[sage-support] Re: Inter-disciplinary applications of Sage (biopython, etc.)

2008-03-29 Thread dean moore
For what we looking? As to explaining, "What is this sage thing good for?", an organization of the somewhat-messy published documents might be nice. There's some great stuff in there! Get something for Jason's colloquium talk in a week? A link on the main page

[sage-support] Re: Inter-disciplinary applications of Sage (biopython, etc.)

2008-03-29 Thread William Stein
Hi, This quarter I'm going to use Sage to teach an interdisciplinary course called "Algebraic, Scientiļ¬c, and Statistical Computing, an Open Source Approach Using Sage" this quarter. The course webpage is here: http://wiki.wstein.org/2008/480a For me the theme of this course is basically this

[sage-support] Re: Inter-disciplinary applications of Sage (biopython, etc.)

2008-03-29 Thread Marshall Hampton
I use Sage as the primary platform for an interdisciplinary course on bioinformatics. The students are a mix of math, biology, and chemistry graduate students (and a small number of undergraduates). I use (and largely maintain) the biopython spkg for sage. For more detail than you want, you can

[sage-support] Re: Inter-disciplinary applications of Sage (biopython, etc.)

2008-03-29 Thread Michael
I'm using Sage to build a tick-level equity analysis tool (finance / econometrics). I use the "extra" Octave Forge package called TSA (Time Series Analysis) heavily: http://octave.sourceforge.net/tsa/index.html --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ To post to this group, send ema

[sage-support] Re: Inter-disciplinary applications of Sage (biopython, etc.)

2008-03-28 Thread David Joyner
I don't if you call coding theory "other than math" but there are developers who are not in math departments (eg, CJ, a GUAVA developer is in the "Computing, Communications & Electronics" dept). On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 6:34 PM, Jason Grout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I'm giving a