Isn’t that only microsoft exclusive and closed source? Also does compiling it really yield the same speed as C, it is garbage collected isn’t it?
Isn’t that only microsoft exclusive and closed source? Also does compiling it really yield the same speed as C, it is garbage collected isn’t it?
Yeah that point was not entirely accurate. What I meant was, that a np.array and a list don’t work together. Coming from julia and matlab it just does not make sense to me, why I can’t use a function written for a list for a np.array even if they basically represent the exaxt same thing.
Julia for example hast linalg as a module but functions work on lists with no problem.
But I took your advice to heart and installed a Linter
Python is strongly typed, but dynamically checked. Working with other languages I just found, that the type errors in python are the hardest to catch and to debug, but maybe I am just more used to othet languages
I see it’s use as language to write small scripts, I just don’t see much use besides that.
Here is a article talking about the speed of compiled python vs Julia. I don’t see why it is better to go to all these extra steps just to end up with something slower. https://www.matecdev.com/posts/julia-python-numba-cython.html
No I mean, Python is definitely the most used language in scientific computing, but yeah, I would use something else if I could.
Julia, R, Matlab, Mathematica and Fortran.
Yeah, ofc every language must have a type system, the problem is, that this is not enforced. I.e 3 == ‘3’ throws no error, when working with dataframes for example this can be a pain in the ass. But yeah, I don’t say that nobody should use Python (although the title is a bit dramatic) I just think that there are better alternatives out there.
I mean others don’t seem to have the same problem with Python as me, so if it is right for them, I can’t really complain, but I would use the following languages for the following tasks
Scientific Computing (my main area): I prefer Julia, it is faster, feels more intuitive and feels like a modern python for scientific computing
Web: there are many great frameworks out there, i am intrigued by phoenix for elixir
Game Developement: Nobody use python in games to distribute for anything heavy I hope, but for scripting I would use Lua
Learning: Python is often the first language, that people learn, and I guess that also explains it’s widespread use to some degree. I would teach something less high-level like C as a first language, although I think writing “high-level code” also has a learning curve to it.
Scripting: Fine, I guess python is great for small scripts, although one could also use Ruby
It let’s you find a users profile on different social media services based on their username.
Yeah it is, the exact number is 25104128675558732292929443748812027705165520269876079766872595193901106138220937419666018009000254169376172314360982328660708071123369979853445367910653872383599704355532740937678091491429440864316046925074510134847025546014098005907965541041195496105311886173373435145517193282760847755882291690213539123479186274701519396808504940722607033001246328398800550487427999876690416973437861078185344667966871511049653888130136836199010529180056125844549488648617682915826347564148990984138067809999604687488146734837340699359838791124995957584538873616661533093253551256845056046388738129702951381151861413688922986510005440943943014699244112555755279140760492764253740250410391056421979003289600000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
I dont think the second generation of xbox was callled xbox 2.510412868 E+778
I found this, which dives deeper into the impact of inefficient software.
https://eco.kde.org/handbook/#look-to-the-software