Sum and product of an array: Difference between revisions
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=={{header|11l}}==
<
print(sum(arr))
print(product(arr))</
{{out}}
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=={{header|360 Assembly}}==
<
SUMPROD CSECT
USING SUMPROD,R15 base register
Line 38:
PG DS CL24 buffer
YREGS
END SUMPROD</
{{out}}
<pre>
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=={{header|4D}}==
<
For ($i;1;5)
APPEND TO ARRAY($list;$i)
Line 60:
$sum:=sum($list)
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|ACL2}}==
<
(if (endp xs)
0
Line 73:
1
(* (first xs)
(prod (rest xs)))))</
=={{header|Action!}}==
<
PROC Main()
Line 110:
OD
PrintIE(res)
RETURN</
{{out}}
[https://gitlab.com/amarok8bit/action-rosetta-code/-/raw/master/images/Sum_and_product_of_an_array.png Screenshot from Atari 8-bit computer]
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=={{header|ActionScript}}==
<
import flash.display.Sprite;
Line 140:
}
}
}</
=={{header|Ada}}==
<
array : Int_Array := (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
Line 149:
for I in array'range loop
Sum := Sum + array(I);
end loop;</
Define the product function
<
Prod : Integer := 1;
begin
Line 158:
end loop;
return Prod;
end Product;</
This function will raise the predefined exception Constraint_Error if the product overflows the values represented by type Integer
=={{header|Aime}}==
<
compute(integer &s, integer &p, list l)
{
Line 185:
return 0;
}</
{{out}}
<pre>77
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=={{header|ALGOL 68}}==
<
INT default upb := 3;
MODE INTARRAY = [default upb]INT;
Line 211:
) # int product # ;
printf(($" Sum: "g(0)$,sum,$", Product:"g(0)";"l$,int product(array)))
)</
{{Out}}
<pre>
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=={{header|ALGOL W}}==
<
% computes the sum and product of intArray %
Line 251:
write( sum, product );
end
end.</
{{out}}
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=={{header|APL}}==
{{works with|APL2}}
<
prod ← ×/ ⍝ product (×) over (/) an array
Line 269:
prod a ⍝ or simply: ×/a
120</
What follows ⍝ is a comment and / is usually known as ''reduce'' in APL. The use of the ''sum'' and ''prod'' functions is not necessary and was added only to please people baffled by the extreme conciseness of using APL symbols.
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{{works with|Extended Dyalog APL}} ([https://tio.run/##SyzI0U2pTMzJT9dNrShJzUtJTfn//1HfVIVHbRMUNLT1FR71rlM4PF1fU8FQwUjBWMFEwfT/fwA Try It Online])
using the [https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Pair pair (⍮)] primitive function
<
15 120</
Spaces are optional except as separators between array elements.
=={{header|AppleScript}}==
<
set sum to 0
set product to 1
Line 287:
set sum to sum + i
set product to product * i
end repeat</
Condensed version of above, which also prints the results :
<syntaxhighlight lang="applescript">
set {array, sum, product} to {{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, 0, 1}
repeat with i in array
Line 296:
end repeat
return sum & " , " & product as string
</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
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Or, using an AppleScript implementation of '''fold'''/'''reduce''':
<
a + b
end summed
Line 363:
end script
end if
end mReturn</
{{Out}}
<
=={{header|Arturo}}==
<
print ["Sum =" sum arr]
print ["Product =" product arr]</
{{out}}
Line 379:
=={{header|Asymptote}}==
<
int suma = 0, prod = 1;
Line 387:
}
write("Sum = ", suma);
write("Product = ", prod);</
{{out}}
<pre>Sum = 15
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=={{header|AutoHotkey}}==
<
product := 1
loop, parse, numbers, `,
Line 400:
product *= A_LoopField
}
msgbox, sum = %sum%`nproduct = %product%</
=={{header|AWK}}==
For array input, it is easiest to "deserialize" it from a string with the split() function.
<
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
55
Line 410:
$ awk 'func prod(s){split(s,a);r=1;for(i in a)r*=a[i];return r}{print prod($0)}'
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
3628800</
=={{header|Babel}}==
<
sum! : { <- 0 -> { + } eachar }
Line 425:
Result:
41
30030</
Perhaps better Babel:
<
{ [2 3 5 7 11 13]
ar2ls dup cp
Line 447:
{ * }
{ depth 1 > }
do_while } nest }</
The nest operator creates a kind of argument-passing context -
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=={{header|BASIC}}==
{{works with|FreeBASIC}}
<
dim sum as integer = 0
Line 467:
sum += array(index)
prod *= array(index)
next</
==={{header|Applesoft BASIC}}===
{{works with|Commodore BASIC}}
<
20 S = 0:P = 1: DATA 1,2,3,4,5
30 N = N - 1: DIM A(N)
Line 479:
70 S = S + A(I):P = P * A(I)
80 NEXT
90 PRINT "SUM="S,"PRODUCT="P</
==={{header|Atari BASIC}}===
Almost the same code works in Atari BASIC, but you can't READ directly into arrays, leave the variable off a NEXT, or concatenate values in PRINT without semicolons between them:
<
20 S = 0:P = 1: DATA 1,2,3,4,5
30 N = N - 1: DIM A(N)
Line 492:
70 S = S + A(I):P = P * A(I)
80 NEXT I
90 PRINT "SUM=";S,"PRODUCT=";P</
==={{header|BaCon}}===
<
'--- set some values into the array
DECLARE a[10] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 } TYPE int
Line 511:
PRINT "The sum is ",sum
PRINT "The product is ",product
</
==={{header|BBC BASIC}}===
<
array%() = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Line 523:
product% *= array%(I%)
NEXT
PRINT "Product of array elements = " ; product%</
==={{header|IS-BASIC}}===
<
110 LET N=5
120 NUMERIC A(1 TO N)
Line 538:
200 LET SUM=SUM+A(I):LET PROD=PROD*A(I)
210 NEXT
220 PRINT "Sum =";SUM,"Product =";PROD</
=={{header|BASIC256}}==
{{trans|Yabasic}}
<
dim array(5)
array[1] = 1
Line 559:
print "The sum is "; sum #15
print "and the product is "; prod #120
end</
=={{header|bc}}==
<
a[1] = 1
a[2] = 4.0
Line 576:
}
"Sum: "; s
"Product: "; p</
=={{header|Befunge}}==
{{works with|befungee}}
The program first reads the number of elements in the array, then the elements themselves (each number on a separate line) and calculates their sum.
<
>1- \ & + \v
^ <</
=={{header|BQN}}==
Line 592:
* Paired with <code>⋈</code>
* Product <code>×´</code>
<
+´⋈×´
SumProd 1‿2‿3‿4‿5
⟨ 15 120 ⟩</
=={{header|Bracmat}}==
<
= sum prod num
. 0:?sum
Line 614:
)
& out$sumprod$(2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19)
);</
{{Out}}
<pre>77.9699690</pre>
=={{header|C}}==
<
int arg[] = { 1,2,3,4,5 };
int arg_length = sizeof(arg)/sizeof(arg[0]);
Line 629:
sum += *p;
prod *= *p;
}</
=={{header|C sharp|C#}}==
<
int[] arg = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
foreach (int value in arg) {
sum += value;
prod *= value;
}</
===Alternative using Linq (C# 3)===
{{works with|C sharp|C#|3}}
<
int sum = arg.Sum();
int prod = arg.Aggregate((runningProduct, nextFactor) => runningProduct * nextFactor);</
=={{header|C++}}==
{{libheader|STL}}
<
#include <functional>
Line 656:
// std::accumulate(arg, arg + 5, 0);
// since plus() is the default functor for accumulate
int prod = std::accumulate(arg, arg+5, 1, std::multiplies<int>());</
Template alternative:
<
template <typename T> T sum (const T *array, const unsigned n)
{
Line 685:
cout << sum(aflo,4) << " " << prod(aflo,4) << endl;
return 0;
}</
=={{header|Chef}}==
<
This recipe sums N given numbers.
Line 711:
Pour contents of 1st mixing bowl into the baking dish.
Serves 1.</
=={{header|Clean}}==
<
Sum = sum [x \\ x <-: array]
Prod = foldl (*) 1 [x \\ x <-: array]</
=={{header|Clojure}}==
<
(defn product [vals] (reduce * vals))</
=={{header|CLU}}==
<
sum: int := 0
prod: int := 1
Line 742:
stream$putl(po, "Sum = " || int$unparse(sum))
stream$putl(po, "Product = " || int$unparse(prod))
end start_up</
{{out}}
<pre>Sum = 55
Line 748:
=={{header|COBOL}}==
<
PROGRAM-ID. array-sum-and-product.
Line 772:
GOBACK
.</
=={{header|CoffeeScript}}==
<
sum = (array) ->
array.reduce (x, y) -> x + y
Line 781:
product = (array) ->
array.reduce (x, y) -> x * y
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|ColdFusion}}==
Sum of an Array,
<
<cfoutput>#ArraySum(Variables.myArray)#</cfoutput></
Product of an Array,
<
<cfset Variables.Product = 1>
<cfloop array="#Variables.myArray#" index="i">
<cfset Variables.Product *= i>
</cfloop>
<cfoutput>#Variables.Product#</cfoutput></
=={{header|Common Lisp}}==
<
(values (reduce #'+ data) ; sum
(reduce #'* data))) ; product</
The loop macro also has support for sums.
<
=={{header|Crystal}}==
===Declarative===
<syntaxhighlight lang="ruby">
def sum_product(a)
{ a.sum(), a.product() }
end
</syntaxhighlight>
===Imperative===
<syntaxhighlight lang="ruby">
def sum_product_imperative(a)
sum, product = 0, 1
Line 823:
{sum, product}
end
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang="ruby">
require "benchmark"
Benchmark.ips do |x|
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x.report("imperative") { sum_product_imperative [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] }
end
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>declarative 8.1M (123.45ns) (± 2.99%) 65 B/op 1.30× slower
Line 837:
=={{header|D}}==
<
void main() {
Line 852:
writeln("Sum: ", sum);
writeln("Product: ", prod);
}</
{{Out}}
<pre>Sum: 15
Product: 120</pre>
Compute sum and product of array in one pass (same output):
<
void main() {
Line 867:
writeln("Sum: ", r[0]);
writeln("Product: ", r[1]);
}</
=={{header|dc}}==
<
Sum: 49
Product: 135135</
=={{header|Delphi}}==
<
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
Line 895:
Write('Product: ');
Writeln(lProduct);
end.</
=={{header|E}}==
<
accum 0 for x in [1,2,3,4,5] { _ + x }
accum 1 for x in [1,2,3,4,5] { _ * x }</
=={{header|Eiffel}}==
<
class
APPLICATION
Line 945:
end
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Out}}
<pre>Sum of the elements of the array: 30
Line 952:
=={{header|Elena}}==
ELENA 5.0:
<
import extensions;
Line 961:
var sum := list.summarize(new Integer());
var product := list.accumulate(new Integer(1), (var,val => var * val));
}</
=={{header|Elixir}}==
When an accumulator is omitted, the first element of the collection is used as the initial value of acc.
<
15
iex(27)> Enum.reduce([1,2,3,4,5], 1, fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
Line 982:
iex(32)> Enum.reduce([], fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
** (Enum.EmptyError) empty error
(elixir) lib/enum.ex:1287: Enum.reduce/2</
The function with sum
<
=={{header|Emacs Lisp}}==
<
(apply #'+ (append array nil))
(apply #'* (append array nil)))</
{{libheader|cl-lib}}
<
(let ((array [1 2 3 4 5]))
(cl-reduce #'+ array)
(cl-reduce #'* array))</
{{libheader|seq.el}}
<
(let ((array [1 2 3 4 5]))
(seq-reduce #'+ array 0)
(seq-reduce #'* array 1))</
=={{header|Erlang}}==
Using the standard libraries:
<
L = lists:seq(1, 10).
% and compute its sum:
S = lists:sum(L).
P = lists:foldl(fun (X, P) -> X * P end, 1, L).</
To compute sum and products in one pass:
<
{Prod,Sum} = lists:foldl(fun (X, {P,S}) -> {P*X,S+X} end, {1,0}, lists:seq(1,10)).</
Or defining our own versions:
<
-export([sum_rec/1, sum_tail/1]).
Line 1,036:
Acc;
sum_tail([Head|Tail], Acc) ->
sum_tail(Tail, Head + Acc).</
=={{header|Euphoria}}==
<
integer sum,prod
Line 1,052:
printf(1,"sum is %d\n",sum)
printf(1,"prod is %d\n",prod)</
{{Out}}
Line 1,061:
=={{header|F_Sharp|F#}}==
<
let numbers = [| 1..10 |]
let sum = numbers |> Array.sum
let product = numbers |> Array.reduce (*)
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Factor}}==
<
15 120
{ 1 2 3 4 } [ sum ] [ product ] bi
10 24</
sum and product are defined in the sequences vocabulary:
<
: product ( seq -- n ) 1 [ * ] reduce ;</
=={{header|FALSE}}==
Strictly speaking, there are no arrays in FALSE. However, a number of elements on the stack could be considered an array. The implementation below assumes the length of the array on top of the stack, and the actual items below it. Note that this implementation does remove the "array" from the stack, so in case the original values need to be retained, a copy should be provided before executing this logic.
<
5 {length of input}
0s: {sum}
Line 1,086:
"Sum: "s;."
