Lists are very important and general structures in Mathematica. They allow you to treat collections of all kinds of objects as a single entity. There are many ways to ...
WaveletMapIndexed[f, wd] applies the function f to the arrays of coefficients and indices of a ContinuousWaveletData or DiscreteWaveletData object.WaveletMapIndexed[f, dwd, ...
You may find it useful to use one or more rules with an expression several times. Mathematica provides functions that let you iterate when using rules with expressions. In ...
Rules
(Mathematica Guide) Everything that Mathematica does can be thought of as derived from its ability to apply general transformation rules to arbitrary symbolic expressions. The Mathematica ...
Long viewed as an important theoretical idea, functional programming finally became truly convenient and practical with the introduction of Mathematica's symbolic language. ...
Mathematica's unified symbolic architecture allows immediate generalization of part-oriented list operations to arbitrary expressions —supporting operations both on ...
Scan
(Built-in Mathematica Symbol) Scan[f, expr] evaluates f applied to each element of expr in turn. Scan[f, expr, levelspec] applies f to parts of expr specified by levelspec.
The names of built-in functions follow some general guidelines. The main expression or object on which a built-in function acts is usually given as the first argument to the ...
AbsoluteTiming[expr] evaluates expr, returning a list of the absolute number of seconds in real time that have elapsed, together with the result obtained.
In Mathematica's unified symbolic architecture, every Mathematica notebook you see is represented as a symbolic expression that can be manipulated and controlled ...