<div dir="ltr"><div><br></div>RSVP <a href="http://www.meetup.com/_ChiPy_/events/221954090/">here </a>or <a href="http://www.chipy.org/">here</a><br><div><br>Add your talk <a href="http://www.chipy.org/meetings/topics/propose">here</a>: <br><div><div><br><ul><li><strong>R and Python for regression</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
Jerry Dumblauskas
<br>
Let's compare our favorite language to an 'upstart' highly focused statistical language.
</li><li>
<strong>QML vs. Python</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
Patrick K. O'Brien
<br>
If you think Python is Pythonic, wait until you see
QML from the point of view of an experienced Python developer. QML is
the Qt Meta Language or Qt Modeling Language.
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QML">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QML</a>
</li><li>
<strong>Conway's Game of Life: Programming in a non-language</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
<br>
The Game of Life is Turing Complete. That means it
can (theoretically) calculate anything that any computer can calculate.
What does this mean in practice and how can you program a calculation
when the total syntax is just flipping cells in a 2D bit field?
</li><li>
<strong>Swift</strong><br>
By:
Feihong Hsu
<br>
</li><li>
<strong>as former C# developer the lessons I learned to become pythonic </strong><br>
By:
JC LatinoTV
<br>
language comparison in 5 minutes
</li><li>
<strong>Go: Concurrency is Built In</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
Chris Foresman
<br>
Discussing the pros and cons of Golang from a Python
user's perspective, particularly focusing on its built-in support for
concurrency and the advantages over asyncio.
</li><li>
<strong>Erlang</strong><br>
By:
Garrett Smith
<br>
ULS Erlang entry
</li><li>
<strong>Postscript. Yes, it's a programming language</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
Ken Schutte
<br>
I'll describe Postscript - a interpreted, stack-based
"page description language" used to produce vector graphics and
documents.
</li><li>
<strong>Is True true? : A mini-venture into Python & Ruby truth testing</strong><br>
(0:05:00 Minutes)<br>
By:
Lorena Nicole
<br>
Review of truth testing in Python and Ruby. If
"Explicit is better than Implicit" then why does Python decide that
values like empty sequences are "falsey"? How is it that Ruby only
defines false and nil as false values, isn't this more explicit?
Highlight how languages embed their own philosophies of what is correct
and true with surprising overlaps and at times odd contradictions.
</li></ul><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature">Brian Ray <div>@brianray<div>(773) 669-7717</div></div></div>
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