Product: "p;.</
{{out}}
<pre>Sum: 15
Line 1,093:
=={{header|Fantom}}==
<
class Main
{
Line 1,126:
}
}
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Fermat}}==
<
[a]:=[(1,1,2,3,5,8,13)];
!!Sigma<i=1,7>[a[i]];
!!Prod<i=1,7>[a[i]];
</syntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 1,141:
=={{header|Forth}}==
<
: reduce ( xt n addr cnt -- n' ) \ where xt ( a b -- n )
cells bounds do i @ third execute cell +loop nip ;
Line 1,148:
' + 0 a 5 reduce . \ 15
' * 1 a 5 reduce . \ 120</
=={{header|Fortran}}==
In ISO Fortran 90 and later, use SUM and PRODUCT intrinsics:
<
integer :: sresult, presult
sresult = sum(a)
presult = product(a)</
=={{header|FreeBASIC}}==
<
Dim a(1 To 4) As Integer = {1, 4, 6, 3}
Line 1,171:
Print
Print "Press any key to quit"
Sleep</
{{out}}
Line 1,180:
=={{header|Frink}}==
<
a = [1,2,3,5,7]
sum[a]
product[a]
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Fōrmulæ}}==
Line 1,196:
=={{header|Gambas}}==
'''[https://gambas-playground.proko.eu/?gist=4a4bdc35d661e2dc22d66d88991bef95 Click this link to run this code]'''
<
Dim iList As Integer[] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Dim iSum, iCount As Integer
Line 1,209:
Print "The Product =\t" & iPrd
End</
Output:
<pre>
Line 1,217:
=={{header|GAP}}==
<
Sum(v);
Line 1,231:
Product(v, n -> 1/n);
# 1/40320</
=={{header|GFA Basic}}==
<
DIM a%(10)
' put some values into the array
Line 1,251:
PRINT "Sum is ";sum%
PRINT "Product is ";product%
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Go}}==
;Implementation
<
import "fmt"
Line 1,266:
}
fmt.Println(sum, prod)
}</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 1,272:
</pre>
;Library
<
import (
Line 1,285:
fmt.Println("Sum: ", floats.Sum(a))
fmt.Println("Product:", floats.Prod(a))
}</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 1,294:
=={{header|Groovy}}==
Groovy adds a "sum()" method for collections, but not a "product()" method:
<
However, for general purpose "reduction" or "folding" operations, Groovy does provide an "inject()" method for collections similar to "inject" in Ruby.
<
[1,2,3,4,5].inject(1) { prod, val -> prod * val }</
You can also combine these operations:
<
[sum: result.sum + value, product: result.product * value]})</
=={{header|GW-BASIC}}==
Line 1,306:
{{works with|QBasic}}
<
20 DIM A(5)
30 FOR I = 1 TO 5: READ A(I): NEXT I
Line 1,318:
77 NEXT I
80 PRINT "The sum is "; S;
90 PRINT " and the product is "; P</
=={{header|Haskell}}==
For lists, ''sum'' and ''product'' are already defined in the Prelude:
<
s = sum values -- the easy way
Line 1,328:
s1 = foldl (+) 0 values -- the hard way
p1 = foldl (*) 1 values</
To do the same for an array, just convert it lazily to a list:
<
values = listArray (1,10) [1..10]
s = sum . elems $ values
p = product . elems $ values</
Or perhaps:
<
main :: IO ()
main = mapM_ print $ [sum, product] <*> [elems $ listArray (1, 10) [11 .. 20]]</
{{Out}}
<pre>155
Line 1,347:
=={{header|HicEst}}==
<
sum = SUM(array)
Line 1,356:
ENDDO
WRITE(ClipBoard, Name) n, sum, product ! n=100; sum=5050; product=9.33262154E157;</
=={{header|Icon}} and {{header|Unicon}}==
The program below prints the sum and product of the arguments to the program.
<
every ( sum := 0 ) +:= !arglist
every ( prod := 1 ) *:= !arglist
write("sum := ", sum,", prod := ",prod)
end</
=={{header|IDL}}==
<
print,total(array)
print,product(array)</
=={{header|Inform 7}}==
<
To decide which number is the sum of (N - number) and (M - number) (this is summing):
Line 1,383:
let L be {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
say "List: [L in brace notation], sum = [summing reduction of L], product = [production reduction of L].";
end the story.</
=={{header|J}}==
Simple approach:<
17 210</
<hr />
Line 1,394:
Longer exposition:
<
product =: */</
For example:
<
49
product 1 3 5 7 9 11 13
Line 1,420:
466 472 462
product"1 a
5.53041e15 9.67411e15 1.93356e15</
=={{header|Java}}==
{{works with|Java|1.5+}}
<
{
public static void main(final String[] args)
Line 1,437:
}
}
}</
{{works with|Java|1.8+}}
<
public class SumProd
Line 1,451:
System.out.printf("product = %d\n", Arrays.stream(arg).reduce(1, (a, b) -> a * b));
}
}</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 1,461:
=={{header|JavaScript}}==
===ES5===
<
sum = 0,
prod = 1,
Line 1,469:
prod *= array[i];
}
alert(sum + ' ' + prod);</
{{Works with|Javascript|1.8}}
Where supported, the reduce method can also be used:
<
sum = array.reduce(function (a, b) {
return a + b;
Line 1,481:
return a * b;
}, 1);
alert(sum + ' ' + prod);</
===ES6===
<
'use strict';
Line 1,502:
.map(f => f([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]))
);
})();</
{{Out}}
Line 1,512:
=={{header|jq}}==
The builtin filter, add/0, computes the sum of an array:
<
# => 18</
<
# => 18</
An efficient companion filter for computing the product of the items in an array can be defined as follows:
<
Examples:
<
# => 192</
10!
<
# =>3628800</
=={{header|Julia}}==
<
18
Line 1,536:
julia> prod([4,6,8])
192</
=={{header|K}}==
<
product: {*/}x
a: 1 3 5 7 9 11 13
Line 1,545:
49
product a
135135</
It is easy to see the relationship of K to J here.
=={{header|Kotlin}}==
<
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
Line 1,559:
val product = a.fold(1) { acc, i -> acc * i }
println("Product is $product")
}</
{{out}}
Line 1,570:
=={{header|Lambdatalk}}==
<
{A.serie start end [step]} creates a sequence from start to end with optional step
{A.new words} creates an array from a sequence of words
Line 1,586:
9332621544394415268169923885626670049071596826438162146859296389521759999322991
5608941463976156518286253697920827223758251185210916864000000000000000000000000
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Lang5}}==
<
'+ reduce
'* reduce</
=={{header|langur}}==
<
writeln " array: ", .arr
writeln " sum: ", fold f .x + .y, .arr
writeln "product: ", fold f .x x .y, .arr</
{{works with|langur|0.6.6}}
<
writeln " array: ", .arr
writeln " sum: ", fold f{+}, .arr
writeln "product: ", fold f{x}, .arr</
{{out}}
Line 1,612:
=={{header|Lasso}}==
<
// sum of array elements
'Sum: '
Line 1,622:
local(product = 1)
with n in #x do => { #product *= #n }
#product</
{{out}}
<pre>Sum: 55
Line 1,628:
=={{header|Liberty BASIC}}==
<
For i = 0 To 19
Line 1,642:
Print "Sum is " + str$(sum)
Print "Product is " + str$(product)</
=={{header|Lingo}}==
<
res = 0
repeat with v in intList
Line 1,659:
end repeat
return res
end</
=={{header|LiveCode}}==
<
put "1,2,3,4" into nums
split nums using comma
Line 1,676:
end if
end repeat
answer prodnums</
=={{header|Logo}}==
<
print apply "product arraytolist {1 2 3 4 5}</
=={{header|LOLCODE}}==
<
I HAS A Nums ITZ A BUKKIT
Nums HAS A Length ITZ 0
Line 1,709:
VISIBLE "Product = " !
VISIBLE Timesed
KTHXBYE</
{{Out}}
Line 1,716:
=={{header|Lua}}==
<
function sumf(a, ...) return a and a + sumf(...) or 0 end
function sumt(t) return sumf(unpack(t)) end
Line 1,723:
print(sumt{1, 2, 3, 4, 5})
print(prodt{1, 2, 3, 4, 5})</
<
function table.sum(arr, length)
--same as if <> then <> else <>
Line 1,738:
print(table.sum(t,#t))
print(table.product(t,3))
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Lucid}}==
prints a running sum and product of sequence 1,2,3...
<
where
x = 1 fby x + 1;
sum = 0 fby sum + x;
product = 1 fby product * x
end</
=={{header|M2000 Interpreter}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="m2000 interpreter">
Module Checkit {
a = (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10)
Line 1,761:
}
checkit
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Maple}}==
<
add(a);
mul(a);</
=={{header|Mathematica}}/{{header|Wolfram Language}}==
Mathematica provides many ways of doing the sum of an array (any kind of numbers or symbols):
<
Plus @@ a
Apply[Plus, a]
Line 1,777:
a // Total
Sum[a[[i]], {i, 1, Length[a]}]
Sum[i, {i, a}]</
all give 15. For product we also have a couple of choices:
<
Times @@ a
Apply[Times, a]
Product[a[[i]], {i, 1, Length[a]}]
Product[i, {i, a}]</
all give 120.
Line 1,790:
Sample Usage:
<
array =
Line 1,824:
6
120
504</
=={{header|Maxima}}==
<
36
lreduce("*", [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]);
40320</
=={{header|MAXScript}}==
<
sum = 0
for i in arr do sum += i
product = 1
for i in arr do product *= i</
=={{header|min}}==
{{works with|min|0.19.3}}
<
"Sum: $1\nProduct: $2" get-stack % puts</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 1,852:
=={{header|МК-61/52}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">^ 1 ПE + П0 КИП0 x#0 18 ^ ИПD
+ ПD <-> ИПE * ПE БП 05 С/П</
''Instruction'': РX - array length, Р1:РC - array, РD and РE - sum and product of an array.
=={{header|Modula-3}}==
<
FROM IO IMPORT Put;
Line 1,874:
Put("Sum of array: " & Int(sum) & "\n");
Put("Product of array: " & Int(prod) & "\n");
END Sumprod.</
{{Out}}
<pre>Sum of array: 15
Line 1,880:
=={{header|MUMPS}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="mumps">
SUMPROD(A)
;Compute the sum and product of the numbers in the array A
Line 1,892:
WRITE !,"The product of the array is "_PROD
KILL SUM,PROD,POS
QUIT</
Example: <pre>
USER>SET C(-1)=2,C("A")=3,C(42)=1,C(0)=7
Line 1,913:
=={{header|Nemerle}}==
As mentioned for some of the other functional languages, it seems more natural to work with lists in Nemerle, but as the task specifies working on an array, this solution will work on either.
<
using System.Console;
using System.Collections.Generic;
Line 1,942:
WriteLine("Sum is: {0}\tProduct is: {1}", suml, proda);
}
}</
=={{header|NetRexx}}==
<
options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols binary
Line 1,969:
return
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Out}}
<pre>
Line 1,978:
=={{header|NewLISP}}==
<
(apply + a)
(apply * a)</
=={{header|Nial}}==
Nial being an array language, what applies to individual elements are extended to cover array operations by default strand notation
<
= 6
* 1 2 3
= 6</
array notation
<syntaxhighlight lang
grouped notation
<
= 6
* (1 2 3)
= 6</
(All these notations are equivalent)
=={{header|Nim}}==
<
var sum, product: int
Line 2,006:
for x in xs:
sum += x
product *= x</
Or functionally:
<
let
xs = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
sum = xs.foldl(a + b)
product = xs.foldl(a * b)</
Or using a math function:
<
let numbers = [1, 5, 4]
Line 2,024:
var product = 1
for n in numbers:
product *= n</
=={{header|Objeck}}==
<
sum := 0;
prod := 1;
Line 2,035:
prod *= arg[i];
};
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Objective-C}}==
{{works with|GCC|4.0.1 (apple)}}
Sum:
<
{
int i, sum, value;
Line 2,052:
return suml;
}</
Product:
<
{
int i, prod, value;
Line 2,066:
return suml;
}</
=={{header|OCaml}}==
===Arrays===
<
let a = [| 1; 2; 3; 4; 5 |];;
Array.fold_left (+) 0 a;;
Line 2,077:
let a = [| 1.0; 2.0; 3.0; 4.0; 5.0 |];;
Array.fold_left (+.) 0.0 a;;
Array.fold_left ( *.) 1.0 a;;</
===Lists===
<
let x = [1; 2; 3; 4; 5];;
List.fold_left (+) 0 x;;
Line 2,086:
let x = [1.0; 2.0; 3.0; 4.0; 5.0];;
List.fold_left (+.) 0.0 x;;
List.fold_left ( *.) 1.0 x;;</
=={{header|Octave}}==
<
b = [ 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 ];
vsum = a + b;
vprod = a .* b;</
=={{header|Oforth}}==
<
[1, 3, 5, 7, 9 ] prod println</
{{out}}
Line 2,106:
=={{header|Ol}}==
<
(print (fold + 0 '(1 2 3 4 5)))
(print (fold * 1 '(1 2 3 4 5)))
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|ooRexx}}==
{{trans|REXX}}
<
do i=1 To 20
a[i]=i
Line 2,134:
prod*=self[i]
End
Return prod</
{{out}}
<pre>1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20
Line 2,142:
=={{header|Oz}}==
Calculations like this are typically done on lists, not on arrays:
<
Xs = [1 2 3 4 5]
Sum = {FoldL Xs Number.'+' 0}
Line 2,148:
in
{Show Sum}
{Show Product}</
If you are actually working with arrays, a more imperative approach seems natural:
<
Arr = {Array.new 1 3 0}
Sum = {NewCell 0}
Line 2,162:
Sum := @Sum + Arr.I
end
{Show @Sum}</
=={{header|PARI/GP}}==
These are built in to GP: <code>vecsum</code> and <code>factorback</code> (the latter can also take factorization matrices, thus the name). They could be coded like so:
<
sum(i=1,#v,v[i])
};
vecprod(v)={
prod(i=1,#v,v[i])
};</
{{works with|PARI/GP|2.10.0+}}
Line 2,180:
=={{header|Perl}}==
<
my ( $sum, $prod ) = ( 0, 1 );
$sum += $_ foreach @list;
$prod *= $_ foreach @list;</
Or using the [https://metacpan.org/pod/List::Util List::Util] module:
<
my @list = (1..9);
say "Sum: ", sum0(@list); # sum0 returns 0 for an empty list
say "Product: ", product(@list);</
{{out}}
<pre>Sum: 45
Line 2,197:
=={{header|Phix}}==
{{libheader|Phix/basics}}
<!--<
<span style="color: #004080;">sequence</span> <span style="color: #000000;">s</span> <span style="color: #0000FF;">=</span> <span style="color: #0000FF;">{</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #000000;">2</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #000000;">3</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #000000;">4</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #000000;">5</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">}</span>
<span style="color: #7060A8;">printf</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">(</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #008000;">"sum is %d\n"</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #7060A8;">sum</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">(</span><span style="color: #000000;">s</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">))</span>
<span style="color: #7060A8;">printf</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">(</span><span style="color: #000000;">1</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #008000;">"prod is %d\n"</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">,</span><span style="color: #7060A8;">product</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">(</span><span style="color: #000000;">s</span><span style="color: #0000FF;">))</span>
<!--</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 2,209:
=={{header|Phixmonti}}==
<
( 1 2 3 4 5 )
Line 2,221:
drop
"mult is " print print nl</
=={{header|PHP}}==
<
echo array_sum($array);
echo array_product($array);</
=={{header|Picat}}==
<
L = 1..10,
println(sum=sum(L)),
Line 2,260:
Prod=Prod0.
prod_rec([H|T], Prod0,Prod) =>
prod_rec(T, H*Prod0,Prod).</
{{out}}
Line 2,279:
=={{header|PicoLisp}}==
<
(cons
(apply + Data)
(apply * Data) ) )</
{{Out}}
<pre>(15 . 120)</pre>
=={{header|PL/I}}==
<
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10);
put skip list (sum(A));
put skip list (prod(A));</
=={{header|Plain English}}==
<
To find a sum and a product of some elements:
Line 2,326:
Shut down.
