julia VS SciMLBenchmarks.jl

Compare julia vs SciMLBenchmarks.jl and see what are their differences.

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julia SciMLBenchmarks.jl
350 10
44,510 290
0.9% 2.4%
10.0 9.7
1 day ago 2 days ago
Julia MATLAB
MIT License MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

julia

Posts with mentions or reviews of julia. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-03-06.
  • Top Paying Programming Technologies 2024
    19 projects | dev.to | 6 Mar 2024
    34. Julia - $74,963
  • Optimize sgemm on RISC-V platform
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 28 Feb 2024
    I don't believe there is any official documentation on this, but https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/pull/49430 for example added prefetching to the marking phase of a GC which saw speedups on x86, but not on M1.
  • Dart 3.3
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 15 Feb 2024
    3. dispatch on all the arguments

    the first solution is clean, but people really like dispatch.

    the second makes calling functions in the function call syntax weird, because the first argument is privileged semantically but not syntactically.

    the third makes calling functions in the method call syntax weird because the first argument is privileged syntactically but not semantically.

    the closest things to this i can think of off the top of my head in remotely popular programming languages are: nim, lisp dialects, and julia.

    nim navigates the dispatch conundrum by providing different ways to define free functions for different dispatch-ness. the tutorial gives a good overview: https://nim-lang.org/docs/tut2.html

    lisps of course lack UFCS.

    see here for a discussion on the lack of UFCS in julia: https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/31779

    so to sum up the answer to the original question: because it's only obvious how to make it nice and tidy like you're wanting if you sacrifice function dispatch, which is ubiquitous for good reason!

  • Julia 1.10 Highlights
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 27 Dec 2023
    https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/blob/release-1.10/NEWS.md
  • Best Programming languages for Data Analysis📊
    4 projects | dev.to | 7 Dec 2023
    Visit official site: https://julialang.org/
  • Potential of the Julia programming language for high energy physics computing
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 4 Dec 2023
    No. It runs natively on ARM.

    julia> versioninfo() Julia Version 1.9.3 Commit bed2cd540a1 (2023-08-24 14:43 UTC) Build Info: Official https://julialang.org/ release

  • Rust std:fs slower than Python
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 29 Nov 2023
    https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/51086#issuecomment...

    So while this "fixes" the issue, it'll introduce a confusing time delay between you freeing the memory and you observing that in `htop`.

    But according to https://jemalloc.net/jemalloc.3.html you can set `opt.muzzy_decay_ms = 0` to remove the delay.

    Still, the musl author has some reservations against making `jemalloc` the default:

    https://www.openwall.com/lists/musl/2018/04/23/2

    > It's got serious bloat problems, problems with undermining ASLR, and is optimized pretty much only for being as fast as possible without caring how much memory you use.

    With the above-mentioned tunables, this should be mitigated to some extent, but the general "theme" (focusing on e.g. performance vs memory usage) will likely still mean "it's a tradeoff" or "it's no tradeoff, but only if you set tunables to what you need".

  • Eleven strategies for making reproducible research the norm
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Nov 2023
    I have asked about Julia's reproducibility story on the Guix mailing list in the past, and at the time Simon Tournier didn't think it was promising. I seem to recall Julia itself didnt have a reproducible build. All I know now is that github issue is still not closed.

    https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/34753

  • Julia as a unifying end-to-end workflow language on the Frontier exascale system
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 19 Nov 2023
    I don't really know what kind of rebuttal you're looking for, but I will link my HN comments from when this was first posted for some thoughts: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31396861#31398796. As I said, in the linked post, I'm quite skeptical of the business of trying to assess relative buginess of programming in different systems, because that has strong dependencies on what you consider core vs packages and what exactly you're trying to do.

    However, bugs in general suck and we've been thinking a fair bit about what additional tooling the language could provide to help people avoid the classes of bugs that Yuri encountered in the post.

    The biggest class of problems in the blog post, is that it's pretty clear that `@inbounds` (and I will extend this to `@assume_effects`, even though that wasn't around when Yuri wrote his post) is problematic, because it's too hard to write. My proposal for what to do instead is at https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/pull/50641.

    Another common theme is that while Julia is great at composition, it's not clear what's expected to work and what isn't, because the interfaces are informal and not checked. This is a hard design problem, because it's quite close to the reasons why Julia works well. My current thoughts on that are here: https://github.com/Keno/InterfaceSpecs.jl but there's other proposals also.

  • Getaddrinfo() on glibc calls getenv(), oh boy
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 16 Oct 2023
    Doesn't musl have the same issue? https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/34726#issuecomment...

    I also wonder about OSX's libc. Newer versions seem to have some sort of locking https://github.com/apple-open-source-mirror/Libc/blob/master...

    but older versions (from 10.9) don't have any lockign: https://github.com/apple-oss-distributions/Libc/blob/Libc-99...

