could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Very interesting.
I did not know about it.
You mentioned some book that is related to this code. Which one is this?
Cheers, Doru
On 2 Mar 2012, at 22:45, Stéphane Ducasse wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: '' _______________________________________________ Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
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"Value is always contextual."
On Sun, Mar 4, 2012 at 9:39 PM, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com wrote:
Very interesting.
I did not know about it.
You mentioned some book that is related to this code. Which one is this?
http://www.amazon.com/Object-Oriented-Implementation-Numerical-Methods-Intro...
Regards,
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
It would be really interesting to organize a bit the scientific packages so that we have one nice library to look for. Serge if you have some code please package it.
Stef
On Mar 5, 2012, at 4:05 AM, Serge Stinckwich wrote:
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
On Tue, Mar 6, 2012 at 4:29 AM, Stéphane Ducasse stephane.ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
It would be really interesting to organize a bit the scientific packages so that we have one nice library to look for. Serge if you have some code please package it.
Yes sure !
Anyone is aware of any Smalltalk code/project that might be used for a scientific library for Smalltalk. At the moment, there is a lot of fragmentation:
- DHBNumerical (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical.html - StMath (licence unknown): http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html - MathComplex and MathQuaternion (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/Complex.html - Smallapack (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/Smallapack.html
Who is willing to contribue and in what domain (numerical analysis, matrix, probability distribution, ...) ?
Maybe we can propose a GSOC project for a student ?
Regards,
On Mar 6, 2012, at 3:11 AM, Serge Stinckwich wrote:
On Tue, Mar 6, 2012 at 4:29 AM, Stéphane Ducasse stephane.ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
It would be really interesting to organize a bit the scientific packages so that we have one nice library to look for. Serge if you have some code please package it.
Yes sure !
Anyone is aware of any Smalltalk code/project that might be used for a scientific library for Smalltalk. At the moment, there is a lot of fragmentation:
- DHBNumerical (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical.html
- StMath (licence unknown):
http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
- MathComplex and MathQuaternion (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/Complex.html
- Smallapack (MIT): http://www.squeaksource.com/Smallapack.html
Who is willing to contribue and in what domain (numerical analysis, matrix, probability distribution, ...) ?
Maybe we can propose a GSOC project for a student ?
why not now we should start to - define a configurationOf for DHB - produce more tests Right now they are all in one class - may be produce some simple doc. I should reread the book (I read it in draft at least 5 times).
Stef
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
Hi all,
we talked recently on the moose mailing-list about having a more robust library for doing mathematical stuff in Smalltalk like SciPython or SciRuby (see below). If there is enough interested, i'm wondering if we could propose a Google Summer of Code project about that. I could write a draft for the project.
Regards,
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
Hi Serge,
There definitely is interest. If you volunteer for mentoring it would be great.
Cheers, Doru
On 20 Mar 2012, at 04:35, Serge Stinckwich wrote:
Hi all,
we talked recently on the moose mailing-list about having a more robust library for doing mathematical stuff in Smalltalk like SciPython or SciRuby (see below). If there is enough interested, i'm wondering if we could propose a Google Summer of Code project about that. I could write a draft for the project.
Regards,
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
-- Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"Not knowing how to do something is not an argument for how it cannot be done."
On Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 12:45 PM, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com wrote:
Hi Serge,
There definitely is interest. If you volunteer for mentoring it would be great.
Yes sure i can do it. I can even maybe propose some local students. Do you want to co-mentor ?
Regards,
I would more want to see what can be done with it :). I have very little knowledge in this area and a bit too little time, but I can try to help.
Doru
On 20 Mar 2012, at 07:12, Serge Stinckwich wrote:
On Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 12:45 PM, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com wrote:
Hi Serge,
There definitely is interest. If you volunteer for mentoring it would be great.
Yes sure i can do it. I can even maybe propose some local students. Do you want to co-mentor ?
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"Don't give to get. Just give."
Hi,
There's a package "Numerical Methods" in Cincoms Public Repository which is - I think - based on the book "Object-Oriented Implementation of Numerical Methods". Is this package already ported? If not, it might be a good starting point. But it needs more documentation...
Regards, Steffen
Am 20.03.2012, 04:35 Uhr, schrieb Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com:
Hi all,
we talked recently on the moose mailing-list about having a more robust library for doing mathematical stuff in Smalltalk like SciPython or SciRuby (see below). If there is enough interested, i'm wondering if we could propose a Google Summer of Code project about that. I could write a draft for the project.
Regards,
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
2012/3/20 Steffen Märcker merkste@web.de:
Hi,
There's a package "Numerical Methods" in Cincoms Public Repository which is
- I think - based on the book "Object-Oriented Implementation of Numerical
Methods". Is this package already ported? If not, it might be a good starting point. But it needs more documentation