CharlesW
9 hours ago
For anyone else who hadn't heard of Octave, it's an open source near-clone of the proprietary MATLAB: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Octave
wiz21c
9 hours ago
"near clone" is a bit exaggerated. As much as I'm a free software zealot, I don't think Octave comes close to matlab yet (provided you do anything a bit more advanced than the practical of some courses)
See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12084246/differences-bet...
bee_rider
8 hours ago
I don’t think Matlab or Octave are great languages for software engineering. Actually, these languages are like example #1 of the difference between engineering software vs software engineering: they are excellent tools for writing, like, 10-100 line numerical experiments.
Anyone who runs up against a limitation of Octave has probably hit the point where they should consider switching, but not to Matlab or some other scripting language, but to Fortran or maybe Julia or something.
Therefore, I disagree with the accepted answer in that StackOverflow thread. The language is only good in the first place for short codes anyway, so fixing any little octave/matlab regionalisms is not a big deal. And, since it is a mathematical experiments, you should understand what every line of code does, so running the code without reading it is not really an option.
DarmokJalad1701
an hour ago
> 10-100 line numerical experiments
There's plenty of satellites, rockets, re-entry vehicles whose guidance and control code were designed and written using MATLAB/Simulink and then "autocoded" to C using "MATLAB Coder".
While not my preferred way of doing things, it is popular for this purpose throughout the aerospace industry.
rs186
7 hours ago
They are never meant for general software engineer but for numerical analysis/data analysis and engineering. In fact they are quite horrible for writing general software code -- the APIs for IO and HTTP requests are very lacking compared what you can find in other languages, for example.
duped
3 hours ago
I haven't found a better CLI calculator utility for writing more than one-liner numerical stuff with some plots than MATLAB and octave. They're fantastic.
Python is trash, by comparison.
almostgotcaught
2 hours ago
You think MATLAB is better than (checks notes) a scripting language for writing one liners/throwaway code? Is that what you're saying here? Lol
viccis
an hour ago
>a scripting language for writing one liners/throwaway code
Just objectively not an accurate description of Python
ok123456
5 hours ago
People who use MATLAB use it for the toolboxes.
The language itself is awful.
enriquto
2 hours ago
> The language itself is awful.
As a programming language freak, I must disagree... in what other programming language can you solve a linear system Ax=b in one line
x = A\b
without any external libraries or imports, just with the base language?I never used any official matlab "toolbox", but still love the language via the octave interpreter. It's so clean and straightforward!
torrance
an hour ago
Well, in Julia, for one.
almostgotcaught
2 hours ago
> without any external libraries or imports
Why does this matter in the least? Like you must understand that this is a library call right? Like just put `import numpy as np` in your PYTHONSTARTUP and it's the exact same UX in python.
https://docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html#envvar-PYTHONST...
username223
2 hours ago
Matlab/Octave is great for numerical programs that perform within an order of magnitude of Fortran. If some things aren't fast enough, you can rewrite them in C or Fortran without too much trouble. If you're doing anything other than numerical computing, it's awful, and you should use a different language.
(Source: I did a PhD using a mixture of Octave for numerical stuff, Perl for text-processing and automation, and C++ for the parts that were too slow. Choose the right tool for the job.)
kjgkjhfkjf
9 hours ago
Early versions of Andrew Ng's ML MOOC used Octave, if you are looking for examples and exercises.
YouTube playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiPvV5TNogxIS4bHQVW4p...
tomku
7 hours ago
I was in one of those early cohorts that used Octave, one of the things the course had to deal with was that at the time (I don't know about now) Octave did not ship with an optimization function suitable for the coursework so we ended up using an implementation of `fmincg` provided along with the homework by the course staff. If you're following along with the lectures, you might need to track down that file, it's probably available somewhere.
Using Octave for a beginning ML class felt like the worst of both worlds - you got the awkward, ugly language of MATLAB without any of the upsides of MATLAB-the-product because it didn't have the GUI environment or the huge pile of toolbox functions. None of that is meant as criticism at Octave as a project, it's fine for what it is, it just ended up being more of a stumbling block for beginners than a booster in that specific context.
airza
5 hours ago
It’s nice to know that someone else suffered this pain. And that i bet on PGMs which really turned out to be the wrong horse…
mark_l_watson
4 hours ago
ha! I took at least one PGM class myself. I had a difficult time with the material.
znpy
8 hours ago
Oh, the times when Coursera and Udacity were just starting... They were supposed to disrupt academia, it's a shame they never actually did.
jhbadger
3 hours ago
There's a great recent book (Anne Trumbore's _The Teacher_in_The_Machine_) on using technology to "disrupt" education (starting much earlier than you would think, with mechanical devices in the early 20th century that could drill students with multiple choice questions, running through basically pre-computer MOOCS that used radio and then TV to broadcast lectures, various educational software, and finally MOOCs like Coursera and Udacity).
lispisok
an hour ago
The real value of a degree unfortunately isnt the education it's the exclusivity of the program. When bootcamps realized this some started having more stringent admissions.
le-mark
9 hours ago
I used octave in place of matlab in undergrad numerical analysis course 15 years ago. The language was completely compatible for what we did.
analog31
5 hours ago
I'm not a Matlab user, but from what I can tell, even if the language can be cloned, there's a lot more to Matlab: It's a GUI driven software suite, with a lot of pre-written apps that eliminate the need for coding in many cases.
It comes with vendor support and "official-ness" for lack of a better word.
Things are changing rapidly in this area but it wasn't very long ago that most people reacted to open-source software as something weird that shouldn't be trusted.
29athrowaway
5 hours ago
Scilab is another MATLAB clone, but emphasizes features rather than compatibility.