And it's 100% scalable. It has any number of octave workers that just sit around waiting for things to do which we can increase/decrease the number as needed
And it only launches octave once per worker and just cleans itself up after it's done with a job so we don't waste time relaunching
What is the difference between the following codes?
code1:
var=2**2*3
code2:
var2=2*2*3
I see no difference.
This raises the following question.
Why is the code1 used if we can use code2?
I still can't decide whether to say the equivalent of dict is a containers.Map or a struct using dynamics fields. I know the former is probably more correct, but the latter has basically the same facilities to my knowledge.
I don't know containers.Map to say anything about that, but a struct is very close (with the difference that your keys can be anything that is hashable, not just valid variable names)
@AndrasDeak I remember when I first started learning JavaScript and was like "why in the seventh layer of Hell are strings immutable? Matlab is so much better".
A similar thing happens in Fortran90 where variables that are initialized in their variable declaration have an implicit save (state) applied to it. A little upset when I found that one out.
mutability is the inherent property of an object, telling you whether it can be mutated. As in changing its value without reassigning
it's hard to explain in matlab terms
it all ties in with how variables work in python
When you say x=3, you set the name x to point to an integer with value 3. When you say x=2, you rebind the name x to point to another integer. When you say x=[1,3,4], you again rebind to a list. If you say x[0]=2, you mutate the list to which x points, while x points to the same underlying object
Well the examples in the answer sound like "pass by reference" for "mutable": the reference object is changed, as opposed to a new copy being created within the function. Pass by reference is also a non-Matlab term
@AndrasDeak Very good indeed! I just finished it. I still think that mutable / immutable is analogous to pass by reference / by value. Or rather, to reference / value (not necessarily passing) :-)
But yeah, I actually have a method on all of my objects called bind which performs the referencing and relies on the fact that Matlab is copy-on-write.
@LuisMendo I think that the differences between immutability and pass-by-value are that variables passed by value can be changed locally, and in the originating scope of the variable it is mutable
most of it is really elegant and logical, some of these oddities are emergent
like the previous one, it actually makes sense: the reference to which a[3] points can't change, because a is immutable
but the object that resides at that address can change, since that is mutable
the tuple doesn't know anything about it
the "mutable default function parameter", on the other hand, should be a conscious choice made by (probably) Guido van Rossum, which I personally disagree with