Yes!

On Fri, Nov 12, 2021 at 4:45 PM Eric MacAdie <emaca...@gmail.com> wrote:

> A lot of hard-core math libraries are written in C, C++ or Fortran (like
> BLAS, ATLAS and LAPACK).
>
> So a lot of math programs in a lot of languages (like JVM languages, as
> well as Ruby and Python) off load a lot of the work to these C libraries.
> TensorFlow, NumPy, SciPy, DeepLearning4J, etc all do that. For some of the
> libraries in Java (like TensorFlow or DeepLearning4J) I think you can
> choose to either use Java, a C library, or a library that calls the GPU.
>
>
> = Eric MacAdie
>
>
> On Fri, Nov 12, 2021 at 9:22 PM Rick Van Camp <ravc0...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> For this reason I suspect Groovy is not a 'quantitative language' if I
>> can use this phrase.
>>
>> On 2021/11/12 09:14:18 Rick Van Camp wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > I joined the list to learn if STEM applications exist for Groovy? I read
>> > through several months of archives but did not see much involving
>> issues I
>> > am interested in such as computation, simulations, approximations, etc.
>> I
>> > used Groovy briefly in an image processing application but it was only
>> > calling operations which performed the manipulations I am interested in
>> > learning if Groovy can perform.
>> >
>> > Thank you,
>> >
>> > Rick
>> >
>>
>

Reply via email to