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  • Book Overview & Buying Mastering Julia
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Mastering Julia

Mastering Julia

By : Malcolm Sherrington
4.4 (7)
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Mastering Julia

Mastering Julia

4.4 (7)
By: Malcolm Sherrington

Overview of this book

Julia is a well-constructed programming language with fast execution speed, eliminating the classic problem of performing analysis in one language and translating it for performance into a second. This book will help you develop and enhance your programming skills in Julia to solve real-world automation challenges. This book starts off with a refresher on installing and running Julia on different platforms. Next, you will compare the different ways of working with Julia and explore Julia's key features in-depth by looking at design and build. You will see how data works using simple statistics and analytics, and discover Julia's speed, its real strength, which makes it particularly useful in highly intensive computing tasks and observe how Julia can cooperate with external processes in order to enhance graphics and data visualization. Finally, you will look into meta-programming and learn how it adds great power to the language and establish networking and distributed computing with Julia.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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11
Index

Sockets and servers


In this section, we are going to look at a basic cornerstone of network services, the socket, and see how this leads to the creation of familiar operating system tasks such as the web and e-mail servers.

First, we need to introduce the concept of well-known ports.

Well-known ports

The concept of networked services over well-known ports was introduced to Unix by the Berkeley development on the open source operating system in the early 1980s and has formed the bedrock of almost all computing operating systems ever since. The idea is that a particular service is associated with a port number and that network packets are sent tagged with this port number.

For example, originally the file transfer protocol used port 21, SSH port 22 and sendmail port 25. Today other (additional) ports may be used for these services

One port that many readers will be familiar with is 80, this is the one used by web servers to deliver HTTP content.

Security firewalls often block specific traffic on...

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Mastering Julia
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