Craig DeForest wrote: > Two-liners are always fun, particularly for Python people. > > Sorry I'm pressed right now, I would write more if I had a moment. > >
The presentation is on Feb 4 (next Friday). So, you should have lots of moments. Actually, I will be using some of your "few" liners (flipping image bottoms up -- tv scan problem), Karl's point-in-poly. I think Chris's resampling code (the one that expands an array) would be a great one. Game of life implementation from the PDL book might be fun, but it would be nice to show more of "mapping/GIS/spatial" kinda stuff. > On Jan 27, 2011, at 9:02 PM, Puneet Kishor wrote: > >> I have been roped to give a presentation on something Perl-ish, and I >> have chosen to do so on PDL. The audience is going to be mostly Python >> leaning, but are open-minded enough to an intro to something new. >> >> Are there any suggested slides that I can use for this? I guess I could >> also run "demo" in the pdl> shell. And, of course, I will show some of >> the PDL work that I am doing. >> >> Anyway, suggestions welcome. I need to fill about 45 mins. >> >> >> >> >> -- >> Puneet Kishor >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Perldl mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mailman.jach.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/perldl >> > -- Puneet Kishor http://punkish.org Carbon Model http://carbonmodel.org Charter Member, Open Source Geospatial Foundation http://www.osgeo.org Science Fellow http://creativecommons.org/about/people/fellows#puneetkishor Nelson Institute, UW-Madison http://www.nelson.wisc.edu --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Assertions are politics; backing up assertions with evidence is science =========================================================================== _______________________________________________ Perldl mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.jach.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/perldl
