Just noticed one of my research paper made it to the showcase :-). Thanks 
for that!

As for clojure resources: I have been mainly used clojure itself, and 
visualization libraries, (incanter, quil and gg4clj [to make plots in R 
with ggplot2, but you can use it to run any R code]), and sometimes a stray 
java library for smoothing or clustering things. The inter-op with java is 
often not too bad. I use light table as an IDE.

Boris


On Thursday, April 9, 2015 at 3:17:44 AM UTC+2, Christopher Small wrote:
>
> Made some updates to http://clojure-datascience.herokuapp.com/. In 
> particular, went with the tagline "Resources for the budding Clojure Data 
> Scientist." Couldn't come up with anything else sufficiently punny and 
> appropriate.
>
> Again; please contribute! I'll be starting a list in the about page 
> mentioning everyone who's contributed.
>
> Chris
>
>
> On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:24:27 PM UTC-7, Emrehan Tüzün wrote:
>>
>> Clojure isn't the first tool coming into mind on data science at the 
>> moment but the number of useful libraries are growing up. You can check out 
>> https://github.com/razum2um/awesome-clojure#science-and-data-analysis.
>
>

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