Stata and R have their own journals: Stata Journal <http://www.stata-journal.com/> and R Journal <https://journal.r-project.org/>. Moreover, I do know other journals such as in Computational Agent Based Modeling publish engineering research. I find it extremely valuable as a researcher since it outlines the mathematical and performance nuance of the tools being used which are vital for credible results and transparent / reproducible research. One can have these contributions acknowledge as such, for example take a look at Roger D. Peng <http://www.biostat.jhsph.edu/~rpeng/RR/index.html> CV or list of academic research that cites NetLogo <https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/references.shtml> as the software. More rarely, but not unheard of you it is possible to have it accepted in either a computer science journal per or a methodological focused journal such as econometrica or in the field of statistics, but that is harder. <https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/references.shtml>
On Wednesday, October 15, 2014 at 4:51:34 AM UTC-7, moritz braun wrote: > > Dear Friends > > I have started using Julia about 4 months ago. > > Now I am at the point where I would like to > publish some of this computational physics work including > source code! > However the standard journals will probably > tell me, that this language is to "immature etc." > > Any ideas? > > regards > > Moritz >