Julia v1.6.6 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1324 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.5 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1325 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.7 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1324 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.1 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1397 页 | 4.59 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.4 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1324 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.7.0 DEV Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1399 页 | 4.59 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.0 DEV Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1383 页 | 4.56 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.2 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1324 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.0 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1397 页 | 4.59 MB | 1 年前3
Julia 1.6.3 Documentationwill be interpreted as documenting it (these are called docstrings). Note that no blank lines or comments may intervene between a docstring and the documented object. Here is a basic example: "Tell whether reverse("JuliaLang") "gnaLailuJ" Note The examples below may be rendered differently on different systems. The comments indicate how they're supposed to be rendered Combining characters can lead to surprising results: their arguments by convention # the number sign (or hash or pound) character begins single line comments #= when followed by an equals sign, it begins a multi-line comment (these are nestable) =# end0 码力 | 1325 页 | 4.54 MB | 1 年前3
共 87 条
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 9