A sum is a number.</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 2,335:
=={{header|Pop11}}==
Simple loop:
<
for i from 1 to length(ar) do
ar(i) + sum -> sum;
ar(i) * prod -> prod;
endfor;</
One can alternatively use second order iterator:
<
appdata(ar, procedure(x); x + sum -> sum; endprocedure);
appdata(ar, procedure(x); x * prod -> prod; endprocedure);</
=={{header|PostScript}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
/sumandproduct
{
Line 2,367:
prod ==
}def
</syntaxhighlight>
{{libheader|initlib}}
<
% sum
[1 1 1 1 1] 0 {add} fold
Line 2,376:
[1 1 1 1 1] 1 {mul} fold
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|PowerShell}}==
The <code>Measure-Object</code> cmdlet already knows how to compute a sum:
<
return ($a | Measure-Object -Sum).Sum
}</
But not how to compute a product:
<
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
return 0
Line 2,394:
return $p
}
}</
One could also let PowerShell do all the work by simply creating an expression to evaluate:
{{works with|PowerShell|2}}
<
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
return 0
Line 2,404:
$s = $a -join '*'
return (Invoke-Expression $s)
}</
Even nicer, however, is a function which computes both at once and returns a custom object with appropriate properties:
<
$sum = 0
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
Line 2,421:
$ret | Add-Member NoteProperty Product $prod
return $ret
}</
{{Out}}
<pre>PS> Get-SumAndProduct 5,9,7,2,3,8,4
Line 2,430:
=={{header|Prolog}}==
<
sum([H|T],X) :- sum(T,Y), X is H + Y.
product([],1).
product([H|T],X) :- product(T,Y), X is H * X.</
test
Line 2,443:
Using fold
<
add(A,B,R):-
R is A + B.
Line 2,467:
Prod = 24 .
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|PureBasic}}==
<
Define a, sum=0, prod=1
Line 2,483:
Debug "The sum is " + Str(sum) ; Present the results
Debug "Product is " + Str(prod)</
=={{header|Python}}==
{{works with|Python|2.5}}
<
total = sum(numbers)
product = 1
for i in numbers:
product *= i</
Or functionally (faster but perhaps less clear):
{{works with|Python|2.5}}
<
sum = reduce(add, numbers) # note: this version doesn't work with empty lists
sum = reduce(add, numbers, 0)
product = reduce(mul, numbers) # note: this version doesn't work with empty lists
product = reduce(mul, numbers, 1)</
{{libheader|NumPy}}
<
numbers = r_[1:4]
total = numbers.sum()
product = numbers.prod()</
If you are summing floats in Python 2.6+, you should use <tt>math.fsum()</tt> to avoid loss of precision:
{{works with|Python|2.6, 3.x}}
<
total = math.fsum(floats)</
Line 2,516:
{{works with|QuickBasic}}
{{works with|True BASIC}}
<
DATA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
Line 2,530:
PRINT "The sum is "; sum
PRINT "and the product is "; prod
END</
=={{header|Quackery}}==
<
[ 1 swap witheach * ] is product ( [ --> n )</
In the shell (i.e. Quackery REPL):
<syntaxhighlight lang="quackery">
/O> ' [ 1 2 3 4 5 ] sum echo cr
... ' [ 1 2 3 4 5 ] product echo
Line 2,544:
15
120
Stack empty.</
=={{header|R}}==
<
product <- prod(1:5)</
=={{header|Racket}}==
<
(for/sum ([x #(3 1 4 1 5 9)]) x)
(for/product ([x #(3 1 4 1 5 9)]) x)</
=={{header|Raku}}==
(formerly Perl 6)
<syntaxhighlight lang="raku"
say 'Sum: ', [+] @ary;
say 'Product: ', [*] @ary;</
=={{header|Rapira}}==
<
sum := 0
for N from 1 to #arr do
Line 2,577:
od
return product
end</
=={{header|Raven}}==
<
1 [ 1 2 3 ] each *</
=={{header|REBOL}}==
<
Title: "Sum and Product"
URL: http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Sum_and_product_of_array
Line 2,618:
print [crlf "Fancy reducing function:"]
assert [55 = rsum [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
assert [3628800 = rproduct [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]</
{{Out}}
Line 2,630:
=={{header|Red}}==
<
red-version: 0.6.4
description: "Find the sum and product of an array of numbers."
Line 2,647:
print a
print ["Sum:" sum a]
print ["Product:" product a]</
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 2,656:
=={{header|REXX}}==
<
numeric digits 200 /*200 decimal digit #s (default is 9).*/
parse arg N .; if N=='' then N=20 /*Not specified? Then use the default.*/
Line 2,672:
say ' sum of ' m " elements for the @ array is: " sum
say ' product of ' m " elements for the @ array is: " prod
/*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</
'''output''' using the default input of: <tt> 20 </tt>
<pre>
Line 2,680:
=={{header|Ring}}==
<
aList = 1:10 nSum=0 nProduct=0
for x in aList nSum += x nProduct *= x next
See "Sum = " + nSum + nl
See "Product = " + nProduct + nl
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Ruby}}==
<
p sum = arr.inject(0) { |sum, item| sum + item }
# => 15
p product = arr.inject(1) { |prod, element| prod * element }
# => 120</
{{works with|Ruby|1.8.7}}
<
p sum = arr.inject(0, :+) #=> 15
p product = arr.inject(1, :*) #=> 120
Line 2,702:
# then the first element of collection is used as the initial value of memo.
p sum = arr.inject(:+) #=> 15
p product = arr.inject(:*) #=> 120</
Note: When the Array is empty, the initial value returns. However, nil returns if not giving an initial value.
<
p arr.inject(0, :+) #=> 0
p arr.inject(1, :*) #=> 1
p arr.inject(:+) #=> nil
p arr.inject(:*) #=> nil</
Enumerable#reduce is the alias of Enumerable#inject.
{{works with|Ruby|1.9.3}}
<
p sum = arr.sum #=> 15
p [].sum #=> 0</
=={{header|Run BASIC}}==
<
for i = 1 To 100
array(i) = rnd(0) * 100
Line 2,731:
Print " Sum is ";sum
Print "Product is ";product</
=={{header|Rust}}==
<
fn main() {
Line 2,749:
println!("the sum is {} and the product is {}", sum, product);
}
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|S-lang}}==
<
The sum of array elements is handled by an intrinsic.
[note: print is slsh-specific; if not available, use printf().]
<syntaxhighlight lang
The product is slightly more involved; I'll use this as a
chance to show the alternate stack-based use of 'foreach':
<
% Skipping the loop variable causes the val to be placed on the stack.
Line 2,770:
prod *= ();
print(prod);</
=={{header|SAS}}==
<
array a{*} a1-a100;
do i=1 to 100;
Line 2,780:
b=sum(of a{*});
put b c;
run;</
=={{header|Sather}}==
<
main is
a :ARRAY{INT} := |10, 5, 5, 20, 60, 100|;
Line 2,792:
#OUT + sum + " " + prod + "\n";
end;
end;</
=={{header|Scala}}==
<
val sum = seq.foldLeft(0)(_ + _)
val product = seq.foldLeft(1)(_ * _)</
Or even shorter:
<
val product = seq.product</
Works with all data types for which a Numeric implicit is available.
=={{header|Scheme}}==
<
(apply * '(1 2 3 4 5))</
A tail-recursive solution, without the n-ary operator "trick". Because Scheme supports tail call optimization, this is as space-efficient as an imperative loop.
<
(if (null? l)
i
Line 2,815:
(reduce + 0 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; 0 is unit for +
(reduce * 1 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; 1 is unit for *</
=={{header|Seed7}}==
<
result
var integer: sum is 0;
Line 2,838:
prod *:= value;
end for;
end func;</
Call these functions with:
writeln(sumArray([](1, 2, 3, 4, 5)));
Line 2,844:
=={{header|SETL}}==
<
print(+/ numbers, */ numbers);</
=> <code>45 362880</code>
Line 2,851:
=={{header|Sidef}}==
Using built-in methods:
<
say ary.sum; # => 15
say ary.prod; # => 120</
Alternatively, using hyper-operators:
<
say ary«+»; # => 15
say ary«*»; # => 120</
=={{header|Slate}}==
<
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: [:product :number | product * number]</
Shorthand for the above with a macro:
<
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: #* `er</
=={{header|Smalltalk}}==
<
#(1 2 3 4 5) inject: 1 into: [:product :number | product * number]</
Some implementation also provide a ''fold:'' message:
<
#(1 2 3 4 5) fold: [:product :number | product * number]</
=={{header|SNOBOL4}}==
<
* read the integer from the std. input
init_tab t<x = x + 1> = trim(input) :s(init_tab)
Line 2,887:
out output = "Sum: " sum
output = "Prod: " product
end</
Input
Line 2,902:
=={{header|Sparkling}}==
<
= 15
spn:2> reduce({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }, 1, function(x, y) { return x * y; })
= 120</
=={{header|Standard ML}}==
===Arrays===
<
val a = Array.fromList [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
Array.foldl op+ 0 a;
Line 2,916:
val a = Array.fromList [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0];
Array.foldl op+ 0.0 a;
Array.foldl op* 1.0 a;</
===Lists===
<
val x = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
foldl op+ 0 x;
Line 2,925:
val x = [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0];
foldl op+ 0.0 x;
foldl op* 1.0 x;</
=={{header|Stata}}==
Mata does not have a builtin product function, but one can do the following, which will compute the product of nonzero elements of the array:
<
sum(a)
-3
(-1)^mod(sum(a:<0),2)*exp(sum(log(abs(a))))
-120</
=={{header|Swift}}==
<
println(a.reduce(0, +)) // prints 15
println(a.reduce(1, *)) // prints 120
println(reduce(a, 0, +)) // prints 15
println(reduce(a, 1, *)) // prints 120</
=={{header|Tcl}}==
<
set sum [expr [join $arr +]]
set prod [expr [join $arr *]]</
{{works with|Tcl|8.5}}
<
set sum [tcl::mathop::+ {*}$arr]
set prod [tcl::mathop::* {*}$arr]</
=={{header|TI-83 BASIC}}==
Use the built-in functions <code>sum()</code> and <code>prod()</code>.
<
{1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10}
sum(L₁)
55
prod(L₁)
3628800</
=={{header|Toka}}==
<
212 1 foo array.put
Line 2,974:
( product )
reset 1 4 0 [ i foo array.get * ] countedLoop .</
=={{header|Trith}}==
<
<
=={{header|True BASIC}}==
{{works with|QBasic}}
<
DATA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
Line 2,997:
PRINT "The sum is "; sum
PRINT "and the product is "; prod
END</
=={{header|TUSCRIPT}}==
<
$$ MODE TUSCRIPT
list="1'2'3'4'5"
Line 3,012:
ENDLOOP
PRINT "product: ",product
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Out}}
<pre>
Line 3,023:
From an internal variable, $IFS delimited:
<
prod=1
list="1 2 3"
Line 3,029:
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod</
From the argument list (ARGV):
<
prod=1
for n
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod</
From STDIN, one integer per line:
<
prod=1
while read n
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod</
{{works with|Bourne Again SHell}}
Line 3,054:
Using an actual array variable:
<
(( sum=0, prod=1 ))
for n in "${list[@]}"; do
Line 3,060:
done
printf '%d\t%d\n' "$sum" "$prod"
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Out}}
Line 3,068:
Uses [[ksh93]]-style process substitution.
{{works with|bash}}
<
(read B; res=$1; test -n "$B" && expr $res \* $B || echo $res)
}
Line 3,082:
(echo 3; echo 1; echo 4;echo 1;echo 5;echo 9) |
tee >(fold sum) >(fold prod) > /dev/null</
There is a race between <code>fold sum</code> and <code>fold prod</code>, which run in parallel. The program might print sum before product, or print product before sum.
Line 3,088:
=={{header|Ursa}}==
Ursa doesn't have arrays in the traditional sense. Its equivalent is the stream. All math operators take streams as arguments, so sums and products of streams can be found like this.
<
append 34 76 233 8 2 734 56 stream
Line 3,095:
# outputs 3.95961079808E11
out (* stream) endl console</
=={{header|Ursala}}==
The reduction operator, :-, takes an associative binary function and a constant for the empty case.
Natural numbers are unsigned and of unlimited size.
<
#cast %nW
sp = ^(sum:-0,product:-1) <62,43,46,40,29,55,51,82,59,92,48,73,93,35,42,25></
{{Out}}
Line 3,109:
=={{header|V}}==
<
{{Out|Using it}}
<
=
product=15
sum=120</
=={{header|Vala}}==
<
int sum = 0, prod = 1;
int[] data = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
Line 3,126:
}
print(@"sum: $(sum)\nproduct: $(prod)");
}</
{{out}}
<pre>sum: 10
Line 3,133:
=={{header|VBA}}==
Assumes Excel is used.
<
Dim arr
arr = Array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)
Debug.Print "sum : " & Application.WorksheetFunction.Sum(arr)
Debug.Print "product : " & Application.WorksheetFunction.Product(arr)
End Sub</
<pre>sum : 55
product : 3628800</pre>
=={{header|VBScript}}==
<
sum = 0
product = 1
Line 3,158:
myarray = Array(1,2,3,4,5,6)
sum_and_product(myarray)
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Out}}
Line 3,169:
{{trans|C#}}
<
Sub Main()
Dim arg As Integer() = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
Line 3,175:
Dim prod = arg.Aggregate(Function(runningProduct, nextFactor) runningProduct * nextFactor)
End Sub
End Module</
=={{header|Wart}}==
<
(list (+ @nums) (* @nums))</
=={{header|WDTE}}==
<
let s => import 'stream';
let sum array => a.stream array -> s.reduce 0 +;
let prod array => a.stream prod -> s.reduce 1 *;</
=={{header|Wortel}}==
<
@prod [1 2 3 4] ; returns 24</
=={{header|Wren}}==
{{libheader|Wren-math}}
<
var a = [7, 10, 2, 4, 6, 1, 8, 3, 9, 5]
System.print("Array : %(a)")
System.print("Sum : %(Nums.sum(a))")
System.print("Product : %(Nums.prod(a))")</
{{out}}
Line 3,208:
=={{header|XPL0}}==
<
func SumProd(A, L);
Line 3,219:
]; \SumSq
SumProd([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10], 10)</
{{Out}}
Line 3,230:
XSLT (or XPath rather) has a few built-in functions for reducing from a collection, but product is not among them. Because of referential transparency, one must resort to recursive solutions for general iterative operations upon collections. The following code represents the array by numeric values in <price> elements in the source document.
<
<xsl:output method="text" />
Line 3,265:
</xsl:call-template>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet></
=={{header|Yabasic}}==
{{trans|QBasic}}
<
data 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
for index = 1 to arraysize(array(), 1)
Line 3,284:
print "The sum is ", sum //15
print "and the product is ", prod //120
end</
=={{header|zkl}}==
{{trans|Clojure}}
<
fcn product(vals){vals.reduce('*,1)}</
<pre>
sum(T(1,2,3,4)) //-->10
Line 3,297:
=={{header|Zoea}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="zoea">
program: sum_and_product
case: 1
Line 3,305:
input: [2,3,4]
output: [9,24]
</syntaxhighlight>
=={{header|Zoea Visual}}==
|
Revision as of 17:38, 28 August 2022
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
- Task
Compute the sum and product of an array of integers.
11l
V arr = [1, 2, 3, 4]
print(sum(arr))
print(product(arr))
- Output:
10 24
360 Assembly
* Sum and product of an array 20/04/2017
SUMPROD CSECT
USING SUMPROD,R15 base register
SR R3,R3 su=0
LA R5,1 pr=1
LA R6,1 i=1
DO WHILE=(CH,R6,LE,=AL2((PG-A)/4)) do i=1 to hbound(a)
LR R1,R6 i
SLA R1,2 *4
A R3,A-4(R1) su=su+a(i)
M R4,A-4(R1) pr=pr*a(i)
LA R6,1(R6) i++
ENDDO , enddo i
XDECO R3,PG su
XDECO R5,PG+12 pr
XPRNT PG,L'PG print
BR R14 exit
A DC F'1',F'2',F'3',F'4',F'5',F'6',F'7',F'8',F'9',F'10'
PG DS CL24 buffer
YREGS
END SUMPROD
- Output:
55 3628800
4D
ARRAY INTEGER($list;0)
For ($i;1;5)
APPEND TO ARRAY($list;$i)
End for
$sum:=0
$product:=1
For ($i;1;Size of array($list))
$sum:=$var+$list{$i}
$product:=$product*$list{$i}
End for
// since 4D v13
$sum:=sum($list)
ACL2
(defun sum (xs)
(if (endp xs)
0
(+ (first xs)
(sum (rest xs)))))
(defun prod (xs)
(if (endp xs)
1
(* (first xs)
(prod (rest xs)))))
Action!
DEFINE LAST="6"
PROC Main()
INT ARRAY data=[1 2 3 4 5 6 7]
BYTE i
INT a,res
res=0
FOR i=0 TO LAST
DO
a=data(i)
PrintI(a)
IF i=LAST THEN
Put('=)
ELSE
Put('+)
FI
res==+a
OD
PrintIE(res)
res=1
FOR i=0 TO LAST
DO
a=data(i)
PrintI(a)
IF i=LAST THEN
Put('=)
ELSE
Put('*)
FI
res=res*a
OD
PrintIE(res)
RETURN
- Output:
Screenshot from Atari 8-bit computer
1+2+3+4+5+6+7=28 1*2*3*4*5*6*7=5040
ActionScript
package {
import flash.display.Sprite;
public class SumAndProduct extends Sprite
{
public function SumAndProduct()
{
var arr:Array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
var sum:int = 0;
var prod:int = 1;
for (var i:int = 0; i < arr.length; i++)
{
sum += arr[i];
prod *= arr[i];
}
trace("Sum: " + sum); // 15
trace("Product: " + prod); // 120
}
}
}
Ada
type Int_Array is array(Integer range <>) of Integer;
array : Int_Array := (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
Sum : Integer := 0;
for I in array'range loop
Sum := Sum + array(I);
end loop;
Define the product function
function Product(Item : Int_Array) return Integer is
Prod : Integer := 1;
begin
for I in Item'range loop
Prod := Prod * Item(I);
end loop;
return Prod;
end Product;
This function will raise the predefined exception Constraint_Error if the product overflows the values represented by type Integer
Aime
void
compute(integer &s, integer &p, list l)
{
integer v;
s = 0;
p = 1;
for (, v in l) {
s += v;
p *= v;
}
}
integer
main(void)
{
integer sum, product;
compute(sum, product, list(2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19));
o_form("~\n~\n", sum, product);
return 0;
}
- Output:
77 9699690
ALGOL 68
main:(
INT default upb := 3;
MODE INTARRAY = [default upb]INT;
INTARRAY array = (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
INT sum := 0;
FOR i FROM LWB array TO UPB array DO
sum +:= array[i]
OD;
# Define the product function #
PROC int product = (INTARRAY item)INT:
(
INT prod :=1;
FOR i FROM LWB item TO UPB item DO
prod *:= item[i]
OD;
prod
) # int product # ;
printf(($" Sum: "g(0)$,sum,$", Product:"g(0)";"l$,int product(array)))
)
- Output:
Sum: 55, Product:3628800;
ALGOL W
begin
% computes the sum and product of intArray %
% the results are returned in sum and product %
% the bounds of the array must be specified in lb and ub %
procedure sumAndProduct( integer array intArray ( * )
; integer value lb, ub
; integer result sum, product
) ;
begin
sum := 0;
product := 1;
for i := lb until ub
do begin
sum := sum + intArray( i );
product := product * intArray( i );
end for_i ;
end sumAndProduct ;
% test the sumAndProduct procedure %
begin
integer array v ( 1 :: 10 );
integer sum, product;
for i := 1 until 10 do v( i ) := i;
sumAndProduct( v, 1, 10, sum, product );
write( sum, product );
end
end.
- Output:
55 3628800
APL
sum ← +/ ⍝ sum (+) over (/) an array
prod ← ×/ ⍝ product (×) over (/) an array
a ← 1 2 3 4 5 ⍝ assign a literal array to variable 'a'
sum a ⍝ or simply: +/a
15
prod a ⍝ or simply: ×/a
120
What follows ⍝ is a comment and / is usually known as reduce in APL. The use of the sum and prod functions is not necessary and was added only to please people baffled by the extreme conciseness of using APL symbols.
using the pair (⍮) primitive function
⎕ ← (+/ ⍮ ×/) 1 2 3 4 5
15 120
Spaces are optional except as separators between array elements.
AppleScript
set array to {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
set sum to 0
set product to 1
repeat with i in array
set sum to sum + i
set product to product * i
end repeat
Condensed version of above, which also prints the results :
set {array, sum, product} to {{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, 0, 1}
repeat with i in array
set {sum, product} to {sum + i, product * i}
end repeat
return sum & " , " & product as string
- Output:
"15 , 120"
Or, using an AppleScript implementation of fold/reduce:
on summed(a, b)
a + b
end summed
on product(a, b)
a * b
end product
-- TEST -----------------------------------------------------------------------
on run
set xs to enumFromTo(1, 10)
{xs, ¬
{sum:foldl(summed, 0, xs)}, ¬
{product:foldl(product, 1, xs)}}
--> {{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}, {sum:55}, {product:3628800}}
end run
-- GENERIC FUNCTIONS ----------------------------------------------------------
-- enumFromTo :: Int -> Int -> [Int]
on enumFromTo(m, n)
if n < m then
set d to -1
else
set d to 1
end if
set lst to {}
repeat with i from m to n by d
set end of lst to i
end repeat
return lst
end enumFromTo
-- foldl :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> [b] -> a
on foldl(f, startValue, xs)
tell mReturn(f)
set v to startValue
set lng to length of xs
repeat with i from 1 to lng
set v to |λ|(v, item i of xs, i, xs)
end repeat
return v
end tell
end foldl
-- Lift 2nd class handler function into 1st class script wrapper
-- mReturn :: Handler -> Script
on mReturn(f)
if class of f is script then
f
else
script
property |λ| : f
end script
end if
end mReturn
- Output:
{{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}, {sum:55}, {product:3628800}}
Arturo
arr: 1..10
print ["Sum =" sum arr]
print ["Product =" product arr]
- Output:
Sum = 55 Product = 3628800
Asymptote
int[] matriz = {1,2,3,4,5};
int suma = 0, prod = 1;
for (int p : matriz) {
suma += p;
prod *= p;
}
write("Sum = ", suma);
write("Product = ", prod);
- Output:
Sum = 15 Product = 120
AutoHotkey
numbers = 1,2,3,4,5
product := 1
loop, parse, numbers, `,
{
sum += A_LoopField
product *= A_LoopField
}
msgbox, sum = %sum%`nproduct = %product%
AWK
For array input, it is easiest to "deserialize" it from a string with the split() function.
$ awk 'func sum(s){split(s,a);r=0;for(i in a)r+=a[i];return r}{print sum($0)}'
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
55
$ awk 'func prod(s){split(s,a);r=1;for(i in a)r*=a[i];return r}{print prod($0)}'
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
3628800
Babel
main: { [2 3 5 7 11 13] sp }
sum! : { <- 0 -> { + } eachar }
product!: { <- 1 -> { * } eachar }
sp!:
{ dup
sum %d cr <<
product %d cr << }
Result:
41
30030
Perhaps better Babel:
main:
{ [2 3 5 7 11 13]
ar2ls dup cp
<- sum_stack ->
prod_stack
%d cr <<
%d cr << }
sum_stack:
{ { give
{ + }
{ depth 1 > }
do_while } nest }
prod_stack:
{ { give
{ * }
{ depth 1 > }
do_while } nest }
The nest operator creates a kind of argument-passing context - it saves whatever is on Top-of-Stack (TOS), saves the old stack, clears the stack and places the saved TOS on the new, cleared stack. This permits a section to monopolize the stack. At the end of the nest context, whatever is on TOS will be "passed back" to the original stack which will be restored.
The depth operator returns the current depth of the stack.
BASIC
dim array(5) as integer = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }
dim sum as integer = 0
dim prod as integer = 1
for index as integer = lbound(array) to ubound(array)
sum += array(index)
prod *= array(index)
next
Applesoft BASIC
10 N = 5
20 S = 0:P = 1: DATA 1,2,3,4,5
30 N = N - 1: DIM A(N)
40 FOR I = 0 TO N
50 READ A(I): NEXT
60 FOR I = 0 TO N
70 S = S + A(I):P = P * A(I)
80 NEXT
90 PRINT "SUM="S,"PRODUCT="P
Atari BASIC
Almost the same code works in Atari BASIC, but you can't READ directly into arrays, leave the variable off a NEXT, or concatenate values in PRINT without semicolons between them:
10 N = 5
20 S = 0:P = 1: DATA 1,2,3,4,5
30 N = N - 1: DIM A(N)
40 FOR I = 0 TO N
50 READ X:A(I) = X: NEXT I
60 FOR I = 0 TO N
70 S = S + A(I):P = P * A(I)
80 NEXT I
90 PRINT "SUM=";S,"PRODUCT=";P
BaCon
'--- set some values into the array
DECLARE a[10] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 } TYPE int
sum = 0
product = 1
i = 1
WHILE a[i] <= 10
sum = sum + a[i]
product = product * a[i]
INCR i
WEND
PRINT "The sum is ",sum
PRINT "The product is ",product
BBC BASIC
DIM array%(5)
array%() = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
PRINT "Sum of array elements = " ; SUM(array%())
product% = 1
FOR I% = 0 TO DIM(array%(),1)
product% *= array%(I%)
NEXT
PRINT "Product of array elements = " ; product%
IS-BASIC
100 RANDOMIZE
110 LET N=5
120 NUMERIC A(1 TO N)
130 LET SUM=0:LET PROD=1
140 FOR I=1 TO N
150 LET A(I)=RND(9)+1
160 PRINT A(I);
170 NEXT
180 PRINT
190 FOR I=1 TO N
200 LET SUM=SUM+A(I):LET PROD=PROD*A(I)
210 NEXT
220 PRINT "Sum =";SUM,"Product =";PROD
BASIC256
arraybase 1
dim array(5)
array[1] = 1
array[2] = 2
array[3] = 3
array[4] = 4
array[5] = 5
sum = 0
prod = 1
for index = 1 to array[?]
sum += array[index]
prod *= array[index]
next index
print "The sum is "; sum #15
print "and the product is "; prod #120
end
bc
a[0] = 3.0
a[1] = 1
a[2] = 4.0
a[3] = 1.0
a[4] = 5
a[5] = 9.00
n = 6
p = 1
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
s += a[i]
p *= a[i]
}
"Sum: "; s
"Product: "; p
Befunge
The program first reads the number of elements in the array, then the elements themselves (each number on a separate line) and calculates their sum.
0 &>: #v_ $. @
>1- \ & + \v
^ <
BQN
Getting the sum and product as a two element array fits nicely within a tacit fork pattern.
- Sum
+´
- Paired with
⋈
- Product
×´
SumProd ← +´⋈×´
+´⋈×´
SumProd 1‿2‿3‿4‿5
⟨ 15 120 ⟩
Bracmat
( ( sumprod
= sum prod num
. 0:?sum
& 1:?prod
& ( !arg
: ?
( #%?num ?
& !num+!sum:?sum
& !num*!prod:?prod
& ~
)
| (!sum.!prod)
)
)
& out$sumprod$(2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19)
);
- Output:
77.9699690
C
/* using pointer arithmetic (because we can, I guess) */
int arg[] = { 1,2,3,4,5 };
int arg_length = sizeof(arg)/sizeof(arg[0]);
int *end = arg+arg_length;
int sum = 0, prod = 1;
int *p;
for (p = arg; p!=end; ++p) {
sum += *p;
prod *= *p;
}
C#
int sum = 0, prod = 1;
int[] arg = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
foreach (int value in arg) {
sum += value;
prod *= value;
}
Alternative using Linq (C# 3)
int[] arg = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
int sum = arg.Sum();
int prod = arg.Aggregate((runningProduct, nextFactor) => runningProduct * nextFactor);
C++
#include <numeric>
#include <functional>
int arg[] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
int sum = std::accumulate(arg, arg+5, 0, std::plus<int>());
// or just
// std::accumulate(arg, arg + 5, 0);
// since plus() is the default functor for accumulate
int prod = std::accumulate(arg, arg+5, 1, std::multiplies<int>());
Template alternative:
// this would be more elegant using STL collections
template <typename T> T sum (const T *array, const unsigned n)
{
T accum = 0;
for (unsigned i=0; i<n; i++)
accum += array[i];
return accum;
}
template <typename T> T prod (const T *array, const unsigned n)
{
T accum = 1;
for (unsigned i=0; i<n; i++)
accum *= array[i];
return accum;
}
#include <iostream>
using std::cout;
using std::endl;
int main ()
{
int aint[] = {1, 2, 3};
cout << sum(aint,3) << " " << prod(aint, 3) << endl;
float aflo[] = {1.1, 2.02, 3.003, 4.0004};
cout << sum(aflo,4) << " " << prod(aflo,4) << endl;
return 0;
}
Chef
Sum and Product of Numbers as a Piece of Cake.
This recipe sums N given numbers.
Ingredients.
1 N
0 sum
1 product
1 number
Method.
Put sum into 1st mixing bowl.
Put product into 2nd mixing bowl.
Take N from refrigerator.
Chop N.
Take number from refrigerator.
Add number into 1st mixing bowl.
Combine number into 2nd mixing bowl.
Chop N until choped.
Pour contents of 2nd mixing bowl into the baking dish.
Pour contents of 1st mixing bowl into the baking dish.
Serves 1.
Clean
array = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
Sum = sum [x \\ x <-: array]
Prod = foldl (*) 1 [x \\ x <-: array]
Clojure
(defn sum [vals] (reduce + vals))
(defn product [vals] (reduce * vals))
CLU
sum_and_product = proc (a: array[int]) returns (int,int) signals (overflow)
sum: int := 0
prod: int := 1
for i: int in array[int]$elements(a) do
sum := sum + i
prod := prod * i
end resignal overflow
return(sum, prod)
end sum_and_product
start_up = proc ()
arr: array[int] := array[int]$[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
sum, prod: int := sum_and_product(arr)
po: stream := stream$primary_output()
stream$putl(po, "Sum = " || int$unparse(sum))
stream$putl(po, "Product = " || int$unparse(prod))
end start_up
- Output:
Sum = 55 Product = 3628800
COBOL
IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
PROGRAM-ID. array-sum-and-product.
DATA DIVISION.
WORKING-STORAGE SECTION.
78 Array-Size VALUE 10.
01 array-area VALUE "01020304050607080910".
03 array PIC 99 OCCURS Array-Size TIMES.
01 array-sum PIC 9(8).
01 array-product PIC 9(10) VALUE 1.
01 i PIC 99.
PROCEDURE DIVISION.
PERFORM VARYING i FROM 1 BY 1 UNTIL Array-Size < i
ADD array (i) TO array-sum
MULTIPLY array (i) BY array-product
END-PERFORM
DISPLAY "Sum: " array-sum
DISPLAY "Product: " array-product
GOBACK
.
CoffeeScript
sum = (array) ->
array.reduce (x, y) -> x + y
product = (array) ->
array.reduce (x, y) -> x * y
ColdFusion
Sum of an Array,
<cfset Variables.myArray = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]>
<cfoutput>#ArraySum(Variables.myArray)#</cfoutput>
Product of an Array,
<cfset Variables.myArray = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]>
<cfset Variables.Product = 1>
<cfloop array="#Variables.myArray#" index="i">
<cfset Variables.Product *= i>
</cfloop>
<cfoutput>#Variables.Product#</cfoutput>
Common Lisp
(let ((data #(1 2 3 4 5))) ; the array
(values (reduce #'+ data) ; sum
(reduce #'* data))) ; product
The loop macro also has support for sums.
(loop for i in '(1 2 3 4 5) sum i)
Crystal
Declarative
def sum_product(a)
{ a.sum(), a.product() }
end
Imperative
def sum_product_imperative(a)
sum, product = 0, 1
a.each do |e|
sum += e
product *= e
end
{sum, product}
end
require "benchmark"
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report("declarative") { sum_product [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] }
x.report("imperative") { sum_product_imperative [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] }
end
declarative 8.1M (123.45ns) (± 2.99%) 65 B/op 1.30× slower imperative 10.57M ( 94.61ns) (± 2.96%) 65 B/op fastest
D
import std.stdio;
void main() {
immutable array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
int sum = 0;
int prod = 1;
foreach (x; array) {
sum += x;
prod *= x;
}
writeln("Sum: ", sum);
writeln("Product: ", prod);
}
- Output:
Sum: 15 Product: 120
Compute sum and product of array in one pass (same output):
import std.stdio, std.algorithm, std.typecons;
void main() {
immutable array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// Results are stored in a 2-tuple
immutable r = reduce!(q{a + b}, q{a * b})(tuple(0, 1), array);
writeln("Sum: ", r[0]);
writeln("Product: ", r[1]);
}
dc
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 0ss1sp[dls+sslp*spz0!=a]dsax[Sum: ]Plsp[Product: ]Plpp
Sum: 49
Product: 135135
Delphi
program SumAndProductOfArray;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
var
i: integer;
lIntArray: array [1 .. 5] of integer = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5);
lSum: integer = 0;
lProduct: integer = 1;
begin
for i := 1 to length(lIntArray) do
begin
Inc(lSum, lIntArray[i]);
lProduct := lProduct * lIntArray[i]
end;
Write('Sum: ');
Writeln(lSum);
Write('Product: ');
Writeln(lProduct);
end.
E
pragma.enable("accumulator")
accum 0 for x in [1,2,3,4,5] { _ + x }
accum 1 for x in [1,2,3,4,5] { _ * x }
Eiffel
class
APPLICATION
create
make
feature {NONE}
make
local
test: ARRAY [INTEGER]
do
create test.make_empty
test := <<5, 1, 9, 7>>
io.put_string ("Sum: " + sum (test).out)
io.new_line
io.put_string ("Product: " + product (test).out)
end
sum (ar: ARRAY [INTEGER]): INTEGER
-- Sum of the items of the array 'ar'.
do
across
ar.lower |..| ar.upper as c
loop
Result := Result + ar [c.item]
end
end
product (ar: ARRAY [INTEGER]): INTEGER
-- Product of the items of the array 'ar'.
do
Result := 1
across
ar.lower |..| ar.upper as c
loop
Result := Result * ar [c.item]
end
end
end
- Output:
Sum of the elements of the array: 30 Product of the elements of the array: 3840
Elena
ELENA 5.0:
import system'routines;
import extensions;
public program()
{
var list := new int[]{1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
var sum := list.summarize(new Integer());
var product := list.accumulate(new Integer(1), (var,val => var * val));
}
Elixir
When an accumulator is omitted, the first element of the collection is used as the initial value of acc.
iex(26)> Enum.reduce([1,2,3,4,5], 0, fn x,acc -> x+acc end)
15
iex(27)> Enum.reduce([1,2,3,4,5], 1, fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
120
iex(28)> Enum.reduce([1,2,3,4,5], fn x,acc -> x+acc end)
15
iex(29)> Enum.reduce([1,2,3,4,5], fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
120
iex(30)> Enum.reduce([], 0, fn x,acc -> x+acc end)
0
iex(31)> Enum.reduce([], 1, fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
1
iex(32)> Enum.reduce([], fn x,acc -> x+acc end)
** (Enum.EmptyError) empty error
(elixir) lib/enum.ex:1287: Enum.reduce/2
iex(32)> Enum.reduce([], fn x,acc -> x*acc end)
** (Enum.EmptyError) empty error
(elixir) lib/enum.ex:1287: Enum.reduce/2
The function with sum
Enum.sum([1,2,3,4,5]) #=> 15
Emacs Lisp
(let ((array [1 2 3 4 5]))
(apply #'+ (append array nil))
(apply #'* (append array nil)))
(require 'cl-lib)
(let ((array [1 2 3 4 5]))
(cl-reduce #'+ array)
(cl-reduce #'* array))
(require 'seq)
(let ((array [1 2 3 4 5]))
(seq-reduce #'+ array 0)
(seq-reduce #'* array 1))
Erlang
Using the standard libraries:
% create the list:
L = lists:seq(1, 10).
% and compute its sum:
S = lists:sum(L).
P = lists:foldl(fun (X, P) -> X * P end, 1, L).
To compute sum and products in one pass:
{Prod,Sum} = lists:foldl(fun (X, {P,S}) -> {P*X,S+X} end, {1,0}, lists:seq(1,10)).
Or defining our own versions:
-module(list_sum).
-export([sum_rec/1, sum_tail/1]).
% recursive definition:
sum_rec([]) ->
0;
sum_rec([Head|Tail]) ->
Head + sum_rec(Tail).
% tail-recursive definition:
sum_tail(L) ->
sum_tail(L, 0).
sum_tail([], Acc) ->
Acc;
sum_tail([Head|Tail], Acc) ->
sum_tail(Tail, Head + Acc).
Euphoria
sequence array
integer sum,prod
array = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }
sum = 0
prod = 1
for i = 1 to length(array) do
sum += array[i]
prod *= array[i]
end for
printf(1,"sum is %d\n",sum)
printf(1,"prod is %d\n",prod)
- Output:
sum is 15 prod is 120
F#
let numbers = [| 1..10 |]
let sum = numbers |> Array.sum
let product = numbers |> Array.reduce (*)
Factor
1 5 1 <range> [ sum . ] [ product . ] bi
15 120
{ 1 2 3 4 } [ sum ] [ product ] bi
10 24
sum and product are defined in the sequences vocabulary:
: sum ( seq -- n ) 0 [ + ] reduce ;
: product ( seq -- n ) 1 [ * ] reduce ;
FALSE
Strictly speaking, there are no arrays in FALSE. However, a number of elements on the stack could be considered an array. The implementation below assumes the length of the array on top of the stack, and the actual items below it. Note that this implementation does remove the "array" from the stack, so in case the original values need to be retained, a copy should be provided before executing this logic.
1 2 3 4 5 {input "array"}
5 {length of input}
0s: {sum}
1p: {product}
[$0=~][1-\$s;+s:p;*p:]#%
"Sum: "s;."
Product: "p;.
- Output:
Sum: 15 Product: 120
Fantom
class Main
{
public static Void main ()
{
Int[] array := (1..20).toList
// you can use a loop
Int sum := 0
array.each |Int n| { sum += n }
echo ("Sum of array is : $sum")
Int product := 1
array.each |Int n| { product *= n }
echo ("Product of array is : $product")
// or use 'reduce'
// 'reduce' takes a function,
// the first argument is the accumulated value
// and the second is the next item in the list
sum = array.reduce(0) |Obj r, Int v -> Obj|
{
return (Int)r + v
}
echo ("Sum of array : $sum")
product = array.reduce(1) |Obj r, Int v -> Obj|
{
return (Int)r * v
}
echo ("Product of array : $product")
}
}
Fermat
[a]:=[(1,1,2,3,5,8,13)];
!!Sigma<i=1,7>[a[i]];
!!Prod<i=1,7>[a[i]];
- Output:
33 3120
Forth
: third ( a b c -- a b c a ) 2 pick ;
: reduce ( xt n addr cnt -- n' ) \ where xt ( a b -- n )
cells bounds do i @ third execute cell +loop nip ;
create a 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ,
' + 0 a 5 reduce . \ 15
' * 1 a 5 reduce . \ 120
Fortran
In ISO Fortran 90 and later, use SUM and PRODUCT intrinsics:
integer, dimension(10) :: a = (/ (i, i=1, 10) /)
integer :: sresult, presult
sresult = sum(a)
presult = product(a)
FreeBASIC
' FB 1.05.0 Win64
Dim a(1 To 4) As Integer = {1, 4, 6, 3}
Dim As Integer i, sum = 0, prod = 1
For i = 1 To 4
sum += a(i)
prod *= a(i)
Next
Print "Sum ="; sum
Print "Product ="; prod
Print
Print "Press any key to quit"
Sleep
- Output:
Sum = 14 Product = 72
Frink
a = [1,2,3,5,7]
sum[a]
product[a]
Fōrmulæ
Fōrmulæ programs are not textual, visualization/edition of programs is done showing/manipulating structures but not text. Moreover, there can be multiple visual representations of the same program. Even though it is possible to have textual representation —i.e. XML, JSON— they are intended for storage and transfer purposes more than visualization and edition.
Programs in Fōrmulæ are created/edited online in its website, However they run on execution servers. By default remote servers are used, but they are limited in memory and processing power, since they are intended for demonstration and casual use. A local server can be downloaded and installed, it has no limitations (it runs in your own computer). Because of that, example programs can be fully visualized and edited, but some of them will not run if they require a moderate or heavy computation/memory resources, and no local server is being used.
In this page you can see the program(s) related to this task and their results.
Gambas
Click this link to run this code
Public Sub Main()
Dim iList As Integer[] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Dim iSum, iCount As Integer
Dim iPrd As Integer = 1
For iCount = 0 To iList.Max
iSum += iList[iCount]
iPrd *= iList[iCount]
Next
Print "The Sum =\t" & iSum
Print "The Product =\t" & iPrd
End
Output:
The Sum = 15 The Product = 120
GAP
v := [1 .. 8];
Sum(v);
# 36
Product(v);
# 40320
# You can sum or multiply the result of a function
Sum(v, n -> n^2);
# 204
Product(v, n -> 1/n);
# 1/40320
GFA Basic
DIM a%(10)
' put some values into the array
FOR i%=1 TO 10
a%(i%)=i%
NEXT i%
'
sum%=0
product%=1
FOR i%=1 TO 10
sum%=sum%+a%(i%)
product%=product%*a%(i%)
NEXT i%
'
PRINT "Sum is ";sum%
PRINT "Product is ";product%
Go
- Implementation
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
sum, prod := 0, 1
for _, x := range []int{1,2,5} {
sum += x
prod *= x
}
fmt.Println(sum, prod)
}
- Output:
8 10
- Library
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/gonum/floats"
)
var a = []float64{1, 2, 5}
func main() {
fmt.Println("Sum: ", floats.Sum(a))
fmt.Println("Product:", floats.Prod(a))
}
- Output:
Sum: 8 Product: 10
Groovy
Groovy adds a "sum()" method for collections, but not a "product()" method:
[1,2,3,4,5].sum()
However, for general purpose "reduction" or "folding" operations, Groovy does provide an "inject()" method for collections similar to "inject" in Ruby.
