7

When Mathematica 11 released a few months ago there was the following image under Wolfram's promotional material Expanded Distribution Coverage:

enter image description

However, the image is quite small and some of the text is too pixelated to read and I cannot find a version large enough to read or a list of comparisons to other languages.

Does anyone know this information? The only other thing provided on the site is the caption:

"Version 11 adds new scalar and matrix distributions, widening its already significant lead over the competition."

polfosol
  • 952
  • 5
  • 20
SumNeuron
  • 5,422
  • 19
  • 51
  • 3
    isn't funny that going to the page you linked extended-probability-and-statistics/expanded-distribution-coverage and then clicking on the Expanded Distribution coverage>> link below, send you back to the same page started at? A circular loop of links. I agree with you, the image should be readable. Given that it is so prominently displayed at center of page and it is the whole point of the web page! But can't read what is inside it. WRI should really fix this :) – Nasser Feb 11 '17 at 21:49
  • 1
    @Nasser that is exactly what I was thinking. It just seemed really odd and out of place. Why make this image available and then obscure it? – SumNeuron Feb 11 '17 at 21:58

2 Answers2

10

I have asked this question and @Searke provided the following image (quite large when you click on it to follow its link) in the Mma.SE chat room.

enter image description here

Hope this helps.

Edmund
  • 42,267
  • 3
  • 51
  • 143
  • Thank you for this. It wasn't anything pertinent, but I was curious. Also, I looked at your post and you use [@username] to make a link to a user. However, I can not do the same. Does that require a specific level of points to do? – SumNeuron Feb 12 '17 at 10:03
  • @SumNeuron notice the parentheses after the brackets. [text](URL) is the syntax. – Ruslan Feb 12 '17 at 10:11
  • @edmund, it rendered on another line and I did not see it! my bad – SumNeuron Feb 12 '17 at 10:43
3

You could always run

Names["System`*Distribution"]

There's some extraneous symbols in this list, but it seems fairly exhaustive.

Greg Hurst
  • 35,921
  • 1
  • 90
  • 136