InteractiveCodeSearch.jl
Pluto.jl
InteractiveCodeSearch.jl | Pluto.jl | |
---|---|---|
3 | 78 | |
114 | 4,880 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
over 1 year ago | 4 days ago | |
Julia | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
InteractiveCodeSearch.jl
-
Starlight.jl – A game engine written in Julia
> I’ve read some Julia source and its an awful experience trying to figure out what method is actually going to get executed because of multiple dispatch.
I totally get where you're coming from, as this is how I felt when I started out exploring Julia code. In previous languages, I preferred to use the simple tools I was familiar with (my editor and ack/ag/rg) to explore code, but that workflow was a frustrating no-go in Julia. The usual alternative in those languages was to change my entire coding experience with an IDE, or to accept some (slight) additional complexity with things like ctags. In Julia, neither of those is necessary, as the inbuilt tools like @which, @edit, methods(), and methodswith() do a good job of providing a non-intrusive, simple alternate set of tools. (Shoutout to the InteractiveCodeSearch.jl package too, which provides a nice interactive interface over these that sometimes comes in handy.)
Now, generated functions and @eval-ed functions, those are a bane of readability when you're new to the code. Thankfully, those are rare enough and usually in deep enough parts of the code that this does not pose a significant problem.
[1] https://github.com/tkf/InteractiveCodeSearch.jl/
-
How do you deal with the fact that since Julia is not object-oriented, the IDE can't help showing you what functions can be used on a struct?
methodswith(), this repo and Julia 1.8 will come with the better solution, I think: https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/pull/38791
- Interactivecodesearch.jl – Interactively search Julia code
Pluto.jl
-
Potential of the Julia programming language for high energy physics computing
I thought that notebook based development and package based development were diametrically opposed in the past, but Pluto.jl notebooks have changed my mind about this.
A Pluto.jl notebook is a human readable Julia source file. The Pluto.jl package is itself developed via Pluto.jl notebooks.
https://github.com/fonsp/Pluto.jl
Also, the VSCode Julia plugin tooling has really expanded in functionality and usability for me in the past year. The integrated debugging took some work to setup, but is fast enough to drop into a local frame.
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/languages/julia
Julia is the first language I have achieved full life cycle integration between exploratory code to sharable package. It even runs quite well on my Android. 2023 is the first year I was able to solve a differential equation or render a 3D surface from a calculated mesh with the hardware in my pocket.
- Pluto.jl: Simple, reactive programming environment for Julia
-
Ask HN: Why don't other languages have Jupyter style notebooks?
Re Julia there is also pluto.jl that is another notebook-like environment for julia. It's been a few years since I played with it but it looked cool, for example it handles state differently so you don't get into the same messes as with ipython notebooks. https://plutojl.org/
- Pluto: Simple Reactive Notebooks for Julia
-
Looking for a Julia gui framework with a demo like EGUI
For this, Notebooks are often used. Julia offers a uniquely nice and interactive Pluto notebook for the web https://github.com/fonsp/Pluto.jl
- Excel Labs, a Microsoft Garage Project
-
IPyflow: Reactive Python Notebooks in Jupyter(Lab)
I believe this is what Pluto sets out to do for Julia.
I used it as part of the “Computational Thinking” with Julia course a year or two back. Even then the beta software was very good and some of the demos the Pluto dev showed were nothing short of amazing
https://plutojl.org/
- For Julia is there some thing like VSCode's python interactive window?
-
What have you "washed your hands of" in Python?
I think what you want is Pluto!
-
Show HN: Out of order execution in Jupyter notebooks is a solved problem
I like how Pluto.jl handles this:
> Pluto offers an environment where changed code takes effect instantly and where deleted code leaves no trace. Unlike Jupyter or Matlab, there is no mutable workspace, but rather, an important guarantee:
> At any instant, the program state is completely described by the code you see.
[1] https://github.com/fonsp/Pluto.jl
What are some alternatives?
PlutoUI.jl
vim-slime - A vim plugin to give you some slime. (Emacs)
BinaryTraits.jl - Can do or not? It's easy. See https://tk3369.github.io/BinaryTraits.jl/dev/
rmarkdown - Dynamic Documents for R
Starlight.jl - A greedy game engine for greedy programmers!
Weave.jl - Scientific reports/literate programming for Julia
KittyTerminalImages.jl - A package that allows Julia to display images in the kitty terminal editor
Dash.jl - Dash for Julia - A Julia interface to the Dash ecosystem for creating analytic web applications in Julia. No JavaScript required.
UnicodePlots.jl - Unicode-based scientific plotting for working in the terminal
IJulia.jl - Julia kernel for Jupyter
julia - The Julia Programming Language
Tables.jl - An interface for tables in Julia