Yes, PDL and beer still go well together.

Christian

> On 19/01/2017, at 1:08 pm, karlglazebr...@mac.com wrote:
> 
> Christian and I met up in London for a beer, and were joined virtually by 
> Tuomas.
> 
> Cheers!
> 
> 
> - Karl
> 
> On 8 Jun. 2016, 12:42 AM +0100, Karl Glazebrook <karlglazebr...@mac.com>, 
> wrote:
>> The thought occurred to me that we are approaching the 20-year anniversary 
>> of PDL this coming October 23rd!
>> 
>> It is amazing to me that it is now this old, doesn’t seem like 20 years has 
>> gone by. Makes me feel really old.
>> 
>> Here is the original announcement for the nostalgic:
>> 
>> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/comp.lang.perl.misc/glazebrook$20pdl/comp.lang.perl.misc/MJ8TL5pDaUk/LKWfyhHNCooJ
>> 
>> Do we want to mark this in anyway? Maybe release a ‘final' version of PDL 2? 
>> (which should be v.2.71828182845905 following Knuth...)
>> 
>> Karl
>> 
>> p.s. First stupid code was written in Feb of 1996 - this is described in the 
>> PDL book.
>> 
>> ————
>> 
>> Subject: ANNOUNCE: perlDL v1.00 - the 'perl Data Language’ 10/23/96
>> 
>> `perlDL' ("perl Data Language") gives standard perl the ability
>> to COMPACTLY store and SPEEDILY manipulate the large N-
>> dimensional data arrays which are the bread and butter of
>> scientific computing.
>> 
>> The idea is to turn perl in to a, free, array-oriented,
>> numerical language in the same sense as commerical packages like
>> IDL and MatLab. One can write simple perl expressions to
>> manipulate entire numerical arrays all at once.
>> 
>> For example with `perlDL' the perl variable `$a' can hold a
>> 1024x1024 floating point image, it only takes 4Mb of memory to
>> store it and expressions like `$a=sqrt($a)+2' would manipulate
>> the whole image in a few seconds.
>> 
>> A simple interactive shell ("`perldl'") is provided for command
>> line use together with a module ("`PDL'") for use in perl
>> scripts.
>> 
>> v1.00 is the first official alpha release. It provides the
>> fundumental numerical processing facilities and a limited set of
>> standard functions. Graphics are supported via the perl PGPLOT
>> module and image display via the external programs
>> saoimage/ximtool. The goal is to allow perlDL to interact with a
>> variety of external graphics systems. I/O is currently supported
>> via the FITS standard, though given the simple design it ought
>> to be possible to create perl code to read many common formats.
>> 
>> There are of course many things missing from this first release
>> but it is hoped that perlDL will grow through efforts of
>> interested users. It has a modular design to encourage this.
>> 
>> Where to obtain perlDL:
>> 
>> Home Site:
>> 
>> WWW: http://www.aao.gov.au/local/www/kgb/perldl/
>> 
>> ftp: ftp://ftp.aao.gov.au/pub/perldl/
>> 
>> Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN):
>> 
>> ftp: In directory modules/by-module/PDL/
>> 
>> WWW: You can automatically select your LOCAL CPAN site by going
>> to: http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/PDL/
>> 
>> The PGPLOT module is available from (among others):
>> 
>> http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~kgb/pgperl.html (Home Page/General
>> information)
>> 
>> http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/PGPLOT/
>> 
>> ftp://ftp.ast.cam.ac.uk/pub/kgb/pgperl/
>> 
>> ftp://ftp.aao.gov.au/pub/pgperl/
>> 
>> SAOimage is available from:
>> 
>> http://tdc-www.harvard.edu/software/saoimage.html
>> 
>> Documentation
>> 
>> The current perlDL documentation is available from
>> http://www.aao.gov.au/local/www/kgb/perldl/PDL.html
>> 
>> Mailing List
>> 
>> Finally, a mailing list has been set up to talk about perlDL and
>> for developers to coordinate their work.
>> 
>> The address of the list is per...@jach.hawaii.edu. To subscribe,
>> send a message to perldl-...@jach.hawaii.edu containing a
>> string in the following format:
>> 
>> subscribe me@my.email.address
>> 
>> I hope you find perlDL useful and enjoyable,
>> 
>> Karl Glazebrook. email: k...@aaoepp.aao.gov.au
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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