Thanks, Jarrod. Should I replace the old numpy 1.0.4 information at http://www.scipy.org/Download with the 1.1.0? It's still listing 1.0.4, but I wonder if there's some compatibility with scipy 0.6 issue that should cause it to stay at 1.0.4. In either case, I think the page should be updated -- particularly as searching Google for "numpy download" results in that page as the first hit.
-Andrew Jarrod Millman wrote: > I'm pleased to announce the release of NumPy 1.1.0. > > NumPy is the fundamental package needed for scientific computing with > Python. It contains: > > * a powerful N-dimensional array object > * sophisticated (broadcasting) functions > * basic linear algebra functions > * basic Fourier transforms > * sophisticated random number capabilities > * tools for integrating Fortran code. > > Besides it's obvious scientific uses, NumPy can also be used as an > efficient multi-dimensional container of generic data. Arbitrary > data-types can be defined. This allows NumPy to seamlessly and > speedily integrate with a wide-variety of databases. > > This is the first minor release since the 1.0 release in > October 2006. There are a few major changes, which introduce > some minor API breakage. In addition this release includes > tremendous improvements in terms of bug-fixing, testing, and > documentation. > > For information, please see the release notes: > http://sourceforge.net/project/shownotes.php?release_id=602575&group_id=1369 > > Thank you to everybody who contributed to this release. > > Enjoy, > > _______________________________________________ Numpy-discussion mailing list Numpy-discussion@scipy.org http://projects.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion