GNU Octave Wiki

From Octave
Jump to navigation Jump to search

GNU Octave is a high-level interpreted language, primarily intended for numerical computations. It provides capabilities for the numerical solution of linear and nonlinear problems, and for performing other numerical experiments. It also provides extensive graphics capabilities for data visualization and manipulation. GNU Octave is normally used through its interactive interface (CLI and GUI), but it can also be used to write non-interactive programs. The GNU Octave language is quite similar to MATLAB® so that most programs are easily portable.

This wiki is intended to supplement the GNU Octave documentation. Before adding content, please check that it is not already part of, or belongs in, the documentation.

GNU Octave FAQ

The FAQ is a list of frequently asked questions (FAQ) for GNU Octave users and a good place to start.

Answers to questions regarding what is Octave, licensing, new features, documentation, installation, coding, contributing to Octave, and more, are found there.

Table of contents

Below is a temporary attempt to organize the "most wanted" pages of the Wiki. A list of all pages on the wiki can be seen here. To locate something specific, try the wiki's search box, or prepend site:http://www.octave.org/wiki/ to a google search. Please read the Contribution guidelines first, if you want to contribute to this Wiki.

Installation

Packages

Octave-Forge

Editors

Tutorials/Examples

  • Octave Basics - For those just getting started.
  • Tips and tricks - Guidelines to improve your coding skills.
  • Cookbook - Several simple and useful examples.
  • Octave load - Use liboctave functions to load variables from a file in Octave's binary format.
  • Fortran - Accessing liboctave from a Fortran 2003 program.
  • Octave fun - Coding can be fun -- miscellaneous more or less funny scripts

Plotting tutorials

Development

  • Release 3.8 - Information about the upcoming 3.8 release.

Building

Testing

Packaging

Academia

External Links