min] [size] [sum]
min
Given a list find the minimum.
Example
[1 2 3 4] min
-------------------
1
Crosslinks
[max] [size] [sum]
mod
Return the remainder of a divided by b.
a b mod
-------------
(a%b)
Crosslinks
[divmod] [mul]
modulus
See mod.
mul
Multiply two numbers.
a b mul
-------------
(a×b)
Crosslinks
[div] [product]
neg
Invert the sign of a number.
a neg
-----------
-a
ne
Not-Equal comparison of the two items on the top of the stack, replacing them with a Boolean value.
a b ne
-------------
Boolean
(a = b)
Crosslinks
[cmp] [eq] [ge] [gt] [le] [lt]
not
Like [bool] but convert the item on the top of the stack to the inverse Boolean value.
true not
--------------
false
false not
---------------
true
Crosslinks
[bool]
nulco
Take the item on the top of the stack and [cons] it onto [nullary].
[F] nulco
-------------------
[[F] nullary]
Discussion
Helper function for [or] and [and].
Crosslinks
[and] [or]
nullary
Combinator
Run a quoted program without using any stack values and leave the first item of the result on the stack.
... [P] nullary
---------------------
... a
Example
... [P] nullary
... [P] [stack] dip infra first
... stack [P] infra first
... [...] [P] infra first
... [a ...] first
... a
Discussion
A very useful function that runs any other quoted function and returns it's first result without disturbing the stack (under the quoted program.)
Crosslinks
of
Like [getitem] but [swap]s the order of arguments.
Example
2 [a b c d] of
--------------------
c
Crosslinks
[getitem]
or
Logical bit-wise OR.
Crosslinks
[and] [xor]
over
[dup] the second item on the stack over the first.
a b over
--------------
a b a
Definition
There are many many ways to define this function.
[swap] [tuck]
[pop]
[dup]
[unit] [dupdip]
[unit] [dupdipd] [first]
And so on...
Discussion
A fine old word from Forth.
Crosslinks
[tuck]
pam
Combinator
Take a list of quoted functions from the stack and replace it with a list of the [first] results from running those functions (on copies of the rest of the stack.)
Example
5 7 [[+][-][*][/][%]] pam
-------------------------------
5 7 [12 -2 35 0 5]
Discussion
A specialization of [map] that runs a list of functions in parallel (if the underlying [map] function is so implemented, of course.)
Crosslinks
[map]
%
See mod.
pick
See getitem.
+
See add.
++
See succ.
pm
Plus or minus. Replace two numbers with their sum and difference.
a b pm
-----------------
(a+b) (a-b)
popdd
[pop] the third item on the stack.
a b c popdd
-----------------
b c
Crosslinks
[pop] [popd] [popop] [popopd] [popopdd] [popopop]
popd
[pop] the second item down on the stack.
a b popd
--------------
b
Crosslinks
[pop] [popdd] [popop] [popopd] [popopdd] [popopop]
pop
Pop the top item from the stack and discard it.
a pop
-----------
Crosslinks
[popd] [popdd] [popop] [popopd] [popopdd] [popopop]
popopdd
a b c d popopdd
---------------------
c d
Crosslinks
[pop] [popd] [popdd] [popop] [popopd] [popopop]
popopd
[pop] the second and third items from the stack.
a b c popopd
------------------
c
Crosslinks
[pop] [popd] [popdd] [popop] [popopdd] [popopop]
popop
[pop] two items from the stack.
a b popop
---------------
Crosslinks
[pop] [popd] [popdd] [popopd] [popopdd] [popopop]
popopop
[pop] three items from the stack.
a b c popopop
-------------------
Crosslinks
[pop] [popd] [popdd] [popop] [popopd] [popopdd]
pow
Take two numbers a and n from the stack and raise a to the nth
power. (n is on the top of the stack.)
a n pow
-------------
(aⁿ)
Example
2 [2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9] [pow] map
-----------------------------------
2 [4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512]
pred
Predecessor. Decrement TOS.
Crosslinks
[succ]
primrec
Combinator
From the "Overview of the language JOY"
The primrec combinator expects two quoted programs in addition to a data parameter. For an integer data parameter it works like this: If the data parameter is zero, then the first quotation has to produce the value to be returned. If the data parameter is positive then the second has to combine the data parameter with the result of applying the function to its predecessor.
5 [1] [*] primrec
Then primrec tests whether the top element on the stack (initially the 5) is equal to zero. If it is, it pops it off and executes one of the quotations, the [1] which leaves 1 on the stack as the result. Otherwise it pushes a decremented copy of the top element and recurses. On the way back from the recursion it uses the other quotation, [*], to multiply what is now a factorial on top of the stack by the second element on the stack.
0 [Base] [Recur] primrec
------------------------------
Base
n [Base] [Recur] primrec
------------------------------------------ n > 0
n (n-1) [Base] [Recur] primrec Recur
Discussion
Simple and useful specialization of the [genrec] combinator from the original Joy system.
Crosslinks
[genrec] [tailrec]
product
Just as [sum] sums a list of numbers, this function multiplies them together.
Definition
1 [swap] mul [step]
Or,
1
?
Is the item on the top of the stack "truthy"?
Discussion
You often want to test the truth value of an item on the stack without consuming the item.
Crosslinks
quoted
"Quote D" Wrap the second item on the stack in a list.
a b quoted
----------------
[a] b
Discussion
This comes from the original Joy stuff.
Crosslinks
[unit]
range
Expect a number n on the stack and replace it with a list:
[(n-1)...0].
Example
5 range
-----------------
[4 3 2 1 0]
-5 range
--------------
[]
Discussion
If n is less than 1 the resulting list is empty.
Crosslinks
[range_to_zero]
range_to_zero
Take a number n from the stack and replace it with a list
[0...n].
Example
5 range_to_zero
---------------------
[0 1 2 3 4 5]
Discussion
Note that the order is reversed compared to [range].
Crosslinks
[down_to_zero] [range]
reco
Replace the first item in a list with the item under it.
a [b ...] reco
--------------------
[a ...]
Crosslinks
[codireco] [make_generator]
remainder
See mod.
rem
See mod.
remove
Expects an item on the stack and a quote under it and removes that item from the the quote. The item is only removed once. If the list is empty or the item isn't in the list then the list is unchanged.
[1 2 3 1] 1 remove
------------------------
[2 3 1]
Definition
See the "Remove Function" notebook.
rest
[a ...] rest
------------------
[...]
Crosslinks
[first] [uncons]
reverse
Reverse the list on the top of the stack.
Example
[1 2 3] reverse
---------------------
[3 2 1]
rolldown
a b c rolldown
--------------------
b c a
Crosslinks
[rollup]
roll>
See rollup.
roll<
See rolldown.
rollup
a b c rollup
------------------
c a b
Crosslinks
[rolldown]
round
Round a number to a given precision in decimal digits.
Discussion
Another one that won't make sense until the "numeric tower" is nailed down.
rrest
[a b ...] rrest
---------------------
[...]
Crosslinks
[rest]
rshift
a n rshift
----------------
(a∕2ⁿ)
Crosslinks
[lshift]
run
Run a quoted program in a list.
Example
[1 2 +] run
-----------------
[3]
second
[a b ...] second
----------------------
b
Crosslinks
[first] [third] [fourth]
select
Use a Boolean value to select one of two items from a sequence. :
[a b] false select
------------------------
a
[a b] true select
-----------------------
b
Discussion
The sequence can contain more than two items but not fewer.
Crosslinks
[choice]
sharing
Print redistribution information.
Discussion
Mathematically this is a form of [id], but it has the side-effect of printing out the GPL notice.
Crosslinks
[warranty]
shift
Move the top item from one list to another.
Example
[x y z] [a b c] shift
---------------------------
[a x y z] [b c]
Crosslinks
[shunt]
shunt
Like [concat] but [reverse] the top list into the second.
Example
[a b c] [d e f] shunt
---------------------------
[f e d a b c]
Discussion
This is more efficient than [concat] so prefer it if you don't need to preserve order.
Crosslinks
[concat] [reverse] [shift]
size
Replace a list with its size.
