Thanks, Patrick !

Frightened by the word "unstable", I do not dare to use it anymore.
Expecting the version 0.4 to be released soon!

On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 3:13 PM, Patrick O'Leary <patrick.ole...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> The master branch of the git repository is currently version 0.4-dev,
> which is in an unstable development phase. The relevant downloads are at
> the bottom of http://julialang.org/downloads/ under "Nightly Builds".
>
>
> On Friday, April 24, 2015 at 5:47:37 AM UTC-5, Sisyphuss wrote:
>>
>> Thanks Tomas!
>>
>> By the way, I built Julia from the source, and I got the version 0.3. Do
>> you know how I can get the version 0.4?
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, April 24, 2015 at 12:21:17 PM UTC+2, Tomas Lycken wrote:
>>>
>>> To be concise: Yes, and yes :)
>>>
>>> Instead of `float32(x)` and the like, 0.4 uses constructor methods
>>> (`Float32(x)` returns a `Float32`, just as `Foo(x)` returns a `Foo`...).
>>>
>>> // T
>>>
>>> On Friday, April 24, 2015 at 11:40:02 AM UTC+2, Sisyphuss wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I mean is there a syntax change from version 0.3 to version 0.4?
>>>>
>>>> Is "float32()"-like minuscule conversion going to be deprecated?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Friday, April 24, 2015 at 9:58:18 AM UTC+2, Tim Holy wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not sure what your question is, but the documentation is correct
>>>>> in both
>>>>> cases. You can also use the Compat package, which allows you to write
>>>>>     x = @compat Float32(y)
>>>>> even on julia 0.3.
>>>>>
>>>>> --Tim
>>>>>
>>>>> On Friday, April 24, 2015 12:35:01 AM Sisyphuss wrote:
>>>>> > To convert a number to the type Float32,
>>>>> >
>>>>> > In 0.3 doc: float32()
>>>>> > In 0.4 doc: Float32()
>>>>>
>>>>>

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