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A demonstration of how to use Python, Julia, Fortran and R cooperatively to analyze data, in the same process.
This is supported by the IPython kernel and a few extensions that take advantage of IPython's magic system to provide low-level integration between Python and other languages.
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This document contains some ideas for additions to the Nix language.
Motivation
The Nix package manager, Nixpkgs and NixOS currently have several
problems:
Poor discoverability of package options. Package functions have
function arguments like enableFoo, but there is no way for the Nix
UI to discover them, let alone to provide programmatic ways to
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Use a productive notebook interface to weave together narrative text and code to produce elegantly formatted output. Use multiple languages including R, Python, and SQL.
Pweave is a scientific report generator and a literate programming tool for Python. It can capture the results and plots from data analysis and works well with numpy, scipy and matplotlib.
Removing ableist language in code is important; it helps to create and maintain an environment that welcomes all developers of all backgrounds, while emphasizing that we as developers select the most articulate, precise, descriptive language we can rather than relying on metaphors. Quite simply, avoiding ableist language lets us make sure we are inclusive of all developers, while moving toward language that is simultaneously more acccessible to developers whose first language might not be our own.
The phrase sanity check is ableist, and unnecessarily references mental health in our code bases. It denotes that people with mental illnesses are inferior, wrong, or incorrect, and the phrase sanity continues to be used by employers and other individuals to discriminate against these people.
There are a ton of alternatives, and one of the best ways to select one is to ask yourself: What am I actually checking? and select something more descriptive. In everyday c