


And, yes, we’re holding steady at an overall average of one hour of livestreamed design time per new function, and a little less than half that per enhanced function.Īstronomy has been a driving force for computation for more than 2000 years (from the Antikythera device on)… and in Version 13.2 it’s coming to Wolfram Language in a big way. During the Version 13.2 cycle we’ve done about 61 hours of design livestreams-getting all sorts of great real-time feedback from the community (thanks, everyone!). For the past several years we’ve been following the principle of open code development (does anyone else do this yet?)-opening up our core software design meetings as livestreams. And, as usual, we’ve put a lot of effort into coherently designing those functions, so they fit into the tightly integrated framework we’ve been building for the past 35 years. But it’s also got some “surprise” new dramatic efficiency improvements, and it’s got some first hints of major new areas that we have under development-particularly related to astronomy and celestial mechanics.īut even though I’m calling it a “small release”, Version 13.2 still introduces completely new functions into the Wolfram Language, 41 of them-as well as substantially enhancing 64 existing functions.

Version 13.2 is-by our standards-a fairly small release, that mostly concentrates on rounding out areas that have been under development for a long time, as well as adding “polish” to a range of existing capabilities. Our goal is to deliver timely snapshots of where we’re at-so people can start using what we’ve built as quickly as possible. We continue to have a huge pipeline of R&D, some short term, some medium term, some long term (like decade-plus). In late June this year it was Version 13.1.
