Please take a moment to read the Julia Community Standards. We expect that your participation in any Julia related forum, online or offline, respects these standards. The Julia Community is committed to continuing to foster an inclusive and diverse culture. Read more about how we are doing this on our diversity page.





GitHub

We use GitHub for the development of Julia itself. There, we host our source code, track issues, and accept pull requests. For support and questions, please use Discourse.

Questions?

The primary online discussion venue for Julia is the Discourse forum. Learn more about our Discourse site and what it is best used for here.

Chat

For casual conversations, we have Zulip, Slack and Discord.






The Julia Community has several local communities organizing meetups and other activities. If your community is missing from the map, add it here.






The Julia Community has a shared calendar for all upcoming global events. If you are an event organizer, please email us with the details so it can be added to the calendar. The Julia community also has local meetups around the world.






We conduct the Julia User & Developer Survey right before JuliaCon every year and present the findings at JuliaCon. The survey has now been conducted several years in a row:





The Julia Language is proud to have fostered a diverse assortment of GitHub Organizations over the years. Find out more about our Ecosystem's GitHub Organizations.

All Julia Org Logos




A working group is a group of people that are interested in working on a common topic. Working groups are informal and have no official authority. Find out more about Working Groups.





In addition to the thousands of individuals who contribute to the Julia project in their personal capacities, we are grateful to a large number of companies and organizations that are supporting the continued growth of the Julia project and ecosystem. We maintain a list of these on the sponsors page.