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Julia 1.0 Programming Complete Reference Guide

You're reading from   Julia 1.0 Programming Complete Reference Guide Discover Julia, a high-performance language for technical computing

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Product type Course
Published in May 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838822248
Length 466 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ivo Balbaert Ivo Balbaert
Author Profile Icon Ivo Balbaert
Ivo Balbaert
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing the Julia Platform FREE CHAPTER 2. Variables, Types, and Operations 3. Functions 4. Control Flow 5. Collection Types 6. More on Types, Methods, and Modules 7. Metaprogramming in Julia 8. I/O, Networking, and Parallel Computing 9. Running External Programs 10. The Standard Library and Packages 11. Creating Our First Julia App 12. Setting Up the Wiki Game 13. Building the Wiki Game Web Crawler 14. Adding a Web UI for the Wiki Game 15. Implementing Recommender Systems with Julia 16. Machine Learning for Recommender Systems 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Packages

Most of the standard library in Julia (which can be found in /share/julia/base and /share/julia/stdlib, relative to where Julia was installed) is written in Julia itself. The rest of Julia's code ecosystem is contained in packages that are simply GitHub repositories. They are most often authored by external contributors, and already provide functionality for such diverse disciplines such as bioinformatics, chemistry, cosmology, finance, linguistics, machine learning, mathematics, statistics, and high-performance computing. A package listing can be found at http://pkg.julialang.org.

Julia's installation contains a built-in package manager, Pkg, for installing additional packages that are written in Julia. Version and dependency management is handled automatically by Pkg.

Pkg has a REPL mode, which can be started from within the Julia REPL by entering the ] key, which is often called the REPL's package mode. The Pkg mode is shown as a blue prompt, like this: (v1.0) pkg>.

From this mode, we can start all functions of Pkg. To return to the normal REPL mode, press Backspace or Ctrl C.

To initialize your environment, enter the init command, which creates an empty Project.toml file in your Julia installation folder.

Adding a new package

Before adding a new package, it is always a good idea to update your package database for the already installed packages with the up command. Then, add a new package by issuing the add PackageName command, and execute it by using PackageName in the code or in the REPL.

For example, to add 2D plotting capabilities, install the Plots package with add Plots in the Package mode by first typing ]. This installs the Plots package and all of its dependencies, building them when needed.

To make a graph of 100 random numbers between 0 and 1, execute the following commands:

using Plots 
plot(rand(100))

The rand(100) function is an array with 100 random numbers. This produces the following output:

A plot of white noise with Plots

After installing a new Julia version, update all the installed packages by running up in the Pkg REPL-mode.

You have been reading a chapter from
Julia 1.0 Programming Complete Reference Guide
Published in: May 2019
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781838822248
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