Book Image

Mastering Julia - Second Edition

By : Malcolm Sherrington
Book Image

Mastering Julia - Second Edition

By: Malcolm Sherrington

Overview of this book

Julia is a well-constructed programming language which was designed for fast execution speed by using just-in-time LLVM compilation techniques, thus eliminating the classic problem of performing analysis in one language and translating it for performance in a second. This book is a primer on Julia’s approach to a wide variety of topics such as scientific computing, statistics, machine learning, simulation, graphics, and distributed computing. Starting off with a refresher on installing and running Julia on different platforms, you’ll quickly get to grips with the core concepts and delve into a discussion on how to use Julia with various code editors and interactive development environments (IDEs). As you progress, you’ll see how data works through simple statistics and analytics and discover Julia's speed, its real strength, which makes it particularly useful in highly intensive computing tasks. You’ll also and observe how Julia can cooperate with external processes to enhance graphics and data visualization. Finally, you will explore metaprogramming and learn how it adds great power to the language and establish networking and distributed computing with Julia. By the end of this book, you’ll be confident in using Julia as part of your existing skill set.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

C++

Support for C++ was started over 8 years ago (around 2015) with a Cxx.jl package; it was not an easy package to use and was no longer supported after Julia v 1.3.

There are currently (as of 2023) a set of packages tackling interoperation with C++, each with a separate approach. We will highlight four of these next:

  • CxxWrap: Now supported by the JuliaInterop group. Writes code for the Julia wrapper in C++, and then uses a one-liner on the Julia side to make the wrapped C++ library available there. It requires a C++ compiler installed that supports, at least, the C++17 standard.
  • CxxInterface: Written by Erik Schnetter. The design is simpler than CxxWrap.jl. Wrapper functions are written in Julia and generate respective C++ wrapper functions. It is not well documented, so needs piecing together from the included examples.
  • jluna: Written by Clem Cords. Relatively recent, comprehensive, and well documented (https://clemens-cords.com/jluna/basics.html). It requires...