SciMLBenchmarks.jl

Posts with mentions or reviews of SciMLBenchmarks.jl. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-01.
  • Can Fortran survive another 15 years?
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 1 May 2023
    What about the other benchmarks on the same site? https://docs.sciml.ai/SciMLBenchmarksOutput/stable/Bio/BCR/ BCR takes about a hundred seconds and is pretty indicative of systems biological models, coming from 1122 ODEs with 24388 terms that describe a stiff chemical reaction network modeling the BCR signaling network from Barua et al. Or the discrete diffusion models https://docs.sciml.ai/SciMLBenchmarksOutput/stable/Jumps/Dif... which are the justification behind the claims in https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.07.30.502135v1 that the O(1) scaling methods scale better than O(log n) scaling for large enough models? I mean.

    > If you use special routines (BLAS/LAPACK, ...), use them everywhere as the respective community does.

    It tests with and with BLAS/LAPACK (which isn't always helpful, which of course you'd see from the benchmarks if you read them). One of the key differences of course though is that there are some pure Julia tools like https://github.com/JuliaLinearAlgebra/RecursiveFactorization... which outperform the respective OpenBLAS/MKL equivalent in many scenarios, and that's one noted factor for the performance boost (and is not trivial to wrap into the interface of the other solvers, so it's not done). There are other benchmarks showing that it's not apples to apples and is instead conservative in many cases, for example https://github.com/SciML/SciPyDiffEq.jl#measuring-overhead showing the SciPyDiffEq handling with the Julia JIT optimizations gives a lower overhead than direct SciPy+Numba, so we use the lower overhead numbers in https://docs.sciml.ai/SciMLBenchmarksOutput/stable/MultiLang....

    > you must compile/write whole programs in each of the respective languages to enable full compiler/interpreter optimizations

    You do realize that a .so has lower overhead to call from a JIT compiled language than from a static compiled language like C because you can optimize away some of the bindings at the runtime right? https://github.com/dyu/ffi-overhead is a measurement of that, and you see LuaJIT and Julia as faster than C and Fortran here. This shouldn't be surprising because it's pretty clear how that works?

    I mean yes, someone can always ask for more benchmarks, but now we have a site that's auto updating tons and tons of ODE benchmarks with ODE systems ranging from size 2 to the thousands, with as many things as we can wrap in as many scenarios as we can wrap. And we don't even "win" all of our benchmarks because unlike for you, these benchmarks aren't for winning but for tracking development (somehow for Hacker News folks they ignore the utility part and go straight to language wars...).

    If you have a concrete change you think can improve the benchmarks, then please share it at https://github.com/SciML/SciMLBenchmarks.jl. We'll be happy to make and maintain another.

  • Why Fortran is a scientific powerhouse
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 11 Jan 2023
    Project.toml or Manifest.toml? Every package has Project.toml which specifies bounds (https://github.com/SciML/OrdinaryDiffEq.jl/blob/master/Proje...). Every fully reproducible project has a Manifest that decrease the complete package state (https://github.com/SciML/SciMLBenchmarks.jl/blob/master/benc...).
  • Why Fortran is easy to learn
    19 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 7 Jan 2022
    > But in the end, it's FORTRAN all the way down. Even in Julia.

    That's not true. None of the Julia differential equation solver stack is calling into Fortran anymore. We have our own BLAS tools that outperform OpenBLAS and MKL in the instances we use it for (mostly LU-factorization) and those are all written in pure Julia. See https://github.com/YingboMa/RecursiveFactorization.jl, https://github.com/JuliaSIMD/TriangularSolve.jl, and https://github.com/JuliaLinearAlgebra/Octavian.jl. And this is one part of the DiffEq performance story. The performance of this of course is all validated on https://github.com/SciML/SciMLBenchmarks.jl

  • Twitter Thread: Symbolic Computing for Compiler Optimizations in Julia
    3 projects | /r/Julia | 3 Jan 2022
    Anything that continues to improve the SciMLBenchmarks of differential equation solvers, inverse problems, scientific machine learning, and equation discovery really. But there's a lot of other applications in mind, like generating compiler passes that improve floating point roundoff (like Herbie), a pure-Julia simple implementation of XLA-transformations for BLAS fusion, and a few others that are a bit more out there and will require a paper to describe the connection.
  • In 2022, the difference between symbolic computing and compiler optimizations will be erased in #julialang. Anyone who can come up with a set of symbolic mathematical rules will automatically receive an optimized compiler pass to build better code
    3 projects | /r/programmingcirclejerk | 2 Jan 2022
    Show me a single DAE solver in Haskell that has even come close to the performance we get in the Julia SciMLBenchmarks. Here's just one example. For Haskell pacakages, all I see are wrappers to GSL and Sundials, both of which are slow in comparison. So this is a 8.5x speedup over something that was already faster than what you could find in Haskell. Show me something with decent speed in DAEs or it's useless.
  • Tutorials for Learning Runge-Kutta Methods with Julia?
    5 projects | /r/Julia | 27 Dec 2021
    That's both a joke and a truth. The DifferentialEquations.jl source code, along with the SciMLBenchmarks and all of the associated documentation, is by far the most complete resource on all of this stuff at this point, for a reason. I've always treated it as "a lab notebook for the community" which is why that 8,000 lines of tableau code, the thousands of convergence tests, etc. are there. Papers have typos sometimes, things change with benchmarks over time, etc. But well-tested code tells you whether something actually converges and what the true performance is today.
  • [D] How important is Numerical Analysis for machine learning?
    2 projects | /r/MachineLearning | 23 Dec 2021
    Star-P was sold off to Microsoft IIRC. Some of the people who had interned there then joined Alan's lab. They created the Julia programming language where now parallelism and performance is directly built into the language. I created the differential equation solver libraries for the language which then used all of these properties to benchmark very well, and that's how I subsequently started working with Alan. Then we took this to build systems that combine machine learning and numerical solvers to accelerate and automatically discover physical systems, and the resulting SciML organization and the scientific machine learning research, along with compiler-level automatic differentiation and parallelism, is where all of that is today with the Julia Lab.
  • Julia 1.7 has been released
    15 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 30 Nov 2021
    https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~thickstn/ctpg-project-page/...

