Infix in a sentence as a noun

Well, infix math is very nice and easy on the other hand.

But, after quite a bit of Racket, I've found that I still heavily prefer having infix operators and a bit more syntax.

So the `union` gets highlighted in a different color, making it obvious it's being used in an infix position.

Dylan is unusual in preferring #1 over #2 despite using infix syntax.

The ambiguity produced by stack effects is also paralleled in most infix procedural languages.

Infix in a sentence as a verb

What would be great if Scala gave you a way to explicitly declare certain functions as infix, and everything else uses the java-style calling convention.

Languages that allow infix syntax have tried to come up with something similar, but I haven't personally used one that I thought was particularly successful.

Lisp does things with its bizarre syntax, making it obvious how to write correct macros and being homoiconic, which translates poorly back into Algol-esque infix languages.

A small annoyance but having a matrix multiplication infix operator would actually be a huge help but the idea has met a great deal of resistance from core Python as being "too domain specific".

Besides how it looks; their example of solving a useful concurrency problem is "a bug-free, efficiently multithreaded real-time clock + infix calculator hybrid application"?

Infix definitions

noun

an affix that is inserted inside the word

verb

put or introduce into something; "insert a picture into the text"

See also: insert enter introduce

verb

attach a morpheme into a stem word