We provide several ways for you to run Julia:
A package which integrates most of Julia’s plotting backends into one convenient and well-documented API is Plots.jl. Plotting capabilities are also provided by external packages such as PyPlot.jl and Gadfly.jl. Look at the plotting instructions to install a plotting package. If you are using JuliaBox, all of these plotting packages are pre-installed.
Windows Self-Extracting Archive (.exe) [help] | 32-bit | 64-bit | ||||
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macOS Package (.dmg) [help] | 10.8+ 64-bit | |||||
Generic Linux Binaries for x86 [help] | 32-bit (GPG) | 64-bit (GPG) | ||||
Generic Linux Binaries for ARM | 32-bit (armv7-a hard float) (GPG) | 64-bit (armv8-a) (GPG) | ||||
Source | Tarball (GPG) | Tarball with dependencies (GPG) | GitHub |
Please see platform specific instructions if you have trouble installing Julia. Checksums for this release are available in both MD5 and SHA256 format.
If the provided download files do not work for you, please file an issue in the Julia project.
Older releases of Julia for all platforms are available on the Older releases page.
For Julia 0.5, only bugfixes are being supported. Releases older than 0.5 are now unmaintained.
These are bleeding-edge binaries of the latest version of Julia under development, which you can use to get a preview of the latest work. The nightly builds are for developer previews and not intended for normal use. You can expect many packages not to work with this version. Most users are advised to use the latest official release version of Julia, above.
Windows Self-Extracting Archive (.exe) | 32-bit | 64-bit | |
---|---|---|---|
macOS Package (.dmg) | 10.8+ 64-bit | ||
Generic Linux binaries for X86 | 32-bit | 64-bit | |
Generic Linux binaries for ARM | 32-bit (armv7-a hard float) | 64-bit (armv8-a) | |
Fedora/RHEL/CentOS/SL packages (.rpm) | 32/64-bit | ||
Source | GitHub |
All Julia binary releases are cryptographically secured using the traditional methods on each operating system platform. macOS and Windows releases are codesigned by certificates that are verified by the operating system before installation. Generic Linux tarballs and source tarballs are signed via GPG using this key. Ubuntu and Fedora/RHEL/CentOS/SL releases are signed by their own keys that are verified by the package managers when installing.