You can have two proposals that work on related things, but each
proposal needs to stand on its own (that is, if only one proposal gets
accepted, you should still be able to do the work).
Aaron Meurer
On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 3:15 PM, Tatyana Abramova wrote:
> As far as I
Tatyana,
There are projects that have enough work to share between two proposals.
That would be ok. But all of the proposals should be primarily focused on
developing software for SymPy. Each proposal should be focused on the
software additions and changes that the student will work on during the
As far as I understand, we are allowed to do one project together, but we
should write separated proposals where each of us should write about own
purposes and objectives. In our project I will deal with the part related
to physics, my friend will be engaged in programming, so I supposed to
Please be aware that group proposals are not allowed by Google, so if
you both wanted to submit, you would need to submit separate, distinct
proposals
https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/faq#can_a_group_submit_a_proposal_together_to_work_on_a_single_project.
Aaron Meurer
On Sat, Mar
This sounds great. The devils in the details though. We'd love to see more
fleshed out ideas. You can propose them here or on the wiki or through pull
requests. This is a good idea for a GSoC project too.
Jason
moorepants.info
+01 530-601-9791
On Sat, Mar 18, 2017 at 3:35 AM, Tatyana Abramova
Hello,
we are Tatyana Abramova, first-year student of The Department of General
and Applied Physics of MIPT, and Robert Drynkin, first-year student of
Applied Mathematics and Computer Science in HSE and Mathematics in IUM.
We have found that there is no model for non-rigid bodies and we are