Typographic conventions in this guide
| Example | Meaning |
| behavior analysis | Key terms when introduced. Most of these terms are included in the Glossary. |
| Diagram | Menus and menu commands, window names, panel names, dialog box names, function parameters. |
| Sequence() | Name of a variable or function in Analytica. |
Price - DownPmt
|
Expressions, definitions, example code. |
10^7 → 10M
|
In example code, this means that the variable or expression before the “→” generates the result after it. |
| Enter, Control+a | A key or key-combination on the keyboard. A letter, such as “a”, can be lower- or uppercase. |
Code examples: This guide includes snippets of code to illustrate features, for example:
Index N := [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]Variable Squares := N^2Sum(Squares, N) → 55
This code says that there are two objects, an index N and a variable Squares. You would create these objects in a Diagram window by dragging from the node toolbar into the diagram (see Creating and editing nodes). You would enter the expressions, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] and N^2 into their definitions (see Creating or editing a definition). You would not enter the assignment “:=”. The last line says that the expression Sum(Squares, N) evaluates to the result 55 after the →. You might include that expression in the definition of third variable.
Array examples: We use these typographic conventions to show Analytica arrays.
- An index or list and its values
N:
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
- A one-dimensional array,
Squares
Squares ▶
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
| |
1
|
4
|
9
|
16
|
25
| |
- A two-dimensional array
Index_b ▶
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
Index_a ▼
|
a | b | c |
| x | value
|
value
|
value
|
| y | value
|
value
|
value
|
| z | value
|
value
|
value
|
- A three-dimensional array
Index_b ▶ Index_c = 'displayed value'
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
Index_a ▼
|
a | b | c |
| x | value
|
value
|
value
|
| y | value
|
value
|
value
|
| z | value
|
value
|
value
|
See Also
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