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
<[email protected]> 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 <[email protected]> Date:
4/11/23 3:53 AM (GMT-08:00) To: Discussion list for Common Lisp professionals
<[email protected]> Subject: Re: Numpy and Common Lisp?
There’s cl-ana, which may be a useful substitute in some cases… or april,
possibly.
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| cl-anacliki.net | |
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| aprilcliki.net | |
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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 <[email protected]> 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 <[email protected]> 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.