|
|
|
|
|
by sivoais
1836 days ago
|
|
Hi, PDL core dev here. Feel free to ask me anything about it. The last release wasn't in February, it was just last week! <https://metacpan.org/release/ETJ/PDL-2.050>. I agree with many of the commenters here that Python has a lot of great libraries and is a major player for scientific computing these days. I also code in Python from time to time, but I prefer the OO modelling and language flexibility features of Perl. Speaking for myself and not the other PDL devs, I don't think this is an issue for Perl-using scientists as Perl can actually call Python code quite easily using Inline::Python. In the future I will be working on interoperability between the two better specifically for NumPy / Pandas. This is also the path being taken by Julia and R. |
|
As a "heavy" user of scientific computing, I must say that the name "data language" is a bit disheartening... It echoes of useless "data frames" not of cool "sparse matrices" which is what I actually need. Does PDS support large sparse matrices? I grepped around the tutorial and the book and the word "sparse" is nowhere to be found. Yet it is an essential data structure in scientific computation. Are there any plans to, e.g., provide an interface into standard libraries like suitesparse?