Thanks very much. Would it be conceivably possible at some point to include python functions called from pycall, in a future julia exe?
I already have a decent grasp of python, but trying to decide if its worth learning the syntax of the entire scipy system if I will be switching to julia later. The lack of tutorials for data science in julia is the main factor I'm pondering now. On Saturday, October 25, 2014 11:13:43 AM UTC-4, John Myles White wrote: > > I’m very conservative about recommeinding Julia these days. I’d say that, > as a beginner to programming, you may find Julia to be a difficult ride. I > think you’ll find Julia quite easy to learn after you’ve already mastered > Python. > > — John > > On Oct 24, 2014, at 9:41 AM, [email protected] <javascript:> wrote: > > > Hi Everyone, > > > > I'v posted the below questions on reddit julia , and wanted to elicit > additional input from the group. I'm trying to figure out which system > (python vs julia) to invest in, Any feedback would be appreciated. > > > > > http://www.reddit.com/r/Julia/comments/2k4dtm/experience_with_pycall_in_action/ > > - How robust is pycall? Can I rely on it to do database connections and > beautiful soup scraping? > > > > > http://www.reddit.com/r/Julia/comments/2k79mn/is_there_something_about_julia_that_facilitates/ > > - julia vs python types for simulations. Using julia types in simulations. > > > > Thanks! > >
