On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 11:29 AM, Jon Harrop wrote:
>
> The Task Parallel Library. It uses concurrent wait-free work-stealing
> queues
> to provide an efficient implementation of "work items" than can spawn other
> work items with automatic load balancing on shared memory machines. Cilk
> uses
>
On Sunday 21 June 2009 02:44:02 Kyle Schaffrick wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Jun 2009 11:29:44 +0100
> Jon Harrop wrote:
> > The Task Parallel Library. It uses concurrent wait-free work-stealing
> > queues to provide an efficient implementation of "work items" than
> > can spawn other work items with auto
On Sunday 21 June 2009 08:55:54 Anand Patil wrote:
> Sounds similar to ForkJoin, which Rich pointed out to me a while ago:
> http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-jtp11137.html
Yes. I believe the main difference is that the TPL does not block because
there is no "join" operation.
--
Why are these different?
user> #^String "hello"
; Evaluation aborted.
(def a "hello")
#'user/a
user> #^String a
"hello"
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On Jun 21, 2009, at 9:51 AM, Ratandeep Ratti wrote:
Why are these different?
user> #^String "hello"
; Evaluation aborted.
#^ is a reader macro for applying metadata to the next object read.
The metadata applied is always a map. If a sequence of characters
() appears after #^: #^, it is i
Hi David and all,
Just trying to get up and running with Incanter, on a Mac with the github
head. The clj script doesn't find part of parallel colt:
(head-mac bin) ./clj
Clojure 1.1.0-alpha-SNAPSHOT
user=> (use '(incanter core))
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError:
cern/colt/matrix/tdouble/impl/DenseC
On Jun 21, 5:01 pm, Anand Patil
wrote:
> Hi David and all,
>
> Just trying to get up and running with Incanter, on a Mac with the github
> head. The clj script doesn't find part of parallel colt:
>
> (head-mac bin) ./clj
> Clojure 1.1.0-alpha-SNAPSHOT
Hello,
I think the script is intended to be
In my previou message I wrote
> I can reproduce the issues you report
where I meant to say
> I _can't_ reproduce the issues you report
Sorry for the noise.
Carlos
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On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 at 5:51 PM, carlitos wrote:
>
> On Jun 21, 5:01 pm, Anand Patil
> wrote:
> > Hi David and all,
> >
> > Just trying to get up and running with Incanter, on a Mac with the github
> > head. The clj script doesn't find part of parallel colt:
> >
> > (head-mac bin) ./clj
> > Cloj
here's a ruby script which configures a java classpath against a bunch
of clojure projects and starts clojure
http://github.com/mccraigmccraig/clojure-load.rb
e.g.
clojure -l clojure-json -l clojure-http-client -l clojureql
- it assumes it's repo is in the same dir as the clojure repo and
I am trying some regex in Clojure and I have problems using regex
literals.
Don't know why the following doesn't seem to work:
user=> (re-seq #"\\W+" "the quick brown fox")
()
user=> (re-seq #"\\w+" "the quick brown fox")
()
user=> (re-seq #"\\s" "the quick brown fox")
()
user=> (re-seq #"\\S"
On Jun 21, 2009, at 4:34 PM, Alpinweis wrote:
I am trying some regex in Clojure and I have problems using regex
literals.
Don't know why the following doesn't seem to work:
user=> (re-seq #"\\W+" "the quick brown fox")
()
user=> (re-seq #"\\w+" "the quick brown fox")
()
user=> (re-seq #"\\s"
Hi Anand,
Try changing the INCANTER_HOME variable in the clj script to the
absolute path to the incanter directory, instead of a relative path,
like ./ or ../
Let me know if that doesn't work.
David
On Jun 21, 1:19 pm, Anand Patil
wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 at 5:51 PM, carlitos wrote:
Hi,
Does clojure have any way to handle jar loading without having to
specify it in command line?
I'm looking for something like groovy, where if you place a jar file
in ~/.groovy/lib. it's
available to any groovy code.
Thanks
--
Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum.
--~--~-~--~-
CuppoJava wrote:
> I'm still not very clear about what JavaFX actually is and what's its
> relation to Java. Do you know of any links that explain it clearly?
>
Its basically a way of declaring Swing GUI items and their layout. One
of its cool features is that it allows "binding"
code to chang
I can't seem to figure out why java can't find the clojure class in
the following example,
where f is a clojure function
(defn cascading-function [f]
(proxy [BaseOperation Function] [(Integer. 1) (Fields. (into-array
Comparable ["line"]))]
(operate [flowProcess functionCall]
(let
In Java 6 you can do a wildcard for jar files in a directory:
java -cp /opt/jars/*:. clojure.main
this will find all the jar files in /opt/jars/ and put them on the classpath.
On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 at 9:10 PM, Wilson MacGyver wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Does clojure have any way to handle jar loading wit
When I enter the following function into the REPL it compiles and
works without problems:
(defn harmonic-number [n prec]
(reduce + (map #(with-precision prec (/ 1 (bigdec %))) (range 1 (inc
n
)
After (set! *warn-on-reflection* true), in a normal REPL I get:
Reflection warning, NO_SO
On Jun 21, 2009, at 11:07 PM, timshawn wrote:
I can't seem to figure out why java can't find the clojure class in
the following example,
where f is a clojure function
(defn cascading-function [f]
(proxy [BaseOperation Function] [(Integer. 1) (Fields. (into-array
Comparable ["line"]))]
On Jun 21, 2009, at 11:17 PM, arasoft wrote:
When I enter the following function into the REPL it compiles and
works without problems:
(defn harmonic-number [n prec]
(reduce + (map #(with-precision prec (/ 1 (bigdec %))) (range 1 (inc
n
)
After (set! *warn-on-reflection* true), in
Hi Stephen,
Thanks for the note. Yea that first post was kind of unwieldy.
hadoop-function takes in f and data, and does some preprocessing
before applying f to the processed data. (I tried it by just using f
directly and taking hadoop-function out, and same thing happens)
One of the problems th
On Jun 22, 2009, at 12:29 AM, timshawn wrote:
It's trying to find:cascading$cascading_function__44$fn__46
When I look in my target directory/exploded jar, it has this
cascading$cascading_function__38$fn__40.class
Could there be a "classes" directory that's in the classpath of the
repl, but
Hi folks,
I had some fortune with the sorted-by function:
1:11 user=> (sort-by (fn [e] (second e)) [[1 99] [3 4] [5 6] [7 8]])
([3 4] [5 6] [7 8] [1 99])
so I thought I'd have a go with sorted-map-by also:
1:13 user=> (doc sorted-map-by)
-
clojure.core/sorted-ma
On Jun 22, 2009, at 1:23 AM, kkw wrote:
I had some fortune with the sorted-by function:
1:11 user=> (sort-by (fn [e] (second e)) [[1 99] [3 4] [5 6] [7 8]])
([3 4] [5 6] [7 8] [1 99])
You were using the form of sort-by that accepts a "keyfn", not the one
where you also provide a compara
Hi Steve,
I didn't know the difference between a keyfn and a comparator.
Thanks for pointing that out!
Kev
On Jun 22, 3:50 pm, "Stephen C. Gilardi" wrote:
> On Jun 22, 2009, at 1:23 AM, kkw wrote:
>
> > I had some fortune with the sorted-by function:
>
> > 1:11 user=> (sort-by (fn [e] (
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