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For example if I was defining the following function

exprod[n_] := Expand[Product[x + i, {i, 1, n}]]

Then why is the underscore after the variable n, necessary in the function definition? Where does this style come from or is it specific only to the Mathematica programming language?

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The underscore comes from pattern matching.

The x_ matches anything and this anything is bound to the name x in the body of the function.

l[x_ * y_] := l[x] + l[y];

Then in l[2*z] first the expression 2*z is matched against the pattern x_ * y_ . Then x is bound to 2 and y is bound to z. Then the expression l[x] + l[y] is evaluated, and the result becomes l[2]+l[z].

Now say we want to define the value of l on e to be 1. Do we write l[e] := 1 or l[e_] := 1 ?

One says that l to (literally) the variable e must be 1. The other says that l to something gives 1.

http://reference.wolfram.com/mathematica/tutorial/Introduction-Patterns.html

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