People do this kind of computation using numpy all the time. If you weren’t developing a new language with a new syntax, there really isn’t much of a library to write. At that point it’s just using numpy.
People do this kind of computation using numpy all the time. If you weren’t developing a new language with a new syntax, there really isn’t much of a library to write. At that point it’s just using numpy.
the language can do a lot of very expressive things, every language feature works in your favor too, but agree with you, i would not use my own language for anything production.
like this:
D ~ unif_int(1, 6); Print("P(rolled a 6 | rolled > 3) =", P(D == 6 | D > 3));
or:
loss ~ unif(0, 1000); claim = if loss > 200 { loss - 200 } else { 0 }; p = P(claim > 0); Print("P(insurer pays a claim) =", p)
notice that "claim" is also a random variable! result of a if expression
Yeah sure this is how numpy people would do it:
It’s concise enough that people generally wouldn’t bother writing a library. Unless they really want their custom syntax, then perhaps they write a parser.