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From: | Richard Crozier |
Subject: | Re: Octave Interpreter |
Date: | Sun, 05 Oct 2014 18:29:21 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.1.1 |
On 02/10/14 13:34, Stefan Seefeld wrote:
On 2014-10-01 21:16, Bipin Mathew wrote:
<snip>
All this being said, perhaps someone more familiar with the source code could comment on how easy / impossible such a thing would be given the current state of Octave? In terms of your direct question of how you can build a compiler for Octave, I believe a good place to start is to look at the lex/yacc grammar files: octave/libinterp/parse-tree/lex.ll octave/libinterp/parse-tree/oct-parse.yyI'm honestly not entirely sure I understand the question: What additional support in terms of language support is needed to provide a "distributed Octave" ?
Stefan
Making 'parfor' loops work with actual parallel pools might be what is meant:
http://www.mathworks.co.uk/help/distcomp/parfor.html Richard -- The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
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