Apparently I anonymized myself when I signed up to this mailing list. Apologies for the strange name. I had forgotten I had done that. My name is Vicky and I'm a grad student in high performance computing. My questions still stand and if anyone is using Apple's Swift in any work, I would love to get in touch.
On Friday, 18 March 2016, Ramakrishna Mallireddy < ramakrishna.ma...@gmail.com> wrote: > Sorry for misleading, yeah swift.org is the official site. > > On Fri, Mar 18, 2016 at 11:28 PM, Paul Schifferer <p...@schifferers.net > <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','p...@schifferers.net');>> wrote: > >> This is incorrect. swift-lang.org is a completely unrelated language >> that happens to be called Swift. The official site for Appleās Swift is >> swift.org. >> >> -- >> Paul Schifferer >> Sent with Airmail >> >> On March 18, 2016 at 10:53:48, Ramakrishna Mallireddy via swift-users ( >> swift-users@swift.org >> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','swift-users@swift.org');>) wrote: >> >> swift-lang.org is official website for Apple Swift Language. >> >> C, ObjC , C++[need to write C/ObjC wrapper] libraries can be used with >> swift code. >> >> The swift compiler currently works on mac & linux. >> >> On Fri, Mar 18, 2016 at 10:42 PM, Graymalk Meow via swift-users < >> swift-users@swift.org >> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','swift-users@swift.org');>> wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> Two things. >>> >>> 1. Has anyone run swift programs on a cluster? Is it possible? You can >>> take that as meaning I am interested in giving it a try. Googling this >>> turns up something super confusing: swift-lang.org >>> Is this the same language? If it isn't then there is a real naming >>> problem here. >>> >>> My interest stems from a love of the Apple world and wanting to somehow >>> include it in some work I'm doing comparing the performance of >>> multiple languages in parallel systems. But my goal is not to make this >>> particular Swift parallel if it isn't already, so if I can't >>> relatively easily make some parallel programs with it then I'll have to >>> pass. And by relatively easily, I mean... If I can use it with >>> OpenMPI, OpenMP, or OpenCL (using CUDA or, if I just run it on my Mac, then >>> OpenGL, but the clusters have CUDA) AND if I can at least compile for >>> different platforms (CentOS Linux and Raspbian Linux) then we're in >>> business. Googling is unhelpful because of the two languages one name >>> problem. The CentOS systems are large heterogeneous clusters that don't >>> presently have Swift (either one) on them at all so I might be dead in the >>> water anyway but I might be able to get them to install it if I can argue >>> that it'll work. The Raspberries are just my toy cluster that I have full >>> control over. My Mac beats the crap out of them in performance lol, as it >>> should. >>> >>> 2. For fun: >>> http://mobile.eweek.com/developer/javascript-most-popular-language-stack-overflow-report.html >>> >>> "Meanwhile, the use of the Swift <https://swift.org/> programming >>> language is exploding, the survey showed. Swift grew faster than any other >>> technology last year, the survey showed." >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> swift-users mailing list >>> swift-users@swift.org >>> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','swift-users@swift.org');> >>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-users >>> >>> >> _______________________________________________ >> swift-users mailing list >> swift-users@swift.org >> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','swift-users@swift.org');> >> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-users >> >> >
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