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authorJim Garrison <jim@garrison.cc>2015-05-02 22:26:12 -0700
committerJim Garrison <jim@garrison.cc>2015-05-02 22:26:12 -0700
commit88dd3f24dab91c35f73157a1b1fffcf6d9bc4dc3 (patch)
tree7055d5625912419fbe725d63448b1fbebc37a2eb
parent7bc99fcaf4329b3c25cca671f62a03b67aa4d46e (diff)
[julia/en] Update for Julia 0.3 and fix a few typos
-rw-r--r--julia.html.markdown8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/julia.html.markdown b/julia.html.markdown
index 3a52018c..5ccd6484 100644
--- a/julia.html.markdown
+++ b/julia.html.markdown
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ filename: learnjulia.jl
Julia is a new homoiconic functional language focused on technical computing.
While having the full power of homoiconic macros, first-class functions, and low-level control, Julia is as easy to learn and use as Python.
-This is based on the current development version of Julia, as of October 18th, 2013.
+This is based on Julia 0.3.
```ruby
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ false
# $ can be used for string interpolation:
"2 + 2 = $(2 + 2)" # => "2 + 2 = 4"
-# You can put any Julia expression inside the parenthesis.
+# You can put any Julia expression inside the parentheses.
# Another way to format strings is the printf macro.
@printf "%d is less than %f" 4.5 5.3 # 5 is less than 5.300000
@@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ end
# inside the julia folder to find these files.
# You can initialize arrays from ranges
-a = [1:5] # => 5-element Int64 Array: [1,2,3,4,5]
+a = [1:5;] # => 5-element Int64 Array: [1,2,3,4,5]
# You can look at ranges with slice syntax.
a[1:3] # => [1, 2, 3]
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ in(("two", 3), filled_dict) # => false
haskey(filled_dict, "one") # => true
haskey(filled_dict, 1) # => false
-# Trying to look up a non-existant key will raise an error
+# Trying to look up a non-existent key will raise an error
try
filled_dict["four"] # => ERROR: key not found: four in getindex at dict.jl:489
catch e