No,not yet.I haven't yet completely implemented
On Wednesday, April 3, 2019 at 4:18:12 AM UTC+5:30, Arif Ahmed wrote:
>
> Seems much better now. I see you have a PR for rs_acos, be sure to include
> the link in your proposal.
> Also , are you getting any output from the prototype code you have
Hello Aaron,
First of all, thank you for this clarification! It makes the terms much
more understandable.
But there is one thing that seems confusing to me. Since NumPy is a numeric
library and SymPy is a symbolic one, what is the point to have a NumPy-like
array in this case? Does it mean the
Seems much better now. I see you have a PR for rs_acos, be sure to include
the link in your proposal.
Also , are you getting any output from the prototype code you have for
rs_laurent and rs_fourier ?
On Monday, April 1, 2019 at 12:55:02 PM UTC+5:30, Nabanita Dash wrote:
>
> I have updated my
I am working on adding wheel support to the release script. I might do
an rc2 that the same as rc1 but includes a wheel to make sure it works
right.
Regarding the XPASS tests, yes, we need to go in and clean those up.
Possibly some of them only fail sometimes. I think there were some
issues with
You could try to use pandoc to convert the latex files to restructuredtext.
I bet it would get most of it right with only minimal manual formatting
needs.
Jason
moorepants.info
+01 530-601-9791
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 3:06 PM brombo wrote:
> After GSOC is over I have someone to help me
After GSOC is over I have someone to help me reintegrate geometric
algebra/calculus
into sympy. The biggest problem is documentation (all of it is in
LaTeX). I know that sympy uses sphinx. Can one use nbsphinx so they
can launch tutorial notebooks directly from the documentation or is the
Making a wheel is not hard:
$ pip install wheel
$ python setup.py bdist_wheel
$ ls dist/
sympy-1.4rc1-py3-none-any.whl
--
Oscar
On Tue, 2 Apr 2019 at 22:39, Nathan Goldbaum wrote:
>
> It would also be really nice to set up wheels for fastcache. I’ve had it on
> my todo list forever.
>
> On
On Mon, Apr 1, 2019, at 9:44 PM, Aaron Meurer wrote:
> The SymPy 1.4 release candidate 1 is ready for testing. Please
> download it and let us know if you have any issues.
>
> The release can be downloaded from
> https://github.com/sympy/sympy/releases/tag/sympy-1.4rc1.
>
> The release notes
It would also be really nice to set up wheels for fastcache. I’ve had it on
my todo list forever.
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 4:38 PM Aaron Meurer wrote:
> I should look into prereleases. I've shied away from them in the past
> because pip used to install them by default. But I think things are
>
I should look into prereleases. I've shied away from them in the past
because pip used to install them by default. But I think things are
better now. I also should get wheels working. I think it should be an
easy thing to add to the release script. I'll look into if it is
possible.
Aaron Meurer
I think it is now possible to upload pre-releases to PyPI so that
users can ask pip to install them:
https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/reference/pip_install/#pre-release-versions
https://packaging.python.org/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#pre-release-versioning
Also most Python
Hi Dmytro,
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019, at 2:33 AM, dmytr...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hello.
>
> My name is Dmytro Kozii. I am a computer science undergraduate student
> from Lviv Polytechnic National University. I have 2 years of working
> experience with python. During this term, I developed face
On Mon, Apr 1, 2019, at 10:10 PM, Nikhil Maan wrote:
>
>
> On Saturday, March 30, 2019 at 4:33:19 AM UTC+5:30, Ondřej Čertík
> wrote:Hi Nikhil,
> >
> > Also please do not forget about the patches for SymPy.
> >
> > Ondrej
>
> Dear Ondrej,
>
> I have shared a draft of my proposal with
Thanks. GitHub recently changed that, and I edited the old releases,
but I guess I forgot to update the release script. I wish they would
just let us remove those entirely from the release pages.
Aaron Meurer
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 3:12 PM Ondřej Čertík wrote:
>
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 1, 2019, at
On Mon, Apr 1, 2019, at 9:44 PM, Aaron Meurer wrote:
> The SymPy 1.4 release candidate 1 is ready for testing. Please
> download it and let us know if you have any issues.
>
> The release can be downloaded from
> https://github.com/sympy/sympy/releases/tag/sympy-1.4rc1.
>
> The release notes
The only thing that comes to mind is utility of Laplace and Frequency
domain calculations for linear time invariant systems. SymPy doesn't have
those.
Jason
moorepants.info
+01 530-601-9791
On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 6:58 AM Abhigyan Dutta
wrote:
> Hi Jason,
>
> I was looking into scipy's
Hi! I'm Vishnu Bhagyanath. I've recently started contributing to SymPy.
I've made a couple of basic PR's so far to get a hang of the workflow. I've
read the student instructions and followed it. On submitting a PR I noticed
the crypto module had been a bit blank and left untouched for months on
Thanks for the feedback!
I'll work on the changes ASAP.
Thanks again!
Arooshi
On Tue, 2 Apr 2019, 18:46 Jason Moore, wrote:
> Arooshi,
>
> My main feedback is to expand the approach section and reduce the bond
> graph explanation before. You have a very large section that reproduces
> what
Arooshi,
My main feedback is to expand the approach section and reduce the bond
graph explanation before. You have a very large section that reproduces
what you'd find in a bond graph text book or article, but we are most
interested in how you will implement this using code. The approach section
Hello.
My name is Dmytro Kozii. I am a computer science undergraduate student from
Lviv
Polytechnic National University. I have 2 years of working experience with
python. During this term, I developed face recognition system based on
raspberry pi and blog using python and a neural
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