    That's all showing the raw iteration count to show that it algorithmically is faster, but the time per iteration is also fast for many reasons showcased in the SciMLBenchmarks routinely outperforming C and Fortran solvers (https://github.com/SciML/SciMLBenchmarks.jl). So it's excelling pretty well, and things like the automated discovery of black hole dynamics are all done using the universal differential equation framework enabled by the SciML tools (see https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.12695 for that application).

    What we are missing however is that, right now these simulations are all writing raw differential equations so we do need a better set of modeling tools. That said, MuJoCo and DiffTaichi are not great physical modeling environments for building real systems, instead we would point to Simulink and Modelica as what are really useful for building real-world systems. So it would be cool if there was a modeling language in Julia which extends that universe and directly does optimal code generation for the Julia solvers... and that's what ModelingToolkit.jl is (https://github.com/SciML/ModelingToolkit.jl). That project is still pretty new, but there's already enough to show some large-scale models outperforming Dymola on examples that require symbolic tearing and index reduction, which is far more than what physical simulation environments used for non-scientific purposes (MuJoCo and DiffTaichi) are able to do. See the workshop for details (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEVOgSLBzWA). And that's just the top level details, there's a whole Julia Computing product called JuliaSim (https://juliacomputing.com/products/juliasim/) which is then being built on these pieces to do things like automatically generate ML-accelerated components and add model building GUIs.

    That said, MuJoCo and DiffTaichi have much better visualizations and animations than MTK. Our focus so far has been on the core routines, making them fast, scalable, stable, and extensive. You'll need to wait for the near future (or build something with Makie) if you want the pretty pictures of the robot to happen automatically. That said, Julia's Makie visualization system has already been shown to be sufficiently powerful for this kind of application (https://nextjournal.com/sdanisch/taking-your-robot-for-a-wal...), so we're excited to see where that will go in the future.

  • Is Julia suitable for computational physics?
    4 projects | /r/Julia | 5 Jan 2021
    Most of the SciML organization is dedicated to research and production level scientific computing for domains like physical systems, chemical reactions, and systems biology (and more of course). The differential equation benchmarks are quite good in comparison to a lot of C++ and Fortran libraries, there's modern neural PDE solvers, pervasive automatic differentiation, automated GPU and distributed parallelism, SDE solvers, DDE solvers, DAE solvers, ModelingToolkit.jl for Modelica-like symbolic transformations for higher index DAEs, Bayesian differential equations, etc. All of that then ties into big PDE solving. You get the picture.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing julia and SciMLBenchmarks.jl you can also consider the following projects:

jax - Composable transformations of Python+NumPy programs: differentiate, vectorize, JIT to GPU/TPU, and more

DifferentialEquations.jl - Multi-language suite for high-performance solvers of differential equations and scientific machine learning (SciML) components. Ordinary differential equations (ODEs), stochastic differential equations (SDEs), delay differential equations (DDEs), differential-algebraic equations (DAEs), and more in Julia.

NetworkX - Network Analysis in Python

SciMLTutorials.jl - Tutorials for doing scientific machine learning (SciML) and high-performance differential equation solving with open source software.

Lua - Lua is a powerful, efficient, lightweight, embeddable scripting language. It supports procedural programming, object-oriented programming, functional programming, data-driven programming, and data description.

ApproxFun.jl - Julia package for function approximation

rust-numpy - PyO3-based Rust bindings of the NumPy C-API

Diffractor.jl - Next-generation AD

Numba - NumPy aware dynamic Python compiler using LLVM

RecursiveFactorization.jl

F# - Please file issues or pull requests here: https://github.com/dotnet/fsharp

BoundaryValueDiffEq.jl - Boundary value problem (BVP) solvers for scientific machine learning (SciML)