![]() ![]() Both these things have of course been building for three decades. ![]() What we’ve been able to do is a testament both to the strength of our R&D effort, and to the effectiveness of the Wolfram Language as a development environment. In my keynote at our Wolfram Technology Conference last October I summarized what we had up to that point-and even that took nearly 4 hours. I must say that now that 12.0 is finished, I’m amazed at how much is in it, and how much we’ve added since 11.3. I’ll discuss both types of functions in this piece, but I’ll be particularly emphasizing the specifics of what’s new in going from 11.3 to 12.0. In 12.0, perhaps half of our new functions can be thought of as finishing areas that were started in previous “.1” releases-while half begin new areas. But in every release we also want to deliver the latest results of our R&D efforts. In an “ integer release” like 12, our goal is to provide fully-filled-out new areas of functionality. Altogether there are 278 completely new functions, in perhaps 103 areas, together with thousands of different updates across the system: It’s a big jump from Version 11.3 to Version 12.0. Today we’re releasing Version 12 of Wolfram Language (and Mathematica) on desktop platforms, and in the Wolfram Cloud. Version 12 Launches Today! (And It’s a Big Jump for Wolfram Language and Mathematica) Version 12 Launches Today! (And It’s a Big Jump for Wolfram Language and Mathematica) April 16, 2019 Software Engineering & Platform Updates.Blockchain (and CryptoKitty) Computation.Simulated Environments for Machine Learning.Calling the Wolfram Language from Python & Other Places.Integrating Big Data from External Databases.Lots of Little Visualization Enhancements.Going Super-Symbolic with Axiomatic Theories. ![]()
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