Jmp Version History
JMP 13.0 (2016) is a fan favorite. It added Functional Data Explorer (for curves, spectra, profiles), Graph Spawning (right-click any graph to get related views), and Precision Binning for histograms. The Project container finally allowed organizing multiple windows into one file.
JMP 14.0 (2018) doubled down on pre-processing: Interactive Missing Value Imputation, Recurrence Analysis, and Python integration (call Python scripts, use pandas dataframes). The reliability and survival analysis platforms also matured significantly.
Verdict: JMP 13/14 felt like a mature IDE for data exploration. If you used older versions, these were the most polished releases up to that point.
Version 10 marked the introduction of the JMP Pro edition, creating a tiered product. Standard JMP for general analytics; JMP Pro for cross-validation, advanced modeling, and huge data. jmp version history
Pro Features:
Standard Features:
For exact build numbers and patch details, refer to SAS/JMP's official release notes. JMP 13
JMP was first launched in 1989 as a product of SAS Institute. Over the decades, it has evolved from a Macintosh-only statistical tool into a multi-platform suite used for complex data exploration and predictive modeling. 🏛️ Origins and Early Growth
1989 (Version 1): Launched by SAS co-founder John Sall to provide a visual, interactive way to explore data on the Apple Macintosh.
Version 3.1.5: An early 1990s release that ran on "Classic" Mac OS (System 9). Verdict: JMP 13/14 felt like a mature IDE
Version 4: Introduced the JMP Scripting Language (JSL), allowing users to automate analysis and build custom applications. 🚀 Major Modern Milestones How to open data files from earlier versions?
The current stable version as of late 2023 and early 2024, JMP 18 represents the integration of large language models (LLM) and AI-assisted analysis, while remaining true to its interactive roots.
Version 18 Features:
While SAS has not officially announced JMP 19 as of this writing, the roadmap likely includes: