Have you thought about Scala? Apparently also possible to define maths
functions (functions that look like maths) in it, though I haven't done so.
Seems that r is good if it doesn't matter that you hop out of the virtual
machine, and can forebear integrating of results.
Adam

On 28 April 2010 12:45, Sachin Dole <[email protected]> wrote:

> R probably has a large superset of features that math provides while it
> tries to solve a very different type of problem too. Except r is written in
> c. The only java interface I know of is jri  (part of rjava). For complex
> calculations such as   simulations or cluster analysis I would like to
> compare/complement standard Java tools with the r platform. That's why I
> would want to do this...
>
> On Apr 28, 2010 6:22 AM, "Rory Winston" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Sachin
>
> Commons-Maths could work with rJava (as it is a Java-based library). Im not
> sure why you would want to do this though....
>
>
>
> On 28 Apr 2010, at 07:29, Sachin Dole wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am working on a project that will li...
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