On Tuesday, 6 May 2014 at 11:20:33 UTC, Paulo Pinto wrote:
On Tuesday, 6 May 2014 at 09:11:30 UTC, Chris wrote:
I recently came across this article http://www.wired.com/2014/02/julia/. On the Julia homepage there are some benchmarks times relative to C. I know that bearophile has mentioned Julia several times on this forum. Has anyone compared D's vs Julia's performance as well as design features?

I can only comment on design features.

You can think of Julia as a dynamic language similar to Python, with optional typing and for such a young language, a quite good JIT compiler backed by the LLVM backend.

It is a multi-paradigm language, with an OO approach based on multi-methods and direct support for scientific programming.

The target audience are the scientifc community that makes use of R, Python with NumPy and so on, which are currently disappointed with the performance of said systems. Their goal is to keep the programming flexibility of R and Python, while improving the performance without having to be forced to write C code.

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Paulo

Maybe it's time to think about a D interface to Julia. If Julia catches on within the scientific community, it would be good to have a foot in the door. Science quickly creates large code bases, unfortunately, so far it's mostly Python and Matlab which makes it hard to use the algorithms in real world applications.

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