New Mathematica 4.2 Delivers XML and Java Functionality
June 24, 2002--With today's release of Mathematica 4.2,
Wolfram Research, Inc. introduces the first technical computing system
with full XML support and seamless Java integration. Now users can access
any Java program from within Mathematica and work directly with
XML data
and documents. Version 4.2 also brings important advancements in linear
programming, statistics, optimization, combinatorics, graph theory, and
technical publishing.
Key new features in Mathematica 4.2 include the following:
- Transparent Java integration with J/Link 2.0 and built-in Java
Runtime Engine
- XML extensions that allow Mathematica notebooks and expressions
to be stored as XML
- New bundled XML tools package for symbolic XML manipulation
- Support for XHTML export including style sheets
- Extended MathML 2.0 support
- Improved linear programming and optimization
- Statistics enhancements including new ANOVA package
- New bundled Combinatorica package for combinatorics and graph
theory
- New bundled AuthorTools package for technical publishing
- Slide show environment for presentations
- New import and export formats including FITS and SDTS
"The built-in Java Runtime Environment and J/Link 2.0 give
developers an easy way to mix Mathematica and Java code right out
of the box," says Lars
Hohmuth, Product Manager for Mathematica. "Whether they want to
build graphical user interfaces to Mathematica using AWT and Swing
graphical user interface components or connect to their enterprise database using
JDBC, they can now use Java with the same ease as the built-in
Mathematica programming language."
Version 4.2 also marks the beginning of the XML era at Wolfram Research by
offering support for import, export, and symbolic manipulation of XML
documents and data. In conjunction with a major focus on technical
publishing in this version, Mathematica now includes XML extensions
that let users save notebooks and Mathematica expressions as XML
constructs
and adds support for XHTML and MathML 2.0, the emerging standard for
mathematics on the web.
Mathematica 4.2 also includes a new AuthorTools package and
a slide show
environment that make preparing notebooks for presentations and online and
print publication much easier.
"Version 4.2 takes the changing Mathematica customer base into
account without neglecting our core users," says Roger Germundsson,
Director of
Research and Development at Wolfram Research. "An increasing number of our
customers are using Mathematica in nontraditional ways--for example, as a
metaprogramming tool, for document processing, or as a deployment
mechanism--but we are also still committed to our core competency in
technical computing. Mathematica 4.2 contains the largest
collection of
mathematical algorithms worldwide and is the only major technical
computing system that includes state-of-the-art technology for global
optimization, combinatorics, and graph theory in the core product."
"Mathematica has always been uniquely capable as the hub of a
technical
professional's world," adds Conrad Wolfram, Director of Strategic
Development. "Version 4.2 makes it ideal as an enterprise's technical hub
too. The integration of Java, XML, and Mathematica's capabilities
in 4.2
holds the key to computational and document-oriented processing across an
organization."
Mathematica 4.2 is available for Windows, Mac OS, Mac OS X, Linux
(PC, Alpha, PowerPC), Solaris, HP-UX, IRIX, AIX, Compaq Tru64 Unix, and
compatible systems.
Mathematica 4.2 begins shipping in the United States and Canada June 24. It
will be
available in all other territories except Japan starting July 8.
The Japanese edition of Mathematica 4.2 is scheduled for release in early
fall 2002. More product details
are available on the Mathematica product pages.
| |