Quote from lolatency:
Let me just say that whatever you are doing in math, if you want to visualize it, mathematica is the way to go.
Hey lolatency and others,
I haven't used Mathematica for years.
Is there any type of visualization/tool that it can do that R, matlab, or most other math based tools can not?
I was looking over the demos and didn't see too many useful tools (that couldn't be run on any other math program) unless I was missing something.
I do recall a stable distribution demo I ran before that was very good, however, and not on the general example set mentioned on the home edition.
http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/StockPriceSimulationUsingStableRandomVariables/
(the player is free).
One tool I've wanted to find in a math package is non-linear function (like lorentz) animation of 3-d scatterplots. I have a java package that does it, but it is not a very easy to interface.
http://www.ph.biu.ac.il/~rapaport/java-apps/lorenz.html
Also, does the home edition include all packages, or are they fee based add on tools?
OP: Thanks for the mention.