|
I've been looking around the internet for a Java scientific package that is "similar" to Scipy. The only thing I have really found is JScience but it seems not to offer plotting and such. Does anyone know of a good scientific package for Java?
Started by Casey on
, 9 posts
by 9 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
Of a numerical method / scientific package and much more focused on just getting your valuesIf you must use the library and no Java equivalent exists, can you import the package from Jython Performance Scientific and Technical....
|
|
What do you think -- is this company going to survive and thrive? Are they looking to expand their staff, or do you think layoffs are inevitable?
How does Thermo Fisher Scientific stack up against the competition?
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at indeed):
(43 Scientific is horrible....
Don't be so eager to work at Thermo Fisher Scientific.
To expand their staff, or do you think layoffs are inevitable?
How does Thermo Fisher Scientific stack up in droves some by choice others by mandate.
|
|
I'm dealing with timestamps in Lua showing the number of microseconds since the Epoch (e.g. "1247687475123456").
I would really like to be able to print that number in all its terrible glory, but Lua insists on printing it in scientific notation. I've...
Started by Zack on
, 3 posts
by 3 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
In addition, %g and %G choose the shortest to package a true 64-bit integer in a userdata along with a suitable set of arithmetic metamethods.
scientific" notation, and %f to force plain decimal notation.
|
Ask your Facebook Friends
|
I write scientific software in Numpy/Scipy/Matplotlib. Having developed applications on my home computer, I am now interested in writing simple web applications. Example: user uploads image or audio file, my program processes it using Numpy/Scipy, and...
Started by Steve on
, 3 posts
by 3 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
If it's a pure python package, all that's needed is to unpack it to a directory and then add, the excellent virtualenv package allows you to do set up a private python environment with its own libraries.
Space.
|
|
Scientific computing is algorithm intensive and can also be data intensive. It often needs to use a lot of memory to run analysis and release it before continuing with the next. Sometime it also uses memory pool to recycle memory for each analysis. Managed...
Started by heisen on
, 13 posts
by 13 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
Plugin?) so once you arrive at an algorithm you want to package up you can have it generate the C code management for scientific computing where traditionally hand tuned routines have been used for improving believes that it is: Harness....
|
|
Can anyone recommend one ?
I just need a small way of handling a list of a few hundred (maybe 300 tops) scientific papers. I have author (often more than one on one paper), title, publication, some publication details (year, number, ...).
I need something...
Started by Pinky on
, 7 posts
by 7 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at superuser):
Basically you just load all your data with phpMyAdmin and use php to format your reports .
package).
|
|
Are there any serious scientific math libraries made with functional programming languages? From the very nature of functional languages one would think that they are particularly suitable for math, but yet the well-known algorithms seem to be procedural...
Started by Joonas Pulakka on
, 8 posts
by 8 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
A cornerstone of the book is the scmutils package , which and Microsoft's F# programming language....
It draws from LAPACK, BLAS and GSL (GNU Scientific Library in the variational approach to mechanics.
For numerical stuff in hackageDB: hmatrix.
|
|
Background Last year, I did an internship in a physics research group at a university. In this group, we mostly used LabVIEW to write programs for controlling our setups, doing data acquisition and analyzing our data. For the first two purposes, that ...
Started by onnodb on
, 19 posts
by 18 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
The course Software....
Data analysis? What libraries? (E.g..
Also, look around if there is something specific/environments have you used for developing scientific software, esp.
As an upgraded scientific calculator it's definitely overkill).
|
|
I use mostly R and C for statistics-related tasks. Recently I have been dealing with large datasets, typically 1e7-1e8 observations, and 100 features. They seem too big for R too handle, and the package I typically use are also more prone to crashing....
Started by gappy on
, 16 posts
by 16 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
Insufficient package heard of a software package called Root ? It is....
This is NOT acceptable.
I've had good experiences using Python and its package Numpy to work with large data sets that adds dozens of jars to the CLASSPATH.
|
|
I am coming from C/C++, Python background and I am looking to learn a functional language that (Hopefully) can do
Serious Matrix Computation expressive real world modelling database integration concurrency/parallelism Battery (library) included Strong...
Started by leon on
, 16 posts
by 16 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
Incanter : a statistical....
Of these my favorites are, in order:
1: Haskell 2: Erlang 3: OCaml / F#] .
Covers [1 a scientific background, so YMMV).
It uses the high-performance, multithreaded scientific computing package Parallel Colt .
|