

For example, Octave was used on a massive parallel computer at Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center to find vulnerabilities related to guessing social security numbers. In addition to use on desktops for personal scientific computing, Octave is used in academia and industry. Publication of Octave 6.2.0 (QT5 preferred), Bugfix, improved matlab syntax support Publication of Octave 6.1.0 (QT5 preferred, Qt 4.x deprecated for remove in 7)

Publication of Octave 5.2.0 (QT5 preferred) Publication of Octave 5.1.0 (QT5 preferred, Qt 4.8 minimum), hiDpi support Version 4.4.0 (new Goal for GUI QT Toolkit, the FLTK toolkit is not deprecated and there is no schedule for its removal - while no longer prioritized) Version 4.0.0 (stable GUI and new Syntax for OOP) Publication of Octave 3.8.0 (experimental GUI) Development history Timeġst Publication (Version 1.0.0 to 1.1.1) Ģnd Publication (Version 2.0.x) with Windows Port ( Cygwin) Levenspiel was known for his ability to perform quick back-of-the-envelope calculations. The program is named after Octave Levenspiel, a former professor of the principal author. The first alpha release dates back to 4 January 1993 and on 17 February 1994 version 1.0 was released. At first it was intended to be a companion to a chemical reactor design course. 6.1 Command and variable name completion.
