Why is Matlab horrible on Linux?

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Rubem Pacelli
Rubem Pacelli on 17 Aug 2022
Edited: Rubem Pacelli on 21 Aug 2022
Before anything, I do need to highlight that this is my personal experience and it may not be the average result for ordinary Linux users, but I need to confess that working with Matlab on Linux is a nuisance for me... I came across several bugs and incompatibilities I did not have when I worked on Windows.
Maybe my machine has some points that have made it even worse:
  • It has a 4K screen, which is well-known for having problems. . .
  • It has NVidia graphic cards, it has many Low-Level Graphics Issues.
  • Maybe my distro (Majaro) can have some fault.
I can use other scientific languages (`R`, Julia, Python) without any problem... Only Matlab present problems in the installation and usage. I just would like to understand why. Is it my personal computer the guilt, or is it common having so many problems with Matlab on Linux? If it is common, do we have some perspective that things will be better in the future?
Thanks in advance.
  3 Comments
DGM
DGM on 18 Aug 2022
That's why I didn't post it as an answer. Either way, consider it taken care of.
For what it's worth, that was my perspective on the future of these issues..
Michal
Michal on 18 Aug 2022
Try to use officialy supported Linux distribution at first! Matlab is big beast, so the comparison with R, Julia, Python is not fair.

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Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 18 Aug 2022
Why? Because Linux is horribly fragmented with competing incompatible implementations and no central institution that is trying to make all of the versions compatible.
There is, for example, no current POSIX certified Linux. The only one that I can recall at the moment is that IBM certified an AIX... 6 years ago.
Do you know which products are recently POSIX certified, which vendors care about standardization? Answer: Apple MacOS is the only operating system being certified these days.
There are practical limits on the number of different Linux versions that MATLAB can be targeted for.
  4 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 18 Aug 2022
Huawei's EulerOS 2.0 registered 8-Sep-2016 is Linux based
K-UX is no longer on the main list, but is listed at https://www.opengroup.org/openbrand/register/brand3596.htm Registered on: 14-Dec-2012 Valid until: 14-Dec-2018
At least some of Huawei products are banned for use in some governments, due to concerns about potential espionage by a government -- of the same company that K-UX is from.
Things are not going well with Linux. It has already fragmented too far to be rescued -- at least not without some significant distributions going out of business.
Rubem Pacelli
Rubem Pacelli on 21 Aug 2022
Edited: Rubem Pacelli on 21 Aug 2022
@Walter Roberson bad news for Linux users so :( I cannot stand Windows anymore... Linux has integrated so well in my workflow, the unique drawback is Matlab...

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