Workflow Tips

Here are some tips for working with Julia efficiently.

REPL-based workflow

As already elaborated in The Julia REPL, Julia’s REPL provides rich functionality that facilitates an efficient interactive workflow. Here are some tips that might further enhance your experience at the command line.

A basic editor/REPL workflow

The most basic Julia workflows involve using a text editor in conjunction with the julia command line. A common pattern includes the following elements:

  • Put code under development in a temporary module. Create a file, say Tmp.jl, and include within it

    1. module Tmp
    2. <your definitions here>
    3. end
  • Put your test code in another file. Create another file, say tst.jl, which begins with

    1. import Tmp

    and includes tests for the contents of Tmp. Alternatively, you can wrap the contents of your test file in a module, as

    1. module Tst
    2. using Tmp
    3. <scratch work>
    4. end

    The advantage is that you can now do using Tmp in your test code and can therefore avoid prepending Tmp. everywhere. The disadvantage is that code can no longer be selectively copied to the REPL without some tweaking.

  • Lather. Rinse. Repeat. Explore ideas at the julia command prompt. Save good ideas in tst.jl.

Simplify initialization

To simplify restarting the REPL, put project-specific initialization code in a file, say _init.jl, which you can run on startup by issuing the command:

  1. julia -L _init.jl

If you further add the following to your ~/.julia/config/startup.jl file

  1. isfile("_init.jl") && include(joinpath(pwd(), "_init.jl"))

then calling julia from that directory will run the initialization code without the additional command line argument.

Browser-based workflow

It is also possible to interact with a Julia REPL in the browser via IJulia. See the package home for details.