Dear Fidel,
On Mar 3, 5:29 am, Minh Nguyen wrote:
> You might want to have a look at this site:
>
> http://trac.sagemath.org/sage_trac/report/10
>
> It contains tickets with patches, so you can picket any ticket and
> view the attached patches.
Perhaps the use of a "patch" needs an explanation.
Hi Fidel,
On Tue, Mar 3, 2009 at 4:19 AM, Fidel wrote:
>
>> Absolutely, getting a "small" patch into Sage is a great way to get
>> more familiar with the whole process before going off and doing a
>> larger project. And we like small and incremental improvements over
>> "patch bombs".
>>
>
>
Hi Michael,
On Mar 2, 2:28 pm, mabshoff wrote:
> On Mar 2, 10:43 am, Fidel wrote:
>
> > On Mar 2, 12:33 pm, Jason Grout wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi Fidel,
>
> > > It sounds like you already have code that you've written. I think it
> > > may be easiest to get the code that you've already written into
On Mar 2, 10:43 am, Fidel wrote:
> On Mar 2, 12:33 pm, Jason Grout wrote:
Hi Fidel,
> > It sounds like you already have code that you've written. I think it
> > may be easiest to get the code that you've already written into Sage.
> > Can you post it and we can give suggestions on what ne
On Mar 2, 12:33 pm, Jason Grout wrote:
> Fidel wrote:
> > Sorry for explaining so little about myself. During my undergrad I
> > took 5 courses which involved programming (structured programming,
> > OOP, data structures, computer graphics, cryptography) and a graph
> > theory course. I impleme
Fidel wrote:
> Sorry for explaining so little about myself. During my undergrad I
> took 5 courses which involved programming (structured programming,
> OOP, data structures, computer graphics, cryptography) and a graph
> theory course. I implemented a small program called QGraphs (http://
> fidel
On Mar 1, 7:44 am, Fidel wrote:
Hi Fidel,
> Sorry for explaining so little about myself. During my undergrad I
> took 5 courses which involved programming (structured programming,
> OOP, data structures, computer graphics, cryptography) and a graph
> theory course. I implemented a small progr
Sorry for explaining so little about myself. During my undergrad I
took 5 courses which involved programming (structured programming,
OOP, data structures, computer graphics, cryptography) and a graph
theory course. I implemented a small program called QGraphs (http://
fidelinux.googlepages.com/QG
On Feb 28, 6:26 pm, Minh Nguyen wrote:
Hi Minh,
> > I would not do that. There is very little of networkX left in Sage -
> > at least for all performance critical things and Sage's graph code has
> > been moving further and further away from it. There should be a lot of
> > the graph theory
Hi Michael,
On Sun, Mar 1, 2009 at 2:02 AM, mabshoff wrote:
>
>> Because you want to enhance the graph-theoretic component of Sage, I
>> think you should start by going through the library files in the
>> directory tree sage/graph. Please note also that for much of the
>> graph-theoretic calc
On Feb 28, 5:54 pm, Minh Nguyen wrote:
> Hi Fidel,
>
> On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 5:30 PM, Fidel wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> > I'm interested in collaborating to develop sage. I'm mainly interested
> > in doing things for the graph theoretic component of sage. I know a
> > bit of C++ and Python program
Hi Fidel,
On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 5:30 PM, Fidel wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I'm interested in collaborating to develop sage. I'm mainly interested
> in doing things for the graph theoretic component of sage. I know a
> bit of C++ and Python programming.
> I would really appreciate if someone could tell
On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 12:30 PM, Fidel wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I'm interested in collaborating to develop sage. I'm mainly interested
> in doing things for the graph theoretic component of sage. I know a
> bit of C++ and Python programming.
> I would really appreciate if someone could tell me what I
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