I know you're doing a lot of great work, I'm following Julia rather closely. It's just that as of now, it's not easy enough to grasp to make quick tests at work (I'd have some use there, but I have to be on schedule with the projects).
I've used a bit for various pet projects (mainly some graph search and JuMP stuff) and it was convincing. But now I can see Fortran perform in real production code (where it shines, at the cost of being so antiquated that it's not funny anymore) and my expectations for Julia are now higher.
I'll give it another try 'cos you spend some time answering my question :-) (and because the charts in the 2nd provided link are just really convincing)
oh cool, I'm interested to see what your impressions are. Depending on your exact workflows and comfort levels, I could imagine that you either find that things are much much better, or that only moderate progress has been made.
Let us know if you're experiencing any new painpoints too, or if things like code loading aren't as fast as you had hoped, there might be things we can do to help.
I've used a bit for various pet projects (mainly some graph search and JuMP stuff) and it was convincing. But now I can see Fortran perform in real production code (where it shines, at the cost of being so antiquated that it's not funny anymore) and my expectations for Julia are now higher.
I'll give it another try 'cos you spend some time answering my question :-) (and because the charts in the 2nd provided link are just really convincing)