I have a suspicion it is the collaborative effort that is the problem here -- I try to use Python whenever possible for engineering/numerical analysis, but the established industry standard (for most disciplines of engineering) is still MATLAB.
Although Python is arguably better in most respects, especially being a full-blown programming language (and modules such as SciPy and NumPy are just great), but it's hard to expect your co-workers to be using Python for analysis also. On 15 Apr 2006 16:00:08 -0700, Michael Tobis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I'm afraid I can't be very helpful to you, but you could be most > helpful to some of us. > > Can you elaborate on what specifically you found difficult? In some > circles Python is regarded as a direct competitor to Matlab. Your > preference for Python for "other things than standard mathematical > work" in a scientific or engineering context could be most useful if > you have some real-world examples. > > Also, can you elaborate on what (if anything) it is about Matlab that > you feel you can't replicate in Python? Are you aware of matplotlib and > numpy? > > thanks > mt > > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list