The problem is that it is not possible for me to add Benchmarks.jl package 
when i do Pkg,add("Benchmarks"), i have something like "unknown package 
Benchmarks".

On Thursday, 4 February 2016 01:52:22 UTC+1, Kevin Squire wrote:
>
> Benchmarks is great!  JMW, any chance you can register it as an official 
> package (and deprecate Benchmark.jl).
>
> (I guess I could file an issue.)
>
> Cheers,
>    Kevin 
>
> On Wednesday, February 3, 2016, Stefan Karpinski <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> You may want to check out Benchmarks.jl 
>> <https://github.com/johnmyleswhite/Benchmarks.jl>, which goes to 
>> significant lengths to do benchmarking correctly.
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 3, 2016 at 4:05 PM, Milan Bouchet-Valat <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Le mercredi 03 février 2016 à 12:55 -0800, Christopher Alexander a
>>> écrit :
>>> > Try doing something like:
>>> >
>>> > tic()
>>> > # my code
>>> > toc()
>>> Be careful with tic() and toc() in Julia. In most cases, when
>>> benchmarking, you should wrap your code in a function to make sure it
>>> gets specialized on the argument types, instead of running it from the
>>> REPL. So in general it's better to do:
>>> @time myfun(arg1, arg2, ...)
>>>
>>> See http://docs.julialang.org/en/latest/manual/performance-tips/#measur
>>> e-performance-with-time-and-pay-attention-to-memory-allocation 
>>> <http://docs.julialang.org/en/latest/manual/performance-tips/#measure-performance-with-time-and-pay-attention-to-memory-allocation>
>>>
>>>
>>> Regards
>>>
>>> > On Wednesday, February 3, 2016 at 3:28:28 PM UTC-5, Lytu wrote:
>>> > > Hello Julia users,
>>> > >
>>> > > Can someone tell me what's the equivalent of matlab elapsed cputime
>>> > > in Julia
>>> > >
>>> > > For example i Matlab, we can do this:
>>> > >    t = cputime;
>>> > >    x=4;
>>> > >    iter = 1; 
>>> > >    z = ones(1,4);
>>> > >    y=x*2*z;
>>> > >    e = cputime-t
>>> > >
>>> > > But in Julia i don't seem to find how to do this. I thought i can
>>> > > use 
>>> > >    t=time()
>>> > >    x=4;
>>> > >    iter = 1; 
>>> > >    z = ones(1,4);
>>> > >    y=x*2*z;
>>> > >    e=time()-t
>>> > >
>>> > > But time() in Julia is not the elapsed CPU time, it's a wall clock
>>> > > time.
>>> > >
>>> > > Can someone help me?
>>> > >
>>> > > Thank you
>>> > >
>>>
>>
>>

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