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Diffstat (limited to 'julia.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | julia.html.markdown | 152 | 
1 files changed, 106 insertions, 46 deletions
| diff --git a/julia.html.markdown b/julia.html.markdown index c31df752..6c719b5c 100644 --- a/julia.html.markdown +++ b/julia.html.markdown @@ -2,6 +2,7 @@  language: julia  author: Leah Hanson  author_url: http://leahhanson.us +filename: learnjulia.jl  ---  Julia is a new homoiconic functional language focused on technical computing. @@ -9,7 +10,8 @@ While having the full power of homoiconic macros, first-class functions, and low  This is based on the current development version of Julia, as of June 29th, 2013. -```julia +```ruby +  # Single line comments start with a hash.  #################################################### @@ -48,8 +50,10 @@ div(5, 2) #=> 2  2 << 1  #=> 4 # logical/arithmetic shift left  # You can use the bits function to see the binary representation of a number. -bits(12345)   #=> "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011000000111001" -bits(12345.0) #=> "0100000011001000000111001000000000000000000000000000000000000000" +bits(12345) +#=> "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011000000111001" +bits(12345.0) +#=> "0100000011001000000111001000000000000000000000000000000000000000"  # Boolean values are primitives  true @@ -96,25 +100,42 @@ println("I'm Julia. Nice to meet you!")  # No need to declare variables before assigning to them.  some_var = 5 #=> 5   some_var #=> 5 +  # Accessing a previously unassigned variable is an error -some_other_var #=> ERROR: some_other_var not defined +try +  some_other_var #=> ERROR: some_other_var not defined +catch e +    println(e) +end + +# Variable name start with a letter. You can use uppercase letters, digits, +# and exclamation points as well after the initial alphabetic character. +SomeOtherVar123! = 6 #=> 6 -# Variable Names: -SomeOtherVar123! = 6 #=> 6 # You can use uppercase letters, digits, and exclamation points as well after the initial alphabetic character. -☃ = 8 #=> 8 # You can also use unicode characters +# You can also use unicode characters +☃ = 8 #=> 8  # A note on naming conventions in Julia: -# * Names of variables are in lower case, with word separation indicated by underscores ('\_'). -# * Names of Types begin with a capital letter and word separation is shown with CamelCase instead of underscores. +# +# * Names of variables are in lower case, with word separation indicated by +#   underscores ('\_'). +# +# * Names of Types begin with a capital letter and word separation is shown +#   with CamelCase instead of underscores. +#  # * Names of functions and macros are in lower case, without underscores. -# * Functions that modify their inputs have names that end in !. These functions are sometimes called mutating functions or in-place functions. +# +# * Functions that modify their inputs have names that end in !. These +#   functions are sometimes called mutating functions or in-place functions.  # Arrays store a sequence of values indexed by integers 1 through n:  a = Int64[] #=> 0-element Int64 Array +  # 1-dimensional array literals can be written with comma-separated values.  b = [4, 5, 6] #=> 3-element Int64 Array: [4, 5, 6]  b[1] #=> 4  b[end] #=> 6 +  # 2-dimentional arrays use space-separated values and semicolon-separated rows.  matrix = [1 2; 3 4] #=> 2x2 Int64 Array: [1 2; 3 4] @@ -124,42 +145,53 @@ push!(a,2)     #=> [1,2]  push!(a,4)     #=> [1,2,4]  push!(a,3)     #=> [1,2,4,3]  append!(a,b) #=> [1,2,4,3,4,5,6] +  # Remove from the end with pop  pop!(a)        #=> 6 and b is now [4,5] +  # Let's put it back  push!(b,6)   # b is now [4,5,6] again.  a[1] #=> 1 # remember that Julia indexes from 1, not 0! -a[end] #=> 6 # end is a shorthand for the last index; it can be used in any indexing expression. -# Function names that end in exclamations points indicate that they modify their argument. +# end is a shorthand for the last index. It can be used in any +# indexing expression +a[end] #=> 6 + +# Function names that end in exclamations points indicate that they modify +# their argument.  arr = [5,4,6] #=> 3-element Int64 Array: [5,4,6]  sort(arr) #=> [4,5,6]; arr is still [5,4,6]  sort!(arr) #=> [4,5,6]; arr is now [4,5,6]  # Looking out of bounds is a BoundsError -a[0] #=> ERROR: BoundsError() in getindex at array.jl:270 -a[end+1] #=> ERROR: BoundsError() in getindex at array.jl:270 -# Errors list the line and file they came from, even if it's in the standard library. -# If you built Julia from source, you can look in the folder base inside the julia folder to find these files. +try +    a[0] #=> ERROR: BoundsError() in getindex at array.jl:270 +    a[end+1] #=> ERROR: BoundsError() in getindex at array.jl:270 +catch e +    println(e) +end + +# Errors list the line and file they came from, even if it's in the standard +# library. If you built Julia from source, you can look in the folder base +# 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]  # You can look at ranges with slice syntax.  a[1:3] #=> [1, 2, 3] -# Omit the beginning  a[2:] #=> [2, 3, 4, 5]  # Remove arbitrary elements from a list with splice!  arr = [3,4,5]  splice!(arr,2) #=> 4 ; arr is now [3,5] -# Concatenate lists with append!  +# Concatenate lists with append!  b = [1,2,3]  append!(a,b) # Now a is [1, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3] -# Check for existence in a list with contains  +# Check for existence in a list with contains  contains(a,1) #=> true  # Examine the length with length @@ -168,7 +200,11 @@ length(a) #=> 7  # Tuples are immutable.  tup = (1, 2, 3) #=>(1,2,3) # an (Int64,Int64,Int64) tuple.  tup[1] #=> 1 -tup[0] = 3 #=> ERROR: no method setindex!((Int64,Int64,Int64),Int64,Int64) +try: +    tup[0] = 3 #=> ERROR: no method setindex!((Int64,Int64,Int64),Int64,Int64) +catch e +    println(e) +end  # Many list functions also work on tuples  length(tup) #=> 3 @@ -177,36 +213,46 @@ contains(tup,2) #=> true  # You can unpack tuples into variables  a, b, c = (1, 2, 3) #=> (1,2,3)  # a is now 1, b is now 2 and c is now 3 +  # Tuples are created by default if you leave out the parentheses  d, e, f = 4, 5, 6 #=> (4,5,6) +  # Now look how easy it is to swap two values  e, d = d, e  #=> (5,4) # d is now 5 and e is now 4  # Dictionaries store mappings  empty_dict = Dict() #=> Dict{Any,Any}() +  # Here is a prefilled dictionary -filled_dict = ["one"=> 1, "two"=> 2, "three"=> 3] #=> ["one"=> 1, "two"=> 2, "three"=> 3] # Dict{ASCIIString,Int64} +filled_dict = ["one"=> 1, "two"=> 2, "three"=> 3] +# => Dict{ASCIIString,Int64}  # Look up values with []  filled_dict["one"] #=> 1  # Get all keys -keys(filled_dict) #=> KeyIterator{Dict{ASCIIString,Int64}}(["three"=>3,"one"=>1,"two"=>2]) +keys(filled_dict) +#=> KeyIterator{Dict{ASCIIString,Int64}}(["three"=>3,"one"=>1,"two"=>2])  # Note - dictionary keys are not sorted or in the order you inserted them.  # Get all values  -values(d) #=> ValueIterator{Dict{ASCIIString,Int64}}(["three"=>3,"one"=>1,"two"=>2]) +values(filled_dict) +#=> ValueIterator{Dict{ASCIIString,Int64}}(["three"=>3,"one"=>1,"two"=>2])  # Note - Same as above regarding key ordering.  # Check for existence of keys in a dictionary with contains, haskey -contains(filled_dict,("one",1)) #=> true -contains(filled_dict,("two",3)) #=> false -haskey(filled_dict,"one") #=> true -haskey(filled_dict,1) #=> false +contains(filled_dict, ("one", 1)) #=> true +contains(filled_dict, ("two", 3)) #=> false +haskey(filled_dict, "one") #=> true +haskey(filled_dict, 1) #=> false  # Trying to look up a non-existing key will raise an error -filled_dict["four"] #=> ERROR: key not found: four in getindex at dict.jl:489 +try +    filled_dict["four"] #=> ERROR: key not found: four in getindex at dict.jl:489 +catch e +    println(e) +end  # Use get method to avoid the error  # get(dictionary,key,default_value) @@ -250,16 +296,16 @@ else                    # The else clause is optional too.  end -# For loops iterate over iterable things, such as ranges, lists, sets, dicts, strings.  -# prints: -#    dog is a mammal -#    cat is a mammal -#    mouse is a mammal +# For loops iterate over iterables, such as ranges, lists, sets, dicts, strings.  for animal=["dog", "cat", "mouse"]      # You can use $ to interpolate into strings      println("$animal is a mammal")  end +# prints: +#    dog is a mammal +#    cat is a mammal +#    mouse is a mammal  # You can use in instead of =, if you want.  for animal in ["dog", "cat", "mouse"] @@ -288,14 +334,11 @@ while x < 4  end  # Handle exceptions with a try/except block - -error("help") # ERROR: help in error at error.jl:21 -  try     error("help")  catch e     println("caught it $e") -end              +end  #=> caught it ErrorException("help") @@ -306,7 +349,9 @@ end  # Use the keyword function to create new functions  function add(x, y)      println("x is $x and y is $y") -    x + y    # or equivalently: return x + y + +    # Functions implicitly return the value of their last statement +    x + y  end  add(5, 6) #=> 11 after printing out "x is 5 and y is 6" @@ -322,7 +367,7 @@ varargs(1,2,3) #=> (1,2,3)  # The ... is called a splat.  # It can also be used in a fuction call  # to splat a list or tuple out to be the arguments -Set([1,2,3])    #=> Set{Array{Int64,1}}([1,2,3]) # no ..., produces a Set of Arrays +Set([1,2,3])    #=> Set{Array{Int64,1}}([1,2,3]) # produces a Set of Arrays  Set([1,2,3]...) #=> Set{Int64}(1,2,3) # this is equivalent to Set(1,2,3)  x = (1,2,3)     #=> (1,2,3) @@ -338,8 +383,12 @@ end  defaults('h','g') #=> "h g and 5 6"  defaults('h','g','j') #=> "h g and j 6"  defaults('h','g','j','k') #=> "h g and j k" -defaults('h') #=> ERROR: no method defaults(Char,) -defaults() #=> ERROR: no methods defaults() +try +    defaults('h') #=> ERROR: no method defaults(Char,) +    defaults() #=> ERROR: no methods defaults() +catch e +println(e) +end  # You can define functions that take keyword arguments  function keyword_args(;k1=4,name2="hello") # note the ; @@ -416,9 +465,13 @@ tigger = Tiger(3.5,"orange") # the type doubles as the constructor function  # Abtract Types  abstract Cat # just a name and point in the type hierarchy -# types defined with the type keyword are concrete types; they can be instantiated -# types defined with the abstract keyword are abstract types; they can have subtypes -# each type has one supertype; a supertype can have zero or more subtypes. +# * types defined with the type keyword are concrete types; they can be +#   instantiated +# +# * types defined with the abstract keyword are abstract types; they can +#   have subtypes. +# +# * each type has one supertype; a supertype can have zero or more subtypes.  type Lion <: Cat # Lion is a subtype of Cat    mane_color @@ -427,7 +480,8 @@ end  type Panther <: Cat # Panther is also a subtype of Cat    eye_color -  Panther() = new("green") # Panthers will only have this constructor, and no default constructor. +  Panther() = new("green") +  # Panthers will only have this constructor, and no default constructor.  end  # Multiple Dispatch @@ -455,9 +509,15 @@ function pet_cat(cat::Cat)    println("The cat says $(meow(cat))")  end -pet_cat(tigger) #=> ERROR: no method pet_cat(Tiger,) +try +    pet_cat(tigger) #=> ERROR: no method pet_cat(Tiger,) +catch e +    println(e) +end +  pet_cat(Lion(Panther(),"42")) #=> prints "The cat says 42" +```  ## Further Reading | 
