For more learning materials, including links to books, videos, articles/blogs and notebooks, refer to the learning section at Julia's official site. This wikibook is intended as an introduction to the language for the less experienced and occasional programmer. The Julia programming language is easy to use, fast, and powerful. 14.9 A more useful example: 14.10 Under the hood.14.6.1 eval() and 14.7 Scope and context.11.3.1 Writing and reading array to and from a file.11.2.2 Interacting with the file system.11.1.2 Slurp – reading a file all at once.10.1.11.1.1 Making a substitution string.10.1.10 Finding and replacing things inside strings.10.1.7 Converting characters to integers and back again.10.1.6 Converting between numbers and strings.8.3 Type parameters in method definitions.8.1.11 Function chaining and composition.8.1.8.2 Applying functions using the dot syntax.8.1.6 Local variables and changing the values of arguments.8.1.5 Functions with variable number of arguments.8.1.3 Optional arguments and variable number of arguments.8.1.2.1 Returning more than one value from a function.8.1.2 Functions with multiple expressions.7.5.1 Iterating over an array and updating it.5.6.1.1 Using named tuples as keyword arguments.5.5 Modifying array contents: adding and removing elements.5.4.1.1 Broadcasting: dot syntax for vectorizing functions.5.4.1 Elementwise and vectorized operations. 5.3.10 Matrix operations: using arrays as matrices.5.3.7.1 Repeating elements to fill arrays.5.3.6 Using comprehensions and generators to create arrays.5.3.5 Collecting up the values in a range.5.3.3 Creating arrays using range objects.4.2.9 Seeding the random number generator.4.2.8.1 Random numbers in a distribution.4.2.5.1 Multiplying numbers and variables.4.1.10 Changing the prompt and customising your Julia session.
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