Example
[23 [cats] 4] size
------------------------
3
/floor
See floordiv.
/
See floordiv.
//
See floordiv.
sort
Given a list return it sorted.
Example
[4 2 5 7 1] sort
----------------------
[1 2 4 5 7]
spiral_next
Example code.
Discussion
See the "Square Spiral Example Joy Code" notebook.
split_at
Split a list (second on the stack) at the position given by the number on the top of the stack.
Example
[1 2 3 4 5 6 7] 4 split_at
--------------------------------
[5 6 7] [4 3 2 1]
Discussion
Take a list and a number n from the stack, take n items from the top
of the list and [shunt] them onto a new list that replaces the number n
on the top of the stack.
Crosslinks
[split_list]
split_list
Split a list (second on the stack) at the position given by the number on the top of the stack such that [concat] would reconstruct the original list.
[1 2 3 4 5 6 7] 4 split_list
----------------------------------
[1 2 3 4] [5 6 7]
Discussion
Compare with [split_at]. This function does extra work to ensure that [concat] would reconstruct the original list.
Crosslinks
[split_at]
sqr
Square the number on the top of the stack.
n sqr
------------
n²
sqrt
Function Combinator
Return the square root of the number a. Negative numbers return complex roots.
Discussion
Another "numeric tower" hatch...
stackd
Grab the stack under the top item and put it onto the stack.
Example
... 1 2 3 stackd
------------------------
... 1 2 [2 1 ...] 3
stack
Put the stack onto the stack.
... c b a stack
---------------------------
... c b a [a b c ...]
Discussion
This function forms a pair with [unstack], and together they form the complement to the "destructive" pair [enstacken] and [disenstacken].
Crosslinks
[enstacken] [disenstacken]
step
Combinator
Run a quoted program on each item in a sequence.
... [] [Q] step
---------------------
...
... [a] [Q] step
----------------------
... a Q
... [a b c] [Q] . step
----------------------------------------
... a . Q [b c] [Q] step
Discussion
See the Recursion Combinators notebook.
Crosslinks
[step_zero]
step_zero
Combinator
Like [step] but with 0 as the initial value.
[...] [F] step_zero
-------------------------
0 [...] [F] step
Discussion
[size] and [sum] can both be defined in terms of this specialization of [step].
Crosslinks
[step]
stuncons
Take the [stack] and [uncons] the top item.
Example
1 2 3 stuncons
--------------------
1 2 3 3 [2 1]
stununcons
Take the [stack] and [uncons] the top two items.
Example
1 2 3 stununcons
----------------------
1 2 3 3 2 [1]
Crosslinks
[stuncons]
sub
Subtract the number on the top of the stack from the number below it.
a b sub
-------------
(a-b)
Crosslinks
[add]
succ
Successor. Increment TOS.
Crosslinks
[pred]
sum
Combinator
Given a quoted sequence of numbers return the sum.
Example
[1 2 3 4 5] sum
---------------------
15
Crosslinks
[size]
swaack
Swap stack. Take a list from the top of the stack, replace the stack with the list, and put the old stack onto it.
Example
1 2 3 [4 5 6] swaack
--------------------------
6 5 4 [3 2 1]
Discussion
This function works as a kind of "context switch". It's used in the definition of [infra].
Crosslinks
[infra]
swapd
Swap the second and third items on the stack.
a b c swapd
-----------------
b a c
Crosslinks
[over] [tuck]
swap
Swap the top two items on the stack.
a b swap
--------------
b a
Crosslinks
[swapd]
swoncat
[concat] two lists, but [swap] the lists first.
Crosslinks
[concat]
swons
Like [cons] but [swap] the item and list.
[...] a swons
-------------------
[a ...]
tailrec
Combinator
A specialization of the [genrec] combinator.
Discussion
Some recursive functions do not need to store additional data or pending actions per-call. These are called "tail recursive" functions. In Joy, they appear as [genrec] definitions that have [i] for the second half of their recursive branch.
See the Recursion Combinators notebook.
Crosslinks
[genrec]
take
Expects an integer n and a list on the stack and replace them with a list
with just the top n items in reverse order.
