Hi Tamas and everyone,
To introduce myself, I guess I am a software development guy, not an academic, but with some interest in stats.
And I have been part of a varying development teams, ranging from a couple of guys in room, to multi country/multi continental/multi cultural projects that still make me shudder.
So, my take on Mirko's effort is that it is not so much a formal "spec" but more of a way of generating some discussion and agreement about the effort that we are making to bring a numerical iso and common lispstat into the modern world. I certainly sympathise with your view that too much analysis design will get you not very far, but in this case I think that while we don't really need a formal design effort, we do need a way of creating agreement about what our growing community will set out to achieve. And its a darn fine start, in my opinion.
I do think its worthwhile for us to at least agree a starting position about things like visualisation ( gnuplot is a choice I agree with, though while I am familiar with grammar of graphics from ggplot, I wonder about the effort required) and the the use of Antik ( having just spent some time reviewing it and playing with it a bit, its also something I can emphatically agree with). I hope we can get these infrastructure decisions out of the way asap and we can then move onto interesting things like reviving the lisp stat regression models and putting some AR models in and so on.
I also don't think the proposal is advocating One Big Library to Rule Them All (™) - I am pretty sure we all agree that having a modular approach is the best from both a maintainability and flexibility standpoint. (And Antik has just introduced me to asdf-system-connections, which is just groovy and answers an issue that I will respond to Tony in a different email). I think the idea of providing a variety of optional components and having the system manage the dependancies when you actually want to use them is the way to go.
My experience with software development like this is that if we can agree the basics in terms of architecture and infrastructure quickly, then we at least have a basis for discussion when disagreements arise later. It will make the whole process go more smoothly and the cost is actually quite low, in comparison to long drawn out debates later.
Hope that makes sense!
On 27/10/2012, at 10:26 PM, Tamas Papp tkpapp@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Oct 27 2012, Mirko Vukovic mirko.vukovic@gmail.com wrote:
I put up my first draft of numerical lisp on https://github.com/mirkov/numerical-lisp
You will have to clone it and look at the documentation in the doc/developers/index.html.
Comments, feedback, participation welcome.
Hi Mirko,
I have never worked as part of a software development team and I have no formal training in computer science, so I know very little about designing libraries.
That said, I am somewhat skeptical about the idea of first specifying development guidelines, then a detailed user interface, and leaving coding after that. IMO coding in CL is not that costly and is the only way to test the viability of a design. I fear that writing up specifications before code would be wasted effort.
I don't see why you want to achieve everything ("numerical, statistical, visualization, ...") in a single library. That's great if you can pull it off, but I find small, focused projects more manageable. For example, I would break up libraries like this:
- linear algebra
- numerical methods
- random variates
- visualization
(This pretty much follows the structure of the libraries I currently have, so maybe I am biased).
Statistical code beyond simple sample statistics is a very ambitious goal which requires a lot of domain-specific knowledge. I think it is more realistic to just provide the building blocks and let people write their own statistical code.
Best,
Tamas
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