gonum
pgx
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gonum | pgx | |
---|---|---|
24 | 71 | |
7,260 | 9,414 | |
1.5% | - | |
8.3 | 9.2 | |
3 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
gonum
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How to set up interface to accept multi-dimension array?
But if you want to see what can be done for numeric stuff, check out gonum. Personally, I still wouldn't use Go, and I rather suspect it's still pretty easy to reach for something like what you're trying to do and not find it because Go just can't write that type sensibly, but you can at least see what is available, written by people who disagree with me about Go not being a great language for this.
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packages similar to Pandas
Numpy functionality is largely covered by https://www.gonum.org/ but for pandas I'm not sure if there is an equivalent as widely accepted. However, you might try https://github.com/rocketlaunchr/dataframe-go which I have not tried but it looks like it covers some of what you're looking for
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What libraries are missing?
Math libraries. It's just gonum right now. Missing things that often require people to link C or Python libs. E.g. https://github.com/gonum/gonum/issues/354
- Gonum Numerical Packages
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SIMD Accelerated vector math
Maybe this way you could avoid having Mul, Mul_Inplace, Mul_Into variants. Gonum mostly follows the same pattern.
- Modern hardware is fast, so let's choose the slowest language to balance it out
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graph: A generic Go library for creating graph data structures and performing operations on them. It supports different kinds of graphs such as directed graphs, acyclic graphs, or trees.
How does this compare to gonum graph? https://github.com/gonum/gonum/tree/master/graph
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From Python to NumPy
Go is quite a bit cleaner than Python and its concurrency/parallelism primitives can be well suited to scientific workloads.
You may want to have a look at Gonum (https://www.gonum.org), and the Go HEP package developed by CERN (https://go-hep.org).
I was also surprised to see DSP and pretty sophisticated packages, although I never used them: https://awesome-go.com/science-and-data-analysis
And of course Go has Jupyter integration, it's almost like running a script thanks to its fast compilation time.
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Go for science?
You should check out this https://github.com/gonum/gonum
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What makes concurrency in Go better than multiprocesing/multithreading in Python?
No, using CPU extensions and GPUs is a different thing than doing multitasking. There is Gonum but it is still slower than Numpy: https://github.com/gonum/gonum/issues/511
pgx
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Setting up a Database Driver, Repository and Implementation of a transaction function for your Go App
Sometimes, backend developers tend to opt for an ORM library because it provides an abstraction between your app and the database and thus there is little or no need to write raw queries and migrations which is nice. However, if you want to get better at writing queries (SQL for example), you need to learn how to build your repositories without an ORM. To open a database handle, you can either do it directly from the database driver or do it from database/sql with the driver passed into it. I will be opening the connection with database/sql together with pgx which is a driver and toolkit for PostgreSQL. Walk with me.
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The DDD Hamburger for Go
The infrastructure layer contains the concrete implementation of the repository domain interface ActivityRepository in the struct DbActivityRepository. This repository implementation uses the Postgres driver pgx and plain SQL to store the activity in the database. It uses the database transaction from the context, since the transaction was initiated by the application service.
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Building RESTful API with Hexagonal Architecture in Go
For building the RESTful Point of Sale service API, I've considered and selected a combination of technologies that would work seamlessly together. For handling HTTP requests and responses, using the Gin HTTP web framework would make sense because I think it seems complete and popular among Go community too. To ensure data integrity and persistence, I'm using PostgreSQL database with pgx as the database driver, the reason I choose PostgreSQL because it is the most popular relational database to use in production and offers efficient Go integration. I'm also implementing caching using Redis with go-redis client library, which provides powerful in-memory data storage capabilities.
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Working with postgres in GO.
If you are willing to commit to working only with Postgres, I highly recommend pgx. Be sure you get the latest version github.com/jackc/pgx/v5. This gives you the full power of interacting with Postgres without going through an intermediate lowest-common-denominator library.
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How to Use Iris and PostgreSQL for Web Development
It uses pg package and pgx driver under the hood.
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Could I get a code review?
Starting off, is there any reason you're calling out to the CLI, instead of just using a Postgres driver like pgx? Shelling out to the command line should always be a last resort where possible as a software engineer.
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Why elixir over Golang
For maintaining state I use PostgreSQL. Driver: https://github.com/jackc/pgx (I use the pgxpools) Along with Sqlc for generating database models and allowing me to focus on just building queries in DBeaver. https://sqlc.dev/
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Make psql display settings on login
An example of what I'm looking for can be found here https://github.com/jackc/pgx/wiki/Getting-started-with-pgx-through-database-sql/c9f798b4d9a500fcf93931df2464af969d68f516
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Zig now has built-in HTTP server and client in std
Except pgx recommends using their native interface, not database/sql, for performance and extra features [0], so it's not that simple in practice.
[0]: https://github.com/jackc/pgx#choosing-between-the-pgx-and-da...
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Go Roadmap
pgx is “PostgreSQL driver and toolkit for Go”. Take a look at https://github.com/jackc/pgx
What are some alternatives?
dataframe-go - DataFrames for Go: For statistics, machine-learning, and data manipulation/exploration
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
gosl - Linear algebra, eigenvalues, FFT, Bessel, elliptic, orthogonal polys, geometry, NURBS, numerical quadrature, 3D transfinite interpolation, random numbers, Mersenne twister, probability distributions, optimisation, differential equations.
GORM - The fantastic ORM library for Golang, aims to be developer friendly
Stats - A well tested and comprehensive Golang statistics library package with no dependencies.
pq - Pure Go Postgres driver for database/sql
gonum/plot - A repository for plotting and visualizing data
gomock - GoMock is a mocking framework for the Go programming language.
PiHex - PiHex Library, written in Go, generates a hexadecimal number sequence in the number Pi in the range from 0 to 10,000,000.
go-sql-driver/mysql - Go MySQL Driver is a MySQL driver for Go's (golang) database/sql package
goraph - Package goraph implements graph data structure and algorithms.
sqlc - Generate type-safe code from SQL