[a b c d] 2 take
----------------------
[b a]
ternary
Combinator
Run a quoted program using exactly three stack values and leave the first item of the result on the stack.
... z y x [P] ternary
-------------------------
... a
Discussion
Runs any other quoted function and returns its first result while consuming exactly three items from the stack.
Crosslinks
third
[a b c ...] third
-----------------------
c
Crosslinks
[first] [second] [fourth] [rest]
times
Combinator
Expect a quoted program and an integer n on the stack and do the
program n times.
... n [Q] . times
----------------------- w/ n <= 0
... .
... 1 [Q] . times
-----------------------
... . Q
... n [Q] . times
------------------------------------- w/ n > 1
... . Q (n-1) [Q] times
Discussion
This works by building a little [while] program and running it:
1 3 [++] • [-- dip] cons [swap] infra [0 >] swap while pop
1 3 [++] [-- dip] • cons [swap] infra [0 >] swap while pop
1 3 [[++] -- dip] • [swap] infra [0 >] swap while pop
1 3 [[++] -- dip] [swap] • infra [0 >] swap while pop
dip -- [++] • swap [3 1] swaack [0 >] swap while pop
dip [++] -- • [3 1] swaack [0 >] swap while pop
dip [++] -- [3 1] • swaack [0 >] swap while pop
1 3 [-- [++] dip] • [0 >] swap while pop
1 3 [-- [++] dip] [0 >] • swap while pop
1 3 [0 >] [-- [++] dip] • while pop
This is a common pattern in Joy. You accept some parameters from the stack which typically include qouted programs and use them to build another program which does the actual work. This is kind of like macros in Lisp, or preprocessor directives in C.
truthy
See bool.
tuck
[dup] the item on the top of the stack under the second item on the stack.
a b tuck
--------------
b a b
Crosslinks
[over]
unary
(Combinator)
Run a quoted program using exactly one stack value and leave the first item of the result on the stack.
... x [P] unary
---------------------
... a
Discussion
Runs any other quoted function and returns its first result while consuming exactly one item from the stack.
Crosslinks
uncons
Removes an item from a list and leaves it on the stack under the rest of
the list. You cannot uncons an item from an empty list.
[a ...] uncons
--------------------
a [...]
Discussion
This is the inverse of [cons].
Crosslinks
[cons]
unique
Given a list remove duplicate items.
unit
a unit
------------
[a]
unquoted
Combinator
Unquote (using [i]) the list that is second on the stack.
Example
1 2 [3 4] 5 unquoted
--------------------------
1 2 3 4 5
Crosslinks
[unit]
unswons
[a ...] unswons
---------------------
[...] a
||
Combinator
Short-circuiting Boolean OR
Discussion
Accept two quoted programs, run the first and expect a Boolean value, if
it’s false pop it and run the second program (which should also return a
Boolean value) otherwise pop the second program (leaving true on the
stack.)
[A] [B] ||
---------------- A -> false
B
[A] [B] ||
---------------- A -> true
true
Crosslinks
[and]
void
True if the form on TOS is void otherwise False.
Discussion
A form is any Joy expression composed solely of lists. This represents a binary Boolean logical formula in the arithmetic of the "Laws of Form", see The Markable Mark
warranty
Print warranty information.
while
Combinator
A specialization of [loop] that accepts a quoted predicate program P
and runs it [nullary].
[P] [F] while
------------------- P -> false
[P] [F] while
--------------------- P -> true
F [P] [F] while
Crosslinks
[loop]
words
Print all the words in alphabetical order.
Discussion
Mathematically this is a form of [id].
Crosslinks
[help]
x
Combinator
Take a quoted function F and run it with itself as the first item on
the stack.
[F] x
-----------
[F] F
Discussion
The simplest recursive pattern.
See the Recursion Combinators notebook. as well as Recursion Theory and Joy by Manfred von
xor
Logical bit-wise eXclusive OR.
Crosslinks
[and] [or]
zip
Replace the two lists on the top of the stack with a list of the pairs from each list. The smallest list sets the length of the result list.
Example
[1 2 3] [4 5 6] zip
-------------------------
[[4 1] [5 2] [6 3]]