On Wed, 2014-07-23 at 09:00 -0700, Stefan Karpinski wrote:
> Also this: http://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/julia/. 
That was one of the first things I looked at; I liked it a lot, but then
needed something more.
Ross
> David Sander's tutorial is a nice start as well, although it's quite a
> long video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWkgEddb4-A.
> 
> 
> On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 8:15 AM, João Felipe Santos
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>         There's this nice "programming by example"-style tutorial that
>         you can skim to get a grasp of the syntax, features, and
>         standard libraries, as well as some plotting
>         libs: http://bogumilkaminski.pl/files/julia_express.pdf.
>         
>         --
>         João Felipe Santos
>         
>         
>         On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 3:38 AM, <[email protected]>
>         wrote:
>                 Is there anything that is intermediate between the
>                 manual and the introductory material that is kind of a
>                 "taste of"?
>                 I've looked in the documentation and teaching sections
>                 (not sure if the latter is relevant if I don't plan to
>                 teach with Julia), but haven't found anything that
>                 looked right.  I notice there are some videos, but I
>                 find that slow way to get information.
>                 
>                 
>                 Analogs for C: Kernighan and Ritchie, not Harbison and
>                 Steele;
>                 for C++: Stroustrup, not the C++ standard.
>                 
>                 
>                 Otherwise I guess I can skim.
>                 
>                 
>                 Thanks.
>                 Ross Boylan
>         
>         
> 
> 


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