![]() I ended choosing practically and Freemat. If you are good at programming and want the best system to write code with (and willing to invest lots of time learning new things) you'll want one of the other mentioned forms. If you are familiar with matlab but not other forms of programming this might be your best bet to get up running very quickly and comfortably. The nice thing about it is that you can download it, it comes with ~400 page documentation that you can learn from, and comes with a nice user interface that you can start typing code into immediately if you already know matlab. I can carry it and run it off a flash drive although using it off a flash drive is noticeably slower. Very similar to matlab and is very compatible (seems like 99% of the code is copy and paste interchangeable). Since nobody else has mentioned it, I'll go ahead and say give Freemat a try. LearnEngineering: Learn & discuss engineering concepts.EngineeringStudents: For wee engineerlings./u/_wampa_stompa: Sheet metal, Structural, Aerodynamics (AE)ĭirectory of Useful Subreddits Engineering Fields./u/unbelieverben: Plastics/Molding (CHE), Glass (Display/Automotive)./u/theaeroengineer: Aircraft Design (AE)./u/Saryu: IP Video Distribution (EE/SE)./u/rockitscyentist: Control Systems (AE)./u/lafleur818: Environmental/Wastewater./u/internationengineer: MEP Design (ME)./u/ingeniero_war: Industrial Automation (ME)./u/capitalmonks Electrical Power Systems (EE).Pick an engineer from the list of volunteers below and send him or her a PM indicating that you would like to conduct an interview: Lead-in comments are encouraged to provide context to the readers. Completed projects, destructive test results, and unique machinery and hardware are all acceptable and encouraged. Images and videos related to engineering are acceptable, provided they are relevant to engineering. Engineers should help each other to make the world a safer and better place. Questions about current engineering projects you are working on, how to interpret codes and standards, and industry practices are all encouraged. R/engineering is a forum for engineering professionals to share information, knowledge, experience related to the principles & practices of all types of engineering: civil, structural, mechanical, electrical, aerospace, chemical, computer, environmental, etc. No low-effort one-liner comments, memes, or off-topic replies. Racism, sexism, or any other form of bigotry will not be tolerated.īe substantive. Overly insulting or crass comments will be removed. You are allowed one submission, and you must be active in the comments to answer any questions. You can read about why this policy exists here.Ĭrowdfunding: Must be relevant to engineering and submitted as a self-post (not a link). No posts about the 9/11 terrorist attacks. All sources are subject to moderator evaluation. This includes YouTube channels, blogs, etc. For assistance with resumes, try /r/EngineeringResumes.Job postings must go into the Quarterly Hiring Thread.No questions on "how something works" - try r/AskEngineers.Īll workplace topics and questions asking for career advice must go into the Weekly Career Discussion Thread. NOTE: Asking for help on homework will result in an instant ban. No questions related to university, school, major selection, GPA, coursework, etc. If you see any post or comment that violates these rules, please report it so the moderators can respond in a timely manner.
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