Or: "Take Julia for a spin and see how it corners!"

On Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 2:31:42 PM UTC-8, J Luis wrote:
>
> or
> "That corner is mine"
> or
> "The Julia corner"
>
> sábado, 7 de Fevereiro de 2015 às 20:31:41 UTC, Tobias Knopp escreveu:
>>
>> :-) this is so funny! But still not a marketing slogan. Whats about:
>>
>> "The speed lays in the corner" or
>> "The truth lays in the corner"...
>>
>> Am Samstag, 7. Februar 2015 20:54:11 UTC+1 schrieb J Luis:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I'm going to refer to that plot from now on as "nobody puts Julia in a 
>>>> corner".
>>>>
>>>
>>> might be more faithful if you call it "Julia puts itself in a corner"
>>>  
>>>  
>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 2:41 PM, Stefan Karpinski <[email protected]> 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> That's a good one too, Jacob, but it was indeed Simon Danisch's plot I 
>>>>> was thinking of. Thanks, Andreas!
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 2:33 PM, Jacob Quinn <[email protected]> 
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Was is the graph I posted? It compares several of the "Great Computer 
>>>>>> Shootout" benchmarks amongst top languages.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 12:31 PM, Andreas Noack <
>>>>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Simon Danisch in 
>>>>>>> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/julia-users/BYRAeQJuvTw
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 2015-02-07 14:26 GMT-05:00 Stefan Karpinski <[email protected]>:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> There was a thread at some point where someone posted a plot 
>>>>>>>> comparing lines of code versus performance for a bunch of benchmarks 
>>>>>>>> (probably our microbenchmarks), where Julia was alone in the very fast 
>>>>>>>> & 
>>>>>>>> very small line count corner. I can't for the life of me find that 
>>>>>>>> thread 
>>>>>>>> now. Does anyone recall which thread it was or have the graph?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>

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