Difference between revisions of "Mathematica"
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==Related Pages== | ==Related Pages== | ||
[[Category:Computer Algebra System]] | [[Category:Computer Algebra System]] | ||
[[Category:World Wide Web]] | |||
[[Category:Jupyter]] | |||
[[Category:Mathematica]] | |||
[[Category:Editable Web]] | |||
[[Category:Personal Knowledge Container]] | |||
[[Category:Client-Server Architecture]] | [[Category:Client-Server Architecture]] | ||
[[Category:Scale-free]] | [[Category:Scale-free]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 11:21, 3 April 2022
Mathematica is a functional programming system that inspired many products that shaped the world of computation as we know it today, including the design and implementation of the World Wide Web, and Web Browsers as we know them.
Evolution of the Product
As the infrastructure of the World Wide Web became robust and mature, many replacement products of Mathematica and Mathematica Notebook started to appear. The most notable one being Jupyter, which was part of IPython before. Overtime, the founder of this research product, Stephen Wolfram tried to rebrand the product Mathematica as Wolfram Language and Computable Document Format. An article that summarizes the evolutionary path of this product can be found on [Web/The Scientific Paper Is Obsolete Here’s what’s next The Atlantic][1].
An interesting article that explains the history of Mathematica and Mathematica Notebook in a broad stroke.
References
- ↑ Somers, James (April 5, 2018). "The Scientific Paper Is Obsolete Here's what's next". local page: The Atlantic.
Related Pages