El jueves, 10 de julio de 2014 01:00:30 UTC-5, Stefan Karpinski escribió:
>
> This is really excellent. I thought you might appreciate that Jeff, Keno, 
> Viral and I are all sitting around watching this and thoroughly enjoying it.
>
>
That is great to hear, thanks a lot :)

 

>
> On Wed, Jul 9, 2014 at 10:22 PM, David P. Sanders <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I gave a 4-hour Julia tutorial at the SciPy 2014 meeting in Austin a 
>> couple of days ago. 
>>
>> The video is now available online at
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWkgEddb4-A
>>
>> The IJulia notebooks are available at
>>
>> https://github.com/dpsanders/scipy_2014_julia
>>
>> Due to the nature of the audience, the tutorial was aimed at people with 
>> experience of scientific Python, so it skates over those things that are 
>> similar to Python. But it tried to cover all the basics of the Julia 
>> syntax, and a touch of internals, and why Julia is interesting for that 
>> audience.
>>
>> I would like to develop this first attempt into a basic interactive Julia 
>> tutorial, which I feel has been rather missing until now. (Douglas Bates 
>> has a recent one aimed at a different community.)
>>
>> I do feel that the notebook format is the right fit for these kinds of 
>> tutorials.
>> Incidentally, Fernando PƩrez announced at the SciPy meeting that the 
>> IPython Notebook interface will be renamed to Jupyter to emphasise language 
>> agnosticism; the "Ju" comes from Julia ;)  So we should start calling them 
>> Jupyter notebooks, instead of IPython or IJulia
>>
>> I would be very happy to receive pull requests and/or to separate this 
>> out into a separate repo if people would like to do some kind of crowd 
>> development.
>>
>> Thanks to Daniel Jones for pointing out that the tutorial was now online.
>>
>> David.
>>
>
>

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