Difference between revisions of "Merge Functions in z^3 Sets/Arrays"
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'''4. mergeio''' | '''4. mergeio''' | ||
− | *mergeio merges the input that created | + | *mergeio merges the input that created an array such as (1..N) for a given function and outputs it into an array. So, the .input of the last calculation is appended with the output of the last calculation that caused the array. |
'''c = a.mergeio()''' | '''c = a.mergeio()''' | ||
Revision as of 10:18, 11 November 2016
Merge Functions
Description
There are 4 types of merges.
- merge
- mergerows
- mergecolumns
- mergeio
1. merge
- This function facilitates the user to merge two array values using a function, such as SUM, CONCAT, etc...
c = a.merge(SomeOtherArray, SomeFunction)
For example: a = [1,2,3]; b = [4,5,6]; c = a.merge(b,SUM) c = [5,7,9]
2. mergerows
- This allows the user to merge the rows of two arrays.
c = a.mergerows(SomeOtherArray)
For example: a = [1,2,3;20,25,30]; b = [10,11,12;6,7,8]; c = a.mergerows(b) c = [1 2 3 10 11 12 20 25 30 6 7 8]
3. mergecolumns
- This allows the user to merge the columns of two arrays.
c = a.mergecolumns(SomeOtherArray)
For example: a = [1,2,3;20,25,30]; b = [10,11,12;6,7,8]; c = a.mergecolumns(b) c = 1 2 3 20 25 30 10 11 12 6 7 8
4. mergeio
- mergeio merges the input that created an array such as (1..N) for a given function and outputs it into an array. So, the .input of the last calculation is appended with the output of the last calculation that caused the array.
c = a.mergeio()
For example: a = 1..10..2@SIN; c = a.mergeio() c = 1 0.8414709848078965 3 0.1411200080598672 5 -0.9589242746631385 7 0.6569865987187891 9 0.4121184852417566