"A calculator app? Anyone could make that."
Not true.
A calculator should show you the result of the mathematical expression you entered. That's much, much harder than it sounds.
What I'm about to tell you is the greatest calculator app development story ever told.
Fokker-Planck equation equivalently describes the movement of a random particle with a drift (as a stochastic ODE) and the evolution of its density (as a PDE). https://t.co/F8up4bH2aF
Solving f(x)=0 is just Newton's method, right? Well the #julialang nonlinear solvers have had lots of innovations in this very common numerical problems. See this new manuscript from @SciML_Org#sciml
Shout out to the lead author @avikpal1410
https://t.co/iISxtMtGCn
#julialang v1.10 is released! Major "time to first X" and loading time improvements! With this one, I tend to not even do any system image shenanigans anymore: standard Julia is fast enough to start for me for anything I tend to use. Great work all!
https://t.co/ZTiUJC2oFT
Never remember which part goes where when you're multiplying matrices?
Try Falk's Scheme!
It's a visual way of arranging the matrices so that everything naturally falls into place.
And if the product isn't defined, you'll notice immediately that the matrices don't line up!
We're hiring research scientists and engineers in programming languages, probabilistic machine learning & causal inference
Apply/dm me if you want to build general reasoning systems with solid foundations, and use them to solve hard scientific & societal problems
RT appreciated
Chaos and the double pendulum: the configuration space of the double pendulum is a torus (a circle for each angle coordinate) so we can plot the evolution of such a pendulum in two ways: either as a "real pendulum" in physical space, or as a point in configuration space :)
The Cistercian numerals are a forgotten number system, developed by the Cistercian monastic order in the early thirteenth century, much more compact than Arabic or Roman numerals: with a single character you could write any integer from 1 to 9999
[more: https://t.co/8TS1FZle9W]
1/ Many will tell you why Python is great for teaching coding, so I'll tell you ways it's not.
State is a bad default. It should be legal but safe & rare. The arc of programming is long and bends towards immutability. Its early use creates messes (eg, "a variable is a box".) ↵
Anyone interested in a full-time job doing FLINT development should get in touch.
I don't have funding at the moment, but given a qualified candidate (skilled with computer algebra *and* C programming), there's a decent chance that funding can be found.
So excited to share this blogpost!😀
In it, I introduce a new graph: 👑 the Targaryen graph 👑, talk about 5 centrality measures, and ask:
“Who is the most important Targaryen?”
All results were #builtwithrel (@RelationalAI’s declarative language).
https://t.co/OTHMBXPOnj
#HappyHalloween! Come & get spooked with @somacdivad & solve a logic puzzle in Rel, our relational modeling language. Learn to model a problem, store facts, & infer new knowledge. Put on your best costume, & let's go trick-or-treating with Rel! https://t.co/BWzj6Z1h2j
All businesses regularly face difficult decisions. Declarative languages like Rel make the integration of quantum optimizers simple, to minimize cost & maximize benefit as those decisions grow in number & complexity. @WilliamMacread1 explains ⬇️ https://t.co/APAoHb2WIS