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.
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.
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.
For casual conversation and quick, informal questions, we have an official Julia Slack. As an open source alternative to Slack and home to some Julia sub-communities, we also have Zulip.
All the JuliaCon videos and other videos of general interest in the community are uploaded to the Julia Language YouTube channel.
On Twitter, tweet with the #julialang hashtag and check out the Official Julia Language Twitter account for Julia updates.
The Julia Community has a shared calander for all upcoming global events. If you are an event organizer, please email us with the details so it can be added to the calander. The Julia community also has local meetups around the world.
We conducted the first annual Julia User & Developer Survey in June 2019, and presented the results at JuliaCon. Download the survey findings.
The 2020 Julia User and Developer Survey is currently live. Please take the survey.
Julia’s official documentation is in English, but many groups work to translate and localize documentation and other resources. Currently the only active localization effort is JuliaCN (Chinese). See past localization efforts.