My apologies if I do not fully understand, but could you clarify what you 
mean?

I was of the belief that SymPy possessed features relating to topics such 
as differential equations which might be used in the context of situations 
dealing with regressions.

Best,
John 

On Tuesday, July 7, 2020 at 3:30:06 PM UTC-4, Jason Moore wrote:
>
> John,
>
> One issue with your proposal is that SymPy doesn't (at least explicitly) 
> do any of the things you mention.
>
> Jason
> moorepants.info
> +01 530-601-9791
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 7, 2020 at 12:26 PM John Yoon <johny...@gmail.com 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> My tutorials/guides would primarily focus on classical machine learning 
>> and data science problems. There are several Kaggle beginner projects (i.e. 
>> housing price prediction through regression, or image classification) that 
>> are implemented through Python and the usual popular libraries like numpy, 
>> matplotlib, etc. Through my Season of Docs project, I would take those 
>> implementations and step-by-step translate them into SymPy to achieve 
>> similar results. This process should highlight several of the most common 
>> use cases of SymPy's user base, and help new adopters to transition more 
>> smoothly.
>>
>> On Tuesday, July 7, 2020 at 2:16:43 PM UTC-4, Nikhil Maan wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi John, 
>>>
>>> Thanks for showing interest in improving SymPy's documentation. Can you 
>>> tell us a little about what kind of tutorials/guides your project would be 
>>> focused on?
>>>
>>> As for incorporating the notebooks, there was a previous discussion at 
>>> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/sympy/_5RcJXGOgP4
>>> The plan is to move all the notebooks to the 
>>> https://github.com/sympy/sympy-notebooks repository so that all the 
>>> notebooks can be at a single standard place. So, I think it will be a good 
>>> idea to have any notebooks you create as a part of the project at the same 
>>> repo. 
>>>
>>> Also, just to make sure, the deadline for the application is in 2 days, 
>>> on July 9, 2020, 18:00 UTC
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Nikhil Maan
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, July 7, 2020 at 5:46:04 AM UTC+5:30, John Yoon wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello, my name is John Yoon, and I would like to express my interest in 
>>>> contributing to your team for Google’s Season of Docs. Among SymPy’s 
>>>> various projects, the one focusing on High Level Documentation seems 
>>>> particularly fascinating and full of potential for innovation. 
>>>>
>>>> My combined background as both an English major and Computer Science 
>>>> major would prove useful for the task at hand. Similarly, my prior big 
>>>> data 
>>>> internship in a research setting at Oregon State University’s Center for 
>>>> Genome Research and Biocomputing have fostered my Python and data skills. 
>>>> Furthermore, I currently work as a cloud reliability engineer at NYC’s 
>>>> cybersecurity agency, which has developed a familiarity working with Git, 
>>>> as well as documenting my Python implementations of Cloud Functions. 
>>>> Consequently, I offer a unique perspective with which to approach this 
>>>> project.
>>>>
>>>> My analysis of the project description resulted in a precursory plan to 
>>>> focus on three primary areas: identifying the most common and useful use 
>>>> cases of SymPy, develop documentation and tutorials for the aforementioned 
>>>> cases (i.e., Jupyter notebooks or diagrams), and refactoring any existing 
>>>> documentation relevant to the most important use cases. Per an earlier 
>>>> conversation I had with Aaron, I am curious about the team's opinion on 
>>>> setting the precedence of incorporating Jupyter notebooks into the 
>>>> project's documentation in order to facilitate more tangible and 
>>>> interactive tutorials.
>>>>
>>>> I would enjoy speaking further about this project to either narrow or 
>>>> broaden the scope of the team’s documentation endeavors, and to also get a 
>>>> better understanding of the organization’s workflows and culture. Please 
>>>> feel free to contact me to discuss further, so I may have a better 
>>>> understanding of the project prior to the formal application submission 
>>>> later this week. I have attached my resume and two documentation 
>>>> samples for your consideration. Thank you.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>>
>>>> John
>>>>
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