Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-11-20 Thread Benjamin Deonovic
If anyone in your group would be interested in MCMC check out our great 
tutorial on how to use our package 
Mamba: http://mambajl.readthedocs.org/en/latest/


Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-11-20 Thread cdm

the #MonthofJulia blog series has some readily accessible material ...

there are 38 posts beginning at:

   http://www.juliabloggers.com/tag/monthofjulia/page/13/


some of these may provide examples from parts of Julia that one
has not had reason to use in their usual interactions with Julia.

best,

cdm


Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-11-19 Thread Arin Basu
Thanks Mauro. This is excellent.

Arin

On Wednesday, 9 September 2015 22:12:27 UTC+12, Mauro wrote:
>
> Probably, the current state-of-the-art in introduction tutorials is 
> David Sander's: 
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQ1y5NUD_RI&index=2&list=PLP8iPy9hna6Sdx4soiGrSefrmOPdUWixM
>  
>
> On Wed, 2015-09-09 at 11:55, Arin Basu > 
> wrote: 
> > Hi All, 
> > 
> > I am planning to offer a workshop (about 3 hours length, but can be 
> longer, 
> > up to five hours) introducing Julia language to a group of statisticians 
> > and advanced students (biostatistics and epidemiology focus). My 
> audience 
> > is statisticians who may be familiar with Python, C, R, SAS, SPSS. Some 
> may 
> > or may not be, I do not know at this stage, but assume they are not 
> > familiar with Julia. I'd greatly appreciate if you can kindly suggest  a 
> > list of topics that I shall I include. This is going to be an 
> introductory 
> > workshop. Can you please share a few sample introductory workshop topic 
> > lists? 
> > 
> > Best, 
> > Arin Basu 
>
>

Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-11-19 Thread Arin Basu
Thanks a million Tamas. These are very helpful pointers indeed.

Arin

On Wednesday, 9 September 2015 22:27:16 UTC+12, Tamas Papp wrote:
>
> Hi Arin, 
>
> I am planning something similar in the near future and have been 
> thinking about this too. Maybe you could organize your discussion around 
> the following three topics: 
>
> 1. "things that work as expected" 
>
> Language constructs like numbers, arrays, control flow etc, that are 
> very similar to other languages. No surprises there, emphasize that 
> transitioning to Julia is easy from Algol-like languages. 
>
> 2. "things that improve on other languages" 
>
> Multimethods, the type system; with concrete examples. Probably macros 
> are too much when people first see the language. 
>
> 3. "work in progress" 
>
> Your audience will probably care about dataframes and 
> plotting. Emphasize that things are in flux, but more or less usable. 
>
> Probably coding through a small but self-contained example (an 
> epidemiology simulation, with plots at the end?) could be useful. 
>
> IMO 4 hours is the maximum that most people can bear with a meaningful 
> level of attention, 3 is better. 
>
> Best, 
>
> Tamas 
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 09 2015, Arin Basu > wrote: 
>
> > Hi All, 
> > 
> > I am planning to offer a workshop (about 3 hours length, but can be 
> longer, 
> > up to five hours) introducing Julia language to a group of statisticians 
> > and advanced students (biostatistics and epidemiology focus). My 
> audience 
> > is statisticians who may be familiar with Python, C, R, SAS, SPSS. Some 
> may 
> > or may not be, I do not know at this stage, but assume they are not 
> > familiar with Julia. I'd greatly appreciate if you can kindly suggest  a 
> > list of topics that I shall I include. This is going to be an 
> introductory 
> > workshop. Can you please share a few sample introductory workshop topic 
> > lists? 
> > 
> > Best, 
> > Arin Basu 
>


Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-09-09 Thread Tamas Papp
Hi Arin,

I am planning something similar in the near future and have been
thinking about this too. Maybe you could organize your discussion around
the following three topics:

1. "things that work as expected"

Language constructs like numbers, arrays, control flow etc, that are
very similar to other languages. No surprises there, emphasize that
transitioning to Julia is easy from Algol-like languages.

2. "things that improve on other languages"

Multimethods, the type system; with concrete examples. Probably macros
are too much when people first see the language.

3. "work in progress"

Your audience will probably care about dataframes and
plotting. Emphasize that things are in flux, but more or less usable.

Probably coding through a small but self-contained example (an
epidemiology simulation, with plots at the end?) could be useful.

IMO 4 hours is the maximum that most people can bear with a meaningful
level of attention, 3 is better.

Best,

Tamas


On Wed, Sep 09 2015, Arin Basu  wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> I am planning to offer a workshop (about 3 hours length, but can be longer,
> up to five hours) introducing Julia language to a group of statisticians
> and advanced students (biostatistics and epidemiology focus). My audience
> is statisticians who may be familiar with Python, C, R, SAS, SPSS. Some may
> or may not be, I do not know at this stage, but assume they are not
> familiar with Julia. I'd greatly appreciate if you can kindly suggest  a
> list of topics that I shall I include. This is going to be an introductory
> workshop. Can you please share a few sample introductory workshop topic
> lists?
>
> Best,
> Arin Basu


Re: [julia-users] Looking for ideas and topics to include in an introductory workshop in Julia

2015-09-09 Thread Mauro
Probably, the current state-of-the-art in introduction tutorials is
David Sander's:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQ1y5NUD_RI&index=2&list=PLP8iPy9hna6Sdx4soiGrSefrmOPdUWixM

On Wed, 2015-09-09 at 11:55, Arin Basu  wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I am planning to offer a workshop (about 3 hours length, but can be longer, 
> up to five hours) introducing Julia language to a group of statisticians 
> and advanced students (biostatistics and epidemiology focus). My audience 
> is statisticians who may be familiar with Python, C, R, SAS, SPSS. Some may 
> or may not be, I do not know at this stage, but assume they are not 
> familiar with Julia. I'd greatly appreciate if you can kindly suggest  a 
> list of topics that I shall I include. This is going to be an introductory 
> workshop. Can you please share a few sample introductory workshop topic 
> lists? 
>
> Best,
> Arin Basu