Re: [sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-02 Thread Prasoon Shukla
Oh, I am sorry for the late reply. It seems Stefan has covered pretty much everything though. And, I am sorry if my post misled you. But then, other community members can always correct you :) -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sympy" group. To unsubs

Re: [sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-02 Thread Akhil Verghese
Thanks a lot, Stefan. That was exactly the information I was looking for. The linearization and visualization projects look perfect. I'll get to work on an application immediately. Regards. On Thursday, May 2, 2013 1:47:00 PM UTC+5:30, Stefan Krastanov wrote: > > A project is never finished, s

Re: [sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-02 Thread Stefan Krastanov
A project is never finished, so do not worry, there is always more work to do. However you should check our codebase in order to know what the status is. The `mechanics` module is, as I already said, mostly developed by the pydy organization. We can accept projects related to them if the projects a

Re: [sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-01 Thread Akhil Verghese
Hi, The link you posted is where I saw the classical mechanics project. It's under the detailed explanations of the physics sub-projects. Do you mean this project has already been completed? Is there any more work that can be done? I don't think I'd qualify for the other projects. I'm sure you

Re: [sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-01 Thread Stefan Krastanov
I would not be so fast about discouraging this project. There is a lot that can be contributed to this submodule. It is worked on by the PyDy organization and sympy might accept common projects. On 1 May 2013 15:36, Prasoon Shukla wrote: > Classical mechanics has already been implemented in SymPy

[sympy] Re: GSOC Symbolic Classical Mechanics in SymPy

2013-05-01 Thread Prasoon Shukla
Classical mechanics has already been implemented in SymPy[1] in the sympy.physics.mechanics module. You can take a look at other ideas here . [1] http://docs.sympy.org/dev/modules/physics/mechanics/index.html -- You received this message bec