Term Block

A block that represents a local function whose value can be found and used as a term in a UserFunc expression (or in an <Expression>).

<Term>s are similar to Local UserFuncs; the difference is that <Term>s must take exactly the same arguments as the containing function, and they are treated like an <Input> in the containing function (although they shouldn’t appear in the inputOrder, and they are not arguments of the function).

Differences between Terms and local functions:

  • A <Term> must take the exact same arguments as the UserFunc in which it appears.

  • A <Term> is evaluated exactly once for every evaluation of its containing UserFunc; if, e.g., it appears multiple times in an expression, the same value will be used each time (even if the Term returns a random number). In contrast, a local function will be called anew when needed.

    • Often this distinction is moot; it becomes important when evaluation is contingent. For example, suppose a <Term f> and a local <UserFunc g> appear in expression = if(a, f, g()). The expression f is needed only if a evaluates to true, and g() must be evaluated only if a is false. In this case f will be evaluated regardless, while g() is evaluated only if a is false. Therefore, using a local function instead of a variable can sometimes save time.

    • Another difference involves non-deterministic functions, e.g., random-number generators. If f is a Term, and g() a local function, each of which returns a random number, then in expression = if(f < 0.5, f, 0.5) + if(g() < 0.5, g(), 0.5) the same value will be used for both appearances of f, but each appearance of g() will evaluate to a different number.

Kinds of Terms

Terms take all the same kinds (and corresponding attributes) as UserFuncs (see UserFunc Block).

Examples

This example can be contrasted with that using local functions (see Local UserFuncs).

<UserFunc f>
  kind = expression
  inputOrder = [ y ]
  <Input y>
    kind = arbitraryVector
    types = [float]
  </Input>
  <Term mySqrVar>
    kind = expression
    inputOrder = [ y ] # same args as UserFunc f
    <Input y>
      kind = arbitraryVector
      types = [float]
    </Input>
    expression = y*y
  </Term>
  <Term myPlusOneSqrVar>
    kind = expression
    inputOrder = [ y ] # same args as UserFunc f
    <Input y>
      kind = arbitraryVector
      types = [float]
    </Input>
    expression = (y+1)*(y+1)
  </Term>
  expression = mySqrVar*myPlusOneSqrVar + y
</UserFunc>

In the above example, each Term is like a UserFunc that takes the same arguments as function f (namely, a scalar float named y). The Terms are then used in f’s expression as variables.

All Terms are evaluated before f’s expression is evaluated; this differs from local functions, which are typically evaluated only as needed.