Robert,I must say that I am a big fan of your work on asdf and in awe of your 
professional and academic career.I agree with your assessment that numpy and 
the entirety of NUMFocus would be well outside the scope of the current CL 
community.In an effort to conserve the momentum of this thread and channel the 
spirit of my time at Franz Inc, I'd like to emphasize that a lot can be 
accomplished by a small team with clear goals and roles.I hope that if a such 
project arises that I can be of assistance.Best regards,ElliottSent from my 
T-Mobile 5G Device
-------- Original message --------From: Robert Goldman <rpgold...@sift.net> 
Date: 4/11/23  1:07 PM  (GMT-08:00) To: Discussion list for Common Lisp 
professionals <pro@common-lisp.net> Subject: Re: Numpy and Common Lisp? I don't 
mean to rain on the parade, but the development and maintenance of numpy 
consumes a level of resources that is simply beyond the capacity of the CL 
community to muster.
The NUMFocus project, a non-profit, supports this and other numerical 
computation projects (most, but not exclusively python), drawing on substantial 
amounts of corporate sponsorship.
I urge you to cast your eyes on this NumFOCUS sponsors list before thinking 
that our community could even begin to tackle this task:  
https://numfocus.org/sponsors
On 11 Apr 2023, at 7:14, Steven Nunez wrote:



There's also the Lisp-Stat ecosystem, if you don't already know about it. 
Data-frame, array-operations and LLA (Lisp Linear Algebra) cover much of 
numpy's functionality; at least enough to get significant work done.




On Tuesday, April 11, 2023 at 07:45:50 PM GMT+8, Elliott Johnson 
<elli...@elliottjohnson.net> wrote:





FYI -  there appears to be a library called numcl that was written to cover 
numpy's functionality.

   https://github.com/numcl/numcl

I've yet to try it, but thought I'd pass along the link.

Regards,
Elliott Johnson




-------- Original message --------
From: Raymond Wiker <rwi...@gmail.com>
Date: 4/11/23 3:53 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: Discussion list for Common Lisp professionals <pro@common-lisp.net>
Subject: Re: Numpy and Common Lisp?


There’s cl-ana, which may be a useful substitute in some cases… or april, 
possibly.









cliki.net






cl-ana



















cliki.net






april












If you specifically want numpy, it may be possible to have Common Lisp talking 
to python.


On 11 Apr 2023, at 08:41, Marco Antoniotti <marco.antonio...@unimib.it> wrote:



Hi Michael

I am all for it.  But, as I said, I am an academic (and a cat).

Should we (as in "a bunch of common lispers", most of whom with day jobs) want 
to do something like that, how would you want to proceed?  Note that I have 
been part of many past failures.

All the best

Marco




On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 1:01 AM Michael Bentley <mich...@stray-labs.com> wrote:







IMHO, it'd be easier and effective to band up together and FIRST write a proper 
API specification and THEN implement it in CL.





I agree.  Here’s the API specification for NumPy: 
https://numpy.org/doc/stable/reference/index.html#reference

Looks rather intimidating. Less intimidating though, than doing the FFI dance, 
though.




















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