Indeed nbates, you're bringing up something sensible now.Quote from nbates:
Gotta say, It's pretty easy to separate the men from the boys in this thread.
I've coded under almost every ASM, C, Fortran, Pascal, Lisp, Python, Perl, Java, C++, C#, VB, .NET, and other languages in the fashion of the day ...
-rant-rant
Well then, if you are truly interesting in what a quant is and does, you should make the effort and find out for yourself - and that won't be from a prog lang thread on ET. Otherwise, your conclusions are for all intents baseless and bereft of any inferential rigor.Quote from nononsense:
(1) I'm not a "quant". I've always wondered what that beast looks like;
(2) My conclusion was arrived at on the basis of what I learned about "quants" in this thread.
You indeed posted a lot of useless stuff in this thread.Quote from Equalizer:
Well then, if you are truly interesting in what a quant is and does, you should make the effort and find out for yourself - and that won't be from a prog lang thread on ET. Otherwise, your conclusions are for all intents baseless and bereft of any inferential rigor.

Quote from nononsense:
If you look at the internal buildup of numpy and numarray, you will discover that a large part had been existing as C/C++ libraries and another part as Fortran libraries.
"Ooh, look Mrs Marsh, it does get in!". The truth hurts old boy.Quote from nononsense:
You indeed posted a lot of useless stuff in this thread.
Given the apparent general confusion about "quant", how come you couldn't put in something decent about it? Are we to take it that "quant" is some kind of Soho slang term?![]()


I did a full SciPy installation some (6?) months ago, if I recall at the time the new version came out and I definitely had to install Fortran runtime for that - quite some routines were dependent on it. In truth, I did not check any further before writing the above recent post and must have overlooked these implementation details of numarray and NumPy. In fact SciPy is much larger than both these together.Quote from Sparohok:
You're thinking SciPy, all the linear algebra codes, solvers, etc, built on top of NumPy.
I have looked at the internals of numarray and NumPy. They are very straightforward and legacy free. Certainly no Fortran.
Martin
Quote from Batman28:
just vote.
also does anyone use D?
http://www.digitalmars.com/d/comparison.html