[1,2,3,4,5].inject(0) { sum, val -> sum + val }
[1,2,3,4,5].inject(1) { prod, val -> prod * val }
You can also combine these operations:
println ([1,2,3,4,5].inject([sum: 0, product: 1]) { result, value ->
[sum: result.sum + value, product: result.product * value]})
GW-BASIC
10 REM Create an array with some test data in it
20 DIM A(5)
30 FOR I = 1 TO 5: READ A(I): NEXT I
40 DATA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
50 REM Find the sum of elements in the array
60 S = 0
65 P = 1
70 FOR I = 1 TO 5
72 S = SUM + A(I)
75 P = P * A(I)
77 NEXT I
80 PRINT "The sum is "; S;
90 PRINT " and the product is "; P
Haskell
For lists, sum and product are already defined in the Prelude:
values = [1..10]
s = sum values -- the easy way
p = product values
s1 = foldl (+) 0 values -- the hard way
p1 = foldl (*) 1 values
To do the same for an array, just convert it lazily to a list:
import Data.Array
values = listArray (1,10) [1..10]
s = sum . elems $ values
p = product . elems $ values
Or perhaps:
import Data.Array (listArray, elems)
main :: IO ()
main = mapM_ print $ [sum, product] <*> [elems $ listArray (1, 10) [11 .. 20]]
- Output:
155 670442572800
HicEst
array = $ ! 1, 2, ..., LEN(array)
sum = SUM(array)
product = 1 ! no built-in product function in HicEst
DO i = 1, LEN(array)
product = product * array(i)
ENDDO
WRITE(ClipBoard, Name) n, sum, product ! n=100; sum=5050; product=9.33262154E157;
Icon and Unicon
The program below prints the sum and product of the arguments to the program.
IDL
array = [3,6,8]
print,total(array)
print,product(array)
Inform 7
Sum And Product is a room.
To decide which number is the sum of (N - number) and (M - number) (this is summing):
decide on N + M.
To decide which number is the product of (N - number) and (M - number) (this is production):
decide on N * M.
When play begins:
let L be {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
say "List: [L in brace notation], sum = [summing reduction of L], product = [production reduction of L].";
end the story.
J
Simple approach:
(+/,*/) 2 3 5 7
17 210
Longer exposition:
sum =: +/
product =: */
For example:
sum 1 3 5 7 9 11 13
49
product 1 3 5 7 9 11 13
135135
a=: 3 10 ?@$ 100 NB. random array
a
90 47 58 29 22 32 55 5 55 73
58 50 40 5 69 46 34 40 46 84
29 8 75 97 24 40 21 82 77 9
NB. on a table, each row is an item to be summed:
sum a
177 105 173 131 115 118 110 127 178 166
product a
151380 18800 174000 14065 36432 58880 39270 16400 194810 55188
NB. but we can tell J to sum everything within each row, instead:
sum"1 a
466 472 462
product"1 a
5.53041e15 9.67411e15 1.93356e15
Java
public class SumProd
{
public static void main(final String[] args)
{
int sum = 0;
int prod = 1;
int[] arg = {1,2,3,4,5};
for (int i : arg)
{
sum += i;
prod *= i;
}
}
}
import java.util.Arrays;
public class SumProd
{
public static void main(final String[] args)
{
int[] arg = {1,2,3,4,5};
System.out.printf("sum = %d\n", Arrays.stream(arg).sum());
System.out.printf("sum = %d\n", Arrays.stream(arg).reduce(0, (a, b) -> a + b));
System.out.printf("product = %d\n", Arrays.stream(arg).reduce(1, (a, b) -> a * b));
}
}
- Output:
sum = 15 sum = 15 product = 120
JavaScript
ES5
var array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5],
sum = 0,
prod = 1,
i;
for (i = 0; i < array.length; i += 1) {
sum += array[i];
prod *= array[i];
}
alert(sum + ' ' + prod);
Where supported, the reduce method can also be used:
var array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5],
sum = array.reduce(function (a, b) {
return a + b;
}, 0),
prod = array.reduce(function (a, b) {
return a * b;
}, 1);
alert(sum + ' ' + prod);
ES6
(() => {
'use strict';
// sum :: (Num a) => [a] -> a
const sum = xs => xs.reduce((a, x) => a + x, 0);
// product :: (Num a) => [a] -> a
const product = xs => xs.reduce((a, x) => a * x, 1);
// TEST
// show :: a -> String
const show = x => JSON.stringify(x, null, 2);
return show(
[sum, product]
.map(f => f([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]))
);
})();
- Output:
[ 55, 3628800 ]
jq
The builtin filter, add/0, computes the sum of an array:
[4,6,8] | add
# => 18
[range(2;5) * 2] | add
# => 18
An efficient companion filter for computing the product of the items in an array can be defined as follows:
def prod: reduce .[] as $i (1; . * $i);
Examples:
[4,6,8] | prod
# => 192
10!
[range(1;11)] | prod
# =>3628800
Julia
julia> sum([4,6,8])
18
julia> +((1:10)...)
55
julia +([1,2,3]...)
6
julia> prod([4,6,8])
192
K
sum: {+/}x
product: {*/}x
a: 1 3 5 7 9 11 13
sum a
49
product a
135135
It is easy to see the relationship of K to J here.
Kotlin
// version 1.1.2
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val a = intArrayOf(1, 5, 8, 11, 15)
println("Array contains : ${a.contentToString()}")
val sum = a.sum()
println("Sum is $sum")
val product = a.fold(1) { acc, i -> acc * i }
println("Product is $product")
}
- Output:
Array contains : [1, 5, 8, 11, 15] Sum is 40 Product is 6600
Lambdatalk
{A.serie start end [step]} creates a sequence from start to end with optional step
{A.new words} creates an array from a sequence of words
{A.toS array} creates a sequence from the items of an array
{long_add x y} returns the sum of two integers of any size
{long_mult x y} returns the product of two integers of any size
{def A {A.new {S.serie 1 10}}} -> [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
{+ {A.toS {A}}} -> 55
{* {A.toS {A}}} -> 3628800
{def B {A.new {S.serie 1 100}}} -> [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,...,95,96,97,98,99,100]
{S.reduce long_add {A.toS {B}}} -> 5050
{S.reduce long_mult {A.toS {B}}} ->
9332621544394415268169923885626670049071596826438162146859296389521759999322991
5608941463976156518286253697920827223758251185210916864000000000000000000000000
Lang5
4 iota 1 + dup
'+ reduce
'* reduce
langur
val .arr = series 19
writeln " array: ", .arr
writeln " sum: ", fold f .x + .y, .arr
writeln "product: ", fold f .x x .y, .arr
val .arr = series 19
writeln " array: ", .arr
writeln " sum: ", fold f{+}, .arr
writeln "product: ", fold f{x}, .arr
- Output:
array: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19] sum: 190 product: 121645100408832000
Lasso
local(x = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10))
// sum of array elements
'Sum: '
with n in #x
sum #n
'\r'
// product of arrray elements
'Product: '
local(product = 1)
with n in #x do => { #product *= #n }
#product
- Output:
Sum: 55 Product: 3628800
Liberty BASIC
Dim array(19)
For i = 0 To 19
array(i) = Int(Rnd(1) * 20)
Next i
'product must first equal one or you will get 0 as the product
product = 1
For i = 0 To 19
sum = (sum + array(i))
product = (product * array(i))
next i
Print "Sum is " + str$(sum)
Print "Product is " + str$(product)
Lingo
on sum (intList)
res = 0
repeat with v in intList
res = res + v
end repeat
return res
end
on product (intList)
res = 1
repeat with v in intList
res = res * v
end repeat
return res
end
LiveCode
//sum
put "1,2,3,4" into nums
split nums using comma
answer sum(nums)
// product
local prodNums
repeat for each element n in nums
if prodNums is empty then
put n into prodNums
else
multiply prodnums by n
end if
end repeat
answer prodnums
Logo
print apply "sum arraytolist {1 2 3 4 5}
print apply "product arraytolist {1 2 3 4 5}
LOLCODE
HAI 1.2
I HAS A Nums ITZ A BUKKIT
Nums HAS A Length ITZ 0
Nums HAS A SRS Nums'Z Length ITZ 1
Nums'Z Length R SUM OF Nums'Z Length AN 1
Nums HAS A SRS Nums'Z Length ITZ 2
Nums'Z Length R SUM OF Nums'Z Length AN 1
Nums HAS A SRS Nums'Z Length ITZ 3
Nums'Z Length R SUM OF Nums'Z Length AN 1
Nums HAS A SRS Nums'Z Length ITZ 5
Nums'Z Length R SUM OF Nums'Z Length AN 1
Nums HAS A SRS Nums'Z Length ITZ 7
Nums'Z Length R SUM OF Nums'Z Length AN 1
I HAS A Added ITZ 0
I HAS A Timesed ITZ 1
I HAS A Num
IM IN YR Loop UPPIN YR Index WILE DIFFRINT Index AN Nums'Z Length
Num R Nums'Z SRS Index
Added R SUM OF Added AN Num
Timesed R PRODUKT OF Timesed AN Num
IM OUTTA YR Loop
VISIBLE "Sum = " !
VISIBLE Added
VISIBLE "Product = " !
VISIBLE Timesed
KTHXBYE
- Output:
Sum = 18 Product = 210
Lua
function sumf(a, ...) return a and a + sumf(...) or 0 end
function sumt(t) return sumf(unpack(t)) end
function prodf(a, ...) return a and a * prodf(...) or 1 end
function prodt(t) return prodf(unpack(t)) end
print(sumt{1, 2, 3, 4, 5})
print(prodt{1, 2, 3, 4, 5})
function table.sum(arr, length)
--same as if <> then <> else <>
return length == 1 and arr[1] or arr[length] + table.sum(arr, length -1)
end
function table.product(arr, length)
return length == 1 and arr[1] or arr[length] * table.product(arr, length -1)
end
t = {1,2,3}
print(table.sum(t,#t))
print(table.product(t,3))
Lucid
prints a running sum and product of sequence 1,2,3...
[%sum,product%]
where
x = 1 fby x + 1;
sum = 0 fby sum + x;
product = 1 fby product * x
end
M2000 Interpreter
Module Checkit {
a = (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10)
print a#sum() = 55
sum = lambda->{push number+number}
product = lambda->{Push number*number}
print a#fold(lambda->{Push number*number}, 1), a#fold(lambda->{push number+number},0)
dim a(2,2) = 5
Print a()#sum() = 20
}
checkit
Maple
a := Array([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
add(a);
mul(a);
Mathematica/Wolfram Language
Mathematica provides many ways of doing the sum of an array (any kind of numbers or symbols):
a = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
Plus @@ a
Apply[Plus, a]
Total[a]
Total@a
a // Total
Sum[a[[i]], {i, 1, Length[a]}]
Sum[i, {i, a}]
all give 15. For product we also have a couple of choices:
a = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
Times @@ a
Apply[Times, a]
Product[a[[i]], {i, 1, Length[a]}]
Product[i, {i, a}]
all give 120.
MATLAB
These two function are built into MATLAB as the "sum(array)" and "prod(array)" functions.
Sample Usage:
>> array = [1 2 3;4 5 6;7 8 9]
array =
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
>> sum(array,1)
ans =
12 15 18
>> sum(array,2)
ans =
6
15
24
>> prod(array,1)
ans =
28 80 162
>> prod(array,2)
ans =
6
120
504
Maxima
lreduce("+", [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]);
36
lreduce("*", [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]);
40320
MAXScript
arr = #(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
sum = 0
for i in arr do sum += i
product = 1
for i in arr do product *= i
min
(1 2 3 4 5) ((sum) (1 '* reduce)) cleave
"Sum: $1\nProduct: $2" get-stack % puts
- Output:
Sum: 15 Product: 120
МК-61/52
^ 1 ПE + П0 КИП0 x#0 18 ^ ИПD
+ ПD <-> ИПE * ПE БП 05 С/П
Instruction: РX - array length, Р1:РC - array, РD and РE - sum and product of an array.
Modula-3
MODULE Sumprod EXPORTS Main;
FROM IO IMPORT Put;
FROM Fmt IMPORT Int;
VAR a := ARRAY [1..5] OF INTEGER {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
VAR sum: INTEGER := 0;
VAR prod: INTEGER := 1;
BEGIN
FOR i := FIRST(a) TO LAST(a) DO
INC(sum, a[i]);
prod := prod * a[i];
END;
Put("Sum of array: " & Int(sum) & "\n");
Put("Product of array: " & Int(prod) & "\n");
END Sumprod.
- Output:
Sum of array: 15 Product of array: 120
MUMPS
SUMPROD(A)
;Compute the sum and product of the numbers in the array A
NEW SUM,PROD,POS
;SUM is the running sum,
;PROD is the running product,
;POS is the position within the array A
SET SUM=0,PROD=1,POS=""
FOR SET POS=$ORDER(A(POS)) Q:POS="" SET SUM=SUM+A(POS),PROD=PROD*A(POS)
WRITE !,"The sum of the array is "_SUM
WRITE !,"The product of the array is "_PROD
KILL SUM,PROD,POS
QUIT
Example:
USER>SET C(-1)=2,C("A")=3,C(42)=1,C(0)=7 USER>D SUMPROD^ROSETTA(.C) The sum of the array is 13 The product of the array is 42
Note - the string "A" converts to 0 when doing mathematical operations.
USER>SET C(-1)=2,C("A")="3H",C(42)=.1,C(0)=7.0,C("B")="A" USER>D SUMPROD^ROSETTA(.C) The sum of the array is 12.1 The product of the array is 0
Nemerle
As mentioned for some of the other functional languages, it seems more natural to work with lists in Nemerle, but as the task specifies working on an array, this solution will work on either.
using System;
using System.Console;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using Nemerle.Collections;
module SumProd
{
Sum[T] (nums : T) : int
where T : IEnumerable[int]
{
nums.FoldLeft(0, _+_)
}
Product[T] (nums : T) : int
where T : IEnumerable[int]
{
nums.FoldLeft(1, _*_)
}
Main() : void
{
def arr = array[1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
def lis = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
def suml = Sum(lis);
def proda = Product(arr);
WriteLine("Sum is: {0}\tProduct is: {1}", suml, proda);
}
}
NetRexx
/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols binary
harry = [long 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
sum = long 0
product = long 1
entries = Rexx ''
loop n_ = int 0 to harry.length - 1
nxt = harry[n_]
entries = entries nxt
sum = sum + nxt
product = product * nxt
end n_
entries = entries.strip
say 'Sum and product of' entries.changestr(' ', ',')':'
say ' Sum:' sum
say ' Product:' product
return
- Output:
Sum and product of 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10: Sum: 55 Product: 3628800
NewLISP
(setq a '(1 2 3 4 5))
(apply + a)
(apply * a)
Nial
Nial being an array language, what applies to individual elements are extended to cover array operations by default strand notation
+ 1 2 3
= 6
* 1 2 3
= 6
array notation
+ [1,2,3]
grouped notation
(* 1 2 3)
= 6
* (1 2 3)
= 6
(All these notations are equivalent)
Nim
var xs = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
var sum, product: int
product = 1
for x in xs:
sum += x
product *= x
Or functionally:
import sequtils
let
xs = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
sum = xs.foldl(a + b)
product = xs.foldl(a * b)
Or using a math function:
import math
let numbers = [1, 5, 4]
let total = sum(numbers)
var product = 1
for n in numbers:
product *= n
Objeck
sum := 0;
prod := 1;
arg := [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
each(i : arg) {
sum += arg[i];
prod *= arg[i];
};
Objective-C
Sum:
- (float) sum:(NSMutableArray *)array
{
int i, sum, value;
sum = 0;
value = 0;
for (i = 0; i < [array count]; i++) {
value = [[array objectAtIndex: i] intValue];
sum += value;
}
return suml;
}
Product:
- (float) prod:(NSMutableArray *)array
{
int i, prod, value;
prod = 0;
value = 0;
for (i = 0; i < [array count]; i++) {
value = [[array objectAtIndex: i] intValue];
prod *= value;
}
return suml;
}
OCaml
Arrays
(* ints *)
let a = [| 1; 2; 3; 4; 5 |];;
Array.fold_left (+) 0 a;;
Array.fold_left ( * ) 1 a;;
(* floats *)
let a = [| 1.0; 2.0; 3.0; 4.0; 5.0 |];;
Array.fold_left (+.) 0.0 a;;
Array.fold_left ( *.) 1.0 a;;
Lists
(* ints *)
let x = [1; 2; 3; 4; 5];;
List.fold_left (+) 0 x;;
List.fold_left ( * ) 1 x;;
(* floats *)
let x = [1.0; 2.0; 3.0; 4.0; 5.0];;
List.fold_left (+.) 0.0 x;;
List.fold_left ( *.) 1.0 x;;
Octave
a = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ];
b = [ 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 ];
vsum = a + b;
vprod = a .* b;
Oforth
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ] sum println
[1, 3, 5, 7, 9 ] prod println
- Output:
15 945
Ol
(print (fold + 0 '(1 2 3 4 5)))
(print (fold * 1 '(1 2 3 4 5)))
ooRexx
a=.my_array~new(20)
do i=1 To 20
a[i]=i
End
s=a~makestring((LINE),',')
Say s
Say ' sum='a~sum
Say 'product='a~prod
::class my_array subclass array
::method sum
sum=0
Do i=1 To self~dimension(1)
sum+=self[i]
End
Return sum
::method prod
Numeric Digits 30
prod=1
Do i=1 To self~dimension(1)
prod*=self[i]
End
Return prod
- Output:
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20 sum=210 product=2432902008176640000
Oz
Calculations like this are typically done on lists, not on arrays:
declare
Xs = [1 2 3 4 5]
Sum = {FoldL Xs Number.'+' 0}
Product = {FoldL Xs Number.'*' 1}
in
{Show Sum}
{Show Product}
If you are actually working with arrays, a more imperative approach seems natural:
declare
Arr = {Array.new 1 3 0}
Sum = {NewCell 0}
in
Arr.1 := 1
Arr.2 := 2
Arr.3 := 3
for I in {Array.low Arr}..{Array.high Arr} do
Sum := @Sum + Arr.I
end
{Show @Sum}
PARI/GP
These are built in to GP: vecsum
and factorback
(the latter can also take factorization matrices, thus the name). They could be coded like so:
vecsum1(v)={
sum(i=1,#v,v[i])
};
vecprod(v)={
prod(i=1,#v,v[i])
};
In 2.10.0 the function vecprod
was introduced as well. Like factorback
it gives the product of the elements of an array but unlike factorback
it doesn't handle factorization matrices.
Pascal
See Delphi
Perl
my @list = ( 1, 2, 3 );
my ( $sum, $prod ) = ( 0, 1 );
$sum += $_ foreach @list;
$prod *= $_ foreach @list;
Or using the List::Util module:
use List::Util qw/sum0 product/;
my @list = (1..9);
say "Sum: ", sum0(@list); # sum0 returns 0 for an empty list
say "Product: ", product(@list);
- Output:
Sum: 45 Product: 362880
Phix
sequence s = {1,2,3,4,5} printf(1,"sum is %d\n",sum(s)) printf(1,"prod is %d\n",product(s))
- Output:
sum is 15 prod is 120
Phixmonti
include ..\Utilitys.pmt
( 1 2 3 4 5 )
dup sum "sum is " print print nl
1 swap
len for
get rot * swap
endfor
drop
"mult is " print print nl
PHP
$array = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9);
echo array_sum($array);
echo array_product($array);
Picat
go =>
L = 1..10,
println(sum=sum(L)),
println(prod=prod(L)),
nl,
println(sum_reduce=reduce(+,L)),
println(prod_reduce=reduce(*,L)),
println(sum_reduce=reduce(+,L,0)),
println(prod_reduce=reduce(*,L,1)),
nl,
println(sum_fold=fold(+,0,L)),
println(prod_fold=fold(*,1,L)),
nl,
println(sum_rec=sum_rec(L)),
println(prod_rec=prod_rec(L)),
nl.
% recursive variants
sum_rec(List) = Sum =>
sum_rec(List,0,Sum).
sum_rec([],Sum0,Sum) =>
Sum=Sum0.
sum_rec([H|T], Sum0,Sum) =>
sum_rec(T, H+Sum0,Sum).
prod_rec(List) = Prod =>
prod_rec(List,1,Prod).
prod_rec([],Prod0,Prod) =>
Prod=Prod0.
prod_rec([H|T], Prod0,Prod) =>
prod_rec(T, H*Prod0,Prod).
- Output:
sum = 55 prod = 3628800 sum_reduce = 55 prod_reduce = 3628800 sum_reduce = 55 prod_reduce = 3628800 sum_fold = 55 prod_fold = 3628800 sum_rec = 55 prod_rec = 3628800
PicoLisp
(let Data (1 2 3 4 5)
(cons
(apply + Data)
(apply * Data) ) )
- Output:
(15 . 120)
PL/I
declare A(10) fixed binary static initial
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10);
put skip list (sum(A));
put skip list (prod(A));
Plain English
An element is a thing with a number.
To find a sum and a product of some elements:
Put 0 into the sum.
Put 1 into the product.
Get an element from the elements.
Loop.
If the element is nil, exit.
Add the element's number to the sum.
Multiply the product by the element's number.
Put the element's next into the element.
Repeat.
To make some example elements:
If a counter is past 10, exit.
Allocate memory for an element.
Put the counter into the element's number.
Append the element to the example.
Repeat.
A product is a number.
To run:
Start up.
Make some example elements.
Find a sum and a product of the example elements.
Destroy the example elements.
Write "Sum: " then the sum on the console.
Write "Product: " then the product on the console.
Wait for the escape key.
Shut down.
A sum is a number.
- Output:
Sum: 55 Product: 3628800
Pop11
Simple loop:
lvars i, sum = 0, prod = 1, ar = {1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9};
for i from 1 to length(ar) do
ar(i) + sum -> sum;
ar(i) * prod -> prod;
endfor;
One can alternatively use second order iterator:
lvars sum = 0, prod = 1, ar = {1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9};
appdata(ar, procedure(x); x + sum -> sum; endprocedure);
appdata(ar, procedure(x); x * prod -> prod; endprocedure);
PostScript
/sumandproduct
{
/x exch def
/sum 0 def
/prod 0 def
/i 0 def
x length 0 eq
{
}
{
/prod prod 1 add def
x length{
/sum sum x i get add def
/prod prod x i get mul def
/i i 1 add def
}repeat
}ifelse
sum ==
prod ==
}def
% sum
[1 1 1 1 1] 0 {add} fold
% product
[1 1 1 1 1] 1 {mul} fold
PowerShell
The Measure-Object
cmdlet already knows how to compute a sum:
function Get-Sum ($a) {
return ($a | Measure-Object -Sum).Sum
}
But not how to compute a product:
function Get-Product ($a) {
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
return 0
} else {
$p = 1
foreach ($x in $a) {
$p *= $x
}
return $p
}
}
One could also let PowerShell do all the work by simply creating an expression to evaluate:
function Get-Product ($a) {
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
return 0
}
$s = $a -join '*'
return (Invoke-Expression $s)
}
Even nicer, however, is a function which computes both at once and returns a custom object with appropriate properties:
function Get-SumAndProduct ($a) {
$sum = 0
if ($a.Length -eq 0) {
$prod = 0
} else {
$prod = 1
foreach ($x in $a) {
$sum += $x
$prod *= $x
}
}
$ret = New-Object PSObject
$ret | Add-Member NoteProperty Sum $sum
$ret | Add-Member NoteProperty Product $prod
return $ret
}
- Output:
PS> Get-SumAndProduct 5,9,7,2,3,8,4 Sum Product --- ------- 38 60480
Prolog
sum([],0).
sum([H|T],X) :- sum(T,Y), X is H + Y.
product([],1).
product([H|T],X) :- product(T,Y), X is H * X.
test
:- sum([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9],X). X =45; :- product([1,2,3,4,5],X). X = 120;
Using fold
add(A,B,R):-
R is A + B.
mul(A,B,R):-
R is A * B.
% define fold now.
fold([], Act, Init, Init).
fold(Lst, Act, Init, Res):-
head(Lst,Hd),
tail(Lst,Tl),
apply(Act,[Init, Hd, Ra]),
fold(Tl, Act, Ra, Res).
sumproduct(Lst, Sum, Prod):-
fold(Lst,mul,1, Prod),
fold(Lst,add,0, Sum).
?- sumproduct([1,2,3,4],Sum,Prod).
Sum = 10,
Prod = 24 .
PureBasic
Dim MyArray(9)
Define a, sum=0, prod=1
For a = 0 To ArraySize(MyArray()) ; Create a list of some random numbers
MyArray(a) = 1 + Random(9) ; Insert a number [1...10] in current element
Next
For a = 0 To ArraySize(MyArray()) ; Calculate Sum and Product of this Array
sum + MyArray(a)
prod * MyArray(a)
Next
Debug "The sum is " + Str(sum) ; Present the results
Debug "Product is " + Str(prod)
Python
numbers = [1, 2, 3]
total = sum(numbers)
product = 1
for i in numbers:
product *= i
Or functionally (faster but perhaps less clear):
from operator import mul, add
sum = reduce(add, numbers) # note: this version doesn't work with empty lists
sum = reduce(add, numbers, 0)
product = reduce(mul, numbers) # note: this version doesn't work with empty lists
product = reduce(mul, numbers, 1)
from numpy import r_
numbers = r_[1:4]
total = numbers.sum()
product = numbers.prod()
If you are summing floats in Python 2.6+, you should use math.fsum() to avoid loss of precision:
import math
total = math.fsum(floats)
QBasic
DIM array(1 TO 5)
DATA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
READ array(index)
NEXT index
LET sum = 0
LET prod = 1
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
LET sum = sum + array(index)
LET prod = prod * array(index)
NEXT index
PRINT "The sum is "; sum
PRINT "and the product is "; prod
END
Quackery
[ 0 swap witheach + ] is sum ( [ --> n )
[ 1 swap witheach * ] is product ( [ --> n )
In the shell (i.e. Quackery REPL):
/O> ' [ 1 2 3 4 5 ] sum echo cr
... ' [ 1 2 3 4 5 ] product echo
...
15
120
Stack empty.
R
total <- sum(1:5)
product <- prod(1:5)
Racket
#lang racket
(for/sum ([x #(3 1 4 1 5 9)]) x)
(for/product ([x #(3 1 4 1 5 9)]) x)
Raku
(formerly Perl 6)
my @ary = 1, 5, 10, 100;
say 'Sum: ', [+] @ary;
say 'Product: ', [*] @ary;
Rapira
fun sumOfArr(arr)
sum := 0
for N from 1 to #arr do
sum := sum + arr[N]
od
return sum
end
fun productOfArr(arr)
product := arr[1]
for N from 2 to #arr do
product := product * arr[N]
od
return product
end
Raven
0 [ 1 2 3 ] each +
1 [ 1 2 3 ] each *
REBOL
REBOL [
Title: "Sum and Product"
URL: http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Sum_and_product_of_array
]
; Simple:
sum: func [a [block!] /local x] [x: 0 forall a [x: x + a/1] x]
product: func [a [block!] /local x] [x: 1 forall a [x: x * a/1] x]
; Way too fancy:
redux: func [
"Applies an operation across an array to produce a reduced value."
a [block!] "Array to operate on."
op [word!] "Operation to perform."
/init x "Initial value (default 0)."
][if not init [x: 0] forall a [x: do compose [x (op) (a/1)]] x]
rsum: func [a [block!]][redux a '+]
rproduct: func [a [block!]][redux/init a '* 1]
; Tests:
assert: func [code][print [either do code [" ok"]["FAIL"] mold code]]
print "Simple dedicated functions:"
assert [55 = sum [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
assert [3628800 = product [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
print [crlf "Fancy reducing function:"]
assert [55 = rsum [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
assert [3628800 = rproduct [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
- Output:
Simple dedicated functions: ok [55 = sum [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]] ok [3628800 = product [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]] Fancy reducing function: ok [55 = rsum [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]] ok [3628800 = rproduct [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]]
Red
Red [
red-version: 0.6.4
description: "Find the sum and product of an array of numbers."
]
product: function [
"Returns the product of all values in a block."
values [any-list! vector!]
][
result: 1
foreach value values [result: result * value]
result
]
a: [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]
print a
print ["Sum:" sum a]
print ["Product:" product a]
- Output:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sum: 55 Product: 3628800
REXX
/*REXX program adds and multiplies N elements of a (populated) array @. */
numeric digits 200 /*200 decimal digit #s (default is 9).*/
parse arg N .; if N=='' then N=20 /*Not specified? Then use the default.*/
do j=1 for N /*build array of N elements (or 20?).*/
@.j=j /*set 1st to 1, 3rd to 3, 8th to 8 ··· */
end /*j*/
sum=0 /*initialize SUM (variable) to zero. */
prod=1 /*initialize PROD (variable) to unity.*/
do k=1 for N
sum = sum + @.k /*add the element to the running total.*/
prod = prod * @.k /*multiply element to running product. */
end /*k*/ /* [↑] this pgm: same as N factorial.*/
say ' sum of ' m " elements for the @ array is: " sum
say ' product of ' m " elements for the @ array is: " prod
/*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */
output using the default input of: 20
sum of M elements for the @ array is: 210 product of M elements for the @ array is: 2432902008176640000
Ring
aList = 1:10 nSum=0 nProduct=0
for x in aList nSum += x nProduct *= x next
See "Sum = " + nSum + nl
See "Product = " + nProduct + nl
Ruby
arr = [1,2,3,4,5] # or ary = *1..5, or ary = (1..5).to_a
p sum = arr.inject(0) { |sum, item| sum + item }
# => 15
p product = arr.inject(1) { |prod, element| prod * element }
# => 120
arr = [1,2,3,4,5]
p sum = arr.inject(0, :+) #=> 15
p product = arr.inject(1, :*) #=> 120
# If you do not explicitly specify an initial value for memo,
# then the first element of collection is used as the initial value of memo.
p sum = arr.inject(:+) #=> 15
p product = arr.inject(:*) #=> 120
Note: When the Array is empty, the initial value returns. However, nil returns if not giving an initial value.
arr = []
p arr.inject(0, :+) #=> 0
p arr.inject(1, :*) #=> 1
p arr.inject(:+) #=> nil
p arr.inject(:*) #=> nil
Enumerable#reduce is the alias of Enumerable#inject.
arr = [1,2,3,4,5]
p sum = arr.sum #=> 15
p [].sum #=> 0
Run BASIC
dim array(100)
for i = 1 To 100
array(i) = rnd(0) * 100
next i
product = 1
for i = 0 To 19
sum = (sum + array(i))
product = (product * array(i))
next i
Print " Sum is ";sum
Print "Product is ";product
Rust
fn main() {
let arr = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];
// using fold
let sum = arr.iter().fold(0i32, |a, &b| a + b);
let product = arr.iter().fold(1i32, |a, &b| a * b);
println!("the sum is {} and the product is {}", sum, product);
// or using sum and product
let sum = arr.iter().sum::<i32>();
let product = arr.iter().product::<i32>();
println!("the sum is {} and the product is {}", sum, product);
}
S-lang
variable a = [5, -2, 3, 4, 666, 7];
The sum of array elements is handled by an intrinsic. [note: print is slsh-specific; if not available, use printf().]
print(sum(a));
The product is slightly more involved; I'll use this as a chance to show the alternate stack-based use of 'foreach':
variable prod = a[0];
% Skipping the loop variable causes the val to be placed on the stack.
% Also note that the double-brackets ARE required. The inner one creates
% a "range array" based on the length of a.
foreach (a[[1:]])
% () pops it off.
prod *= ();
print(prod);
SAS
data _null_;
array a{*} a1-a100;
do i=1 to 100;
a{i}=i*i;
end;
b=sum(of a{*});
put b c;
run;
Sather
class MAIN is
main is
a :ARRAY{INT} := |10, 5, 5, 20, 60, 100|;
sum, prod :INT;
loop sum := sum + a.elt!; end;
prod := 1;
loop prod := prod * a.elt!; end;
#OUT + sum + " " + prod + "\n";
end;
end;
Scala
val seq = Seq(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
val sum = seq.foldLeft(0)(_ + _)
val product = seq.foldLeft(1)(_ * _)
Or even shorter:
val sum = seq.sum
val product = seq.product
Works with all data types for which a Numeric implicit is available.
Scheme
(apply + '(1 2 3 4 5))
(apply * '(1 2 3 4 5))
A tail-recursive solution, without the n-ary operator "trick". Because Scheme supports tail call optimization, this is as space-efficient as an imperative loop.
(define (reduce f i l)
(if (null? l)
i
(reduce f (f i (car l)) (cdr l))))
(reduce + 0 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; 0 is unit for +
(reduce * 1 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; 1 is unit for *
Seed7
const func integer: sumArray (in array integer: valueArray) is func
result
var integer: sum is 0;
local
var integer: value is 0;
begin
for value range valueArray do
sum +:= value;
end for;
end func;
const func integer: prodArray (in array integer: valueArray) is func
result
var integer: prod is 1;
local
var integer: value is 0;
begin
for value range valueArray do
prod *:= value;
end for;
end func;
Call these functions with:
writeln(sumArray([](1, 2, 3, 4, 5))); writeln(prodArray([](1, 2, 3, 4, 5)));
SETL
numbers := [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9];
print(+/ numbers, */ numbers);
=> 45 362880
Sidef
Using built-in methods:
var ary = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
say ary.sum; # => 15
say ary.prod; # => 120
Alternatively, using hyper-operators:
var ary = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
say ary«+»; # => 15
say ary«*»; # => 120
Slate
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: [:sum :number | sum + number]
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: [:product :number | product * number]
Shorthand for the above with a macro:
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: #+ `er
#(1 2 3 4 5) reduce: #* `er
Smalltalk
#(1 2 3 4 5) inject: 0 into: [:sum :number | sum + number]
#(1 2 3 4 5) inject: 1 into: [:product :number | product * number]
Some implementation also provide a fold: message:
#(1 2 3 4 5) fold: [:sum :number | sum + number]
#(1 2 3 4 5) fold: [:product :number | product * number]
SNOBOL4
t = table()
* read the integer from the std. input
init_tab t<x = x + 1> = trim(input) :s(init_tab)
product = 1
sum = 0
* counting backwards to 1
loop i = t< x = ?gt(x,1) x - 1> :f(out)
sum = sum + i
product = product * i :(loop)
out output = "Sum: " sum
output = "Prod: " product
end
Input
1 2 3 4 5
- Output:
Sum: 15 Prod: 120
Sparkling
spn:1> reduce({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }, 0, function(x, y) { return x + y; })
= 15
spn:2> reduce({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }, 1, function(x, y) { return x * y; })
= 120
Standard ML
Arrays
(* ints *)
val a = Array.fromList [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
Array.foldl op+ 0 a;
Array.foldl op* 1 a;
(* reals *)
val a = Array.fromList [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0];
Array.foldl op+ 0.0 a;
Array.foldl op* 1.0 a;
Lists
(* ints *)
val x = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
foldl op+ 0 x;
foldl op* 1 x;
(* reals *)
val x = [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0];
foldl op+ 0.0 x;
foldl op* 1.0 x;
Stata
Mata does not have a builtin product function, but one can do the following, which will compute the product of nonzero elements of the array:
a = 1,-2,-3,-4,5
sum(a)
-3
(-1)^mod(sum(a:<0),2)*exp(sum(log(abs(a))))
-120
Swift
let a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
println(a.reduce(0, +)) // prints 15
println(a.reduce(1, *)) // prints 120
println(reduce(a, 0, +)) // prints 15
println(reduce(a, 1, *)) // prints 120
Tcl
set arr [list 3 6 8]
set sum [expr [join $arr +]]
set prod [expr [join $arr *]]
set arr [list 3 6 8]
set sum [tcl::mathop::+ {*}$arr]
set prod [tcl::mathop::* {*}$arr]
TI-83 BASIC
Use the built-in functions sum()
and prod()
.
seq(X,X,1,10,1)→L₁
{1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10}
sum(L₁)
55
prod(L₁)
3628800
Toka
4 cells is-array foo
212 1 foo array.put
51 2 foo array.put
12 3 foo array.put
91 4 foo array.put
[ ( array size -- sum )
>r 0 r> 0 [ over i swap array.get + ] countedLoop nip ] is sum-array
( product )
reset 1 4 0 [ i foo array.get * ] countedLoop .
Trith
[1 2 3 4 5] 0 [+] foldl
[1 2 3 4 5] 1 [*] foldl
True BASIC
DIM array(1 TO 5)
DATA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
READ array(index)
NEXT index
LET sum = 0
LET prod = 1
FOR index = LBOUND(array) TO UBOUND(array)
LET sum = sum + array(index)
LET prod = prod * array(index)
NEXT index
PRINT "The sum is "; sum
PRINT "and the product is "; prod
END
TUSCRIPT
$$ MODE TUSCRIPT
list="1'2'3'4'5"
sum=SUM(list)
PRINT " sum: ",sum
product=1
LOOP l=list
product=product*l
ENDLOOP
PRINT "product: ",product
- Output:
sum: 15 product: 120
UNIX Shell
From an internal variable, $IFS delimited:
sum=0
prod=1
list="1 2 3"
for n in $list
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod
From the argument list (ARGV):
sum=0
prod=1
for n
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod
From STDIN, one integer per line:
sum=0
prod=1
while read n
do sum="$(($sum + $n))"; prod="$(($prod * $n))"
done
echo $sum $prod
Using an actual array variable:
list=(20 20 2);
(( sum=0, prod=1 ))
for n in "${list[@]}"; do
(( sum += n, prod *= n ))
done
printf '%d\t%d\n' "$sum" "$prod"
- Output:
42 800
UnixPipes
Uses ksh93-style process substitution.
prod() {
(read B; res=$1; test -n "$B" && expr $res \* $B || echo $res)
}
sum() {
(read B; res=$1; test -n "$B" && expr $res + $B || echo $res)
}
fold() {
(func=$1; while read a ; do fold $func | $func $a ; done)
}
(echo 3; echo 1; echo 4;echo 1;echo 5;echo 9) |
tee >(fold sum) >(fold prod) > /dev/null
There is a race between fold sum
and fold prod
, which run in parallel. The program might print sum before product, or print product before sum.
Ursa
Ursa doesn't have arrays in the traditional sense. Its equivalent is the stream. All math operators take streams as arguments, so sums and products of streams can be found like this.
declare int<> stream
append 34 76 233 8 2 734 56 stream
# outputs 1143
out (+ stream) endl console
# outputs 3.95961079808E11
out (* stream) endl console
Ursala
The reduction operator, :-, takes an associative binary function and a constant for the empty case. Natural numbers are unsigned and of unlimited size.
#import nat
#cast %nW
sp = ^(sum:-0,product:-1) <62,43,46,40,29,55,51,82,59,92,48,73,93,35,42,25>
- Output:
(875,2126997171723931187788800000)
V
[sp dup 0 [+] fold 'product=' put puts 1 [*] fold 'sum=' put puts].
- Using it:
[1 2 3 4 5] sp
=
product=15
sum=120
Vala
void main() {
int sum = 0, prod = 1;
int[] data = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
foreach (int val in data) {
sum += val;
prod *= val;
}
print(@"sum: $(sum)\nproduct: $(prod)");
}
- Output:
sum: 10 product: 24
VBA
Assumes Excel is used.
Sub Demo()
Dim arr
arr = Array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)
Debug.Print "sum : " & Application.WorksheetFunction.Sum(arr)
Debug.Print "product : " & Application.WorksheetFunction.Product(arr)
End Sub
- Output:
sum : 55 product : 3628800
VBScript
Function sum_and_product(arr)
sum = 0
product = 1
For i = 0 To UBound(arr)
sum = sum + arr(i)
product = product * arr(i)
Next
WScript.StdOut.Write "Sum: " & sum
WScript.StdOut.WriteLine
WScript.StdOut.Write "Product: " & product
WScript.StdOut.WriteLine
End Function
myarray = Array(1,2,3,4,5,6)
sum_and_product(myarray)
- Output:
Sum: 21 Product: 720
Visual Basic .NET
Module Program
Sub Main()
Dim arg As Integer() = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
Dim sum = arg.Sum()
Dim prod = arg.Aggregate(Function(runningProduct, nextFactor) runningProduct * nextFactor)
End Sub
End Module
Wart
def (sum_prod nums)
(list (+ @nums) (* @nums))
WDTE
let a => import 'arrays';
let s => import 'stream';
let sum array => a.stream array -> s.reduce 0 +;
let prod array => a.stream prod -> s.reduce 1 *;
Wortel
@sum [1 2 3 4] ; returns 10
@prod [1 2 3 4] ; returns 24
Wren
import "/math" for Nums
var a = [7, 10, 2, 4, 6, 1, 8, 3, 9, 5]
System.print("Array : %(a)")
System.print("Sum : %(Nums.sum(a))")
System.print("Product : %(Nums.prod(a))")
- Output:
Array : [7, 10, 2, 4, 6, 1, 8, 3, 9, 5] Sum : 55 Product : 3628800
XPL0
code CrLf=9, IntOut=11;
func SumProd(A, L);
int A, L;
int S, P, I;
[S:= 0; P:= 1;
for I:= 0 to L-1 do [S:= S+A(I); P:= P*A(I)];
IntOut(0, S); CrLf(0);
IntOut(0, P); CrLf(0);
]; \SumSq
SumProd([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10], 10)
- Output:
55 3628800
XSLT
XSLT (or XPath rather) has a few built-in functions for reducing from a collection, but product is not among them. Because of referential transparency, one must resort to recursive solutions for general iterative operations upon collections. The following code represents the array by numeric values in <price> elements in the source document.
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
<xsl:output method="text" />
<xsl:template name="sum-prod">
<xsl:param name="values" />
<xsl:param name="sum" select="0" />
<xsl:param name="prod" select="1" />
<xsl:choose>
<xsl:when test="not($values)">
<xsl:text>
Sum: </xsl:text>
<xsl:value-of select="$sum" />
<xsl:text>
Product: </xsl:text>
<xsl:value-of select="$prod" />
</xsl:when>
<xsl:otherwise>
<xsl:call-template name="sum-prod">
<xsl:with-param name="values" select="$values[position() > 1]" />
<xsl:with-param name="sum" select="$sum + $values[1]" />
<xsl:with-param name="prod" select="$prod * $values[1]" />
</xsl:call-template>
</xsl:otherwise>
</xsl:choose>
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="/">
<xsl:text>
Sum (built-in): </xsl:text>
<xsl:value-of select="sum(//price)" />
<xsl:call-template name="sum-prod">
<xsl:with-param name="values" select="//price" />
</xsl:call-template>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
Yabasic
dim array(5)
data 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
for index = 1 to arraysize(array(), 1)
read array(index)
next index
sum = 0
prod = 1
for index = 1 to arraysize(array(), 1)
sum = sum + array(index)
prod = prod * array(index)
next index
print "The sum is ", sum //15
print "and the product is ", prod //120
end
zkl
fcn sum(vals){vals.reduce('+,0)}
fcn product(vals){vals.reduce('*,1)}
sum(T(1,2,3,4)) //-->10 product(T(1,2,3,4)) //-->24
Zoea
program: sum_and_product
case: 1
input: [3,5]
output: [8,15]
case: 2
input: [2,3,4]
output: [9,24]
Zoea Visual
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