Always private
DuckDuckGo never tracks your searches.
Learn More
You can hide this reminder in Search Settings
All regions
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium (fr)
Belgium (nl)
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada (en)
Canada (fr)
Catalonia
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India (en)
Indonesia (en)
Ireland
Israel (en)
Italy
Japan
Korea
Latvia
Lithuania
Malaysia (en)
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Pakistan (en)
Peru
Philippines (en)
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain (ca)
Spain (es)
Sweden
Switzerland (de)
Switzerland (fr)
Taiwan
Thailand (en)
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
US (English)
US (Spanish)
Vietnam (en)
Safe search: moderate
Strict
Moderate
Off
Any time
Any time
Past day
Past week
Past month
Past year
  1. Only showing results from rust-lang.org

    Clear filter to show all search results

  2. users.rust-lang.org

    A colleague of mine has been working with FORTRAN for decades, and currently operates a successful business using a model developed in the FORTRAN 2018 standard. They expressed curiosity regarding Rust, along the lines of "my daughter says it's all the rage". The model performs a series of intensive calculations over a spatial extent (LiDAR data), and the business model operates by marketing ...
  3. users.rust-lang.org

    It looks like the reason it became standard in CPUs goes back to Fortran, and then C did it the same way to match Fortran and the CPUs. However, for power-of-2 divisors, actually truncating division / remainder is slower even on current CPUs than flooring division / remainder, because flooring div / rem corresponds to simple bit shifts and bit ...
  4. users.rust-lang.org

    Nov 5, 2023Writing a program that uses Fortran 2008 features (in 2020!— Fortran 2008 got approved in 2010, so that's 10 years after the standard got approved) and compiles on GNU but not the intel compiler and vice versa with different features is not something I'm missing. 7 Likes. afetisov November 5, ...
  5. users.rust-lang.org

    In some fields of scientific research, calculations need to be faster than python and reproducible/reliable than Fortran or C. The speed and reliability of rust make it an ideal candidate for such tasks (for eg. modelling/simulations and calculations in astronomical research and computational physics in general). Researchers could be early adopters because they are curious about new technology ...
  6. users.rust-lang.org

    Sep 17, 2024You should utilize them fully instead of writing Fortran in Rust. Placement of return is entirely insignificant compared to using proper types and covering all edge cases. 2 Likes. MOCKBA September 18, 2024, 3:43am 12. Try to avoid one fundamental mistake - my opinion is the right, all other opinions are wrong and I can teach you the right one. ...
  7. users.rust-lang.org

    It's basically what numerical libraries have been doing ever since someone decided that maybe they wanted to do some number-crunching without learning FORTRAN* -- and BLAS and LAPACK are still written in Fortran under the hood, and have libraries available for half the computer languages in the world, so it can't be that bad of an approach.
  8. users.rust-lang.org

    Hello all. I'm pretty new to rust having come originally from C++ and Fortran and having mostly used Julia for the past 5 or 6 years. I have a question about the use of strings in structs. It seems to me that, roughly speaking, structs should have reference fields are owned by something else. This is consistent with my intuition from C++. Something strange seems to happen with strings however ...
  9. users.rust-lang.org

    Emscripten does not work on the usual *.o file. It saves LLVM bitcode in files it calls *.o, and then convert them to asm.js/Wasm at 'link' time. In order to compile Fortran (and thus Blas) to wasm with emscripten, you would need a fortran compiler that can emit LLVM bitcode. And there are no fully functioning fortran compiler targeting LLVM.
  10. users.rust-lang.org

    Big companies have invested who knows how many millions of dollars into lawyers for obtaining a signature and a seal that says "you are legally allowed to program this jet engine in any language as long as it's Fortran", and they will not exactly be pleased if they have to repeat the whole procedure just in order to use some shiny new language.
  11. users.rust-lang.org

    I've written code in a lot of languages over 56 years (I wrote my first program in IBM 1620 assembly language in 1960; also some Fortran at that time). Much of the early part of my career was writing OS code when that kind of thing was written in assembly language (I worked on CP for the 360/67 and later ran the Tenex project at BBN, so wrote a ...

    Can’t find what you’re looking for?

    Help us improve DuckDuckGo searches with your feedback

Custom date rangeX