PaddedViews.jl
AlgebraOfGraphics.jl
PaddedViews.jl | AlgebraOfGraphics.jl | |
---|---|---|
2 | 4 | |
45 | 393 | |
- | 1.3% | |
3.8 | 5.0 | |
27 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Julia | Julia | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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PaddedViews.jl
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Julia Update: Adoption Keeps Climbing; Is It a Python Challenger?
As sibling posts have pointed out, you can in fact do all of those things:
1. You can write a getproperty method for a tuple. It is considered to be type piracy and thus runs the risk of colliding with someone else's definition, but the language absolutely lets you do it.
2. You can broadcast over the fields of a NamedTuple by defining appropriate methods. Again, it's type piracy, so take that into consideration but the language lets you do this easily.
3. The https://github.com/JuliaArrays/PaddedViews.jl package implements exactly what you're saying Julia won't let you do.
If anything, Julia errs on the side of allowing you to do too many things! There are very few things the language says really won't let you do.
AlgebraOfGraphics.jl
- Makie, a modern and fast plotting library for Julia
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Tidyverse 2.0.0
This illustrates the point perfectly. Julia is attempting this and has a beachhead with Dataframes.jl. Confusingly though, Tidier.jl isn't really analogous to R's Tidyverse. It's more like one of a handful of meta-packages around Dataframes.jl.
Then there are Grammar of Graphics (ggplot was Tidyverse's first star) style plotting libraries that Julia has been building. I'm probably most excited about Algebra of Graphics (https://github.com/MakieOrg/AlgebraOfGraphics.jl/) as part of the Makie Plots ecosystem. It does still feel a bit like Julia community can't decide between following Matplotlib or R's Grid/Ggplot approach.
The seeds of a Tidyverse for Julia are there, but it'll take some time to achieve the consistency and maturity of the original Tidyverse.
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What Julia plotting library do you use/think will be the standard going forward?
Did you maybe overlook something, in https://github.com/JuliaPlots/AlgebraOfGraphics.jl or other package? I looked up "grid" and it seems to have something. I realize R, and ggplot2, were considered best by many (and Gadfly.jl similar, AoG seems to be its replacement?), but I didn't realize it had extensions (that you clarify below). At least you can call R, and thus use its plotting (and I assume its extensions too, can you confirm or deny?). For some reasons you got downvoted, so might you be ignorant of new developments in Julia (also Makie, to me it seemed excellent and I thought Julia caught up with plotting, and also had more options than other languages), or the others, or people simply very opinionated about plotting? It's about features, also speed/latency/TTFP, which is getting better.
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Julia Update: Adoption Keeps Climbing; Is It a Python Challenger?
Julia has plenty of plotting solutions that are better for stats than matplotlib:
https://github.com/JuliaPlots/AlgebraOfGraphics.jl
What are some alternatives?
Chain.jl - A Julia package for piping a value through a series of transformation expressions using a more convenient syntax than Julia's native piping functionality.
Genie.jl - 🧞The highly productive Julia web framework
Dash.jl - Dash for Julia - A Julia interface to the Dash ecosystem for creating analytic web applications in Julia. No JavaScript required.
StatsPlots.jl - Statistical plotting recipes for Plots.jl
VegaLite.jl - Julia bindings to Vega-Lite
org-mode - This is a MIRROR only, do not send PR.
RCall.jl - Call R from Julia
Revise.jl - Automatically update function definitions in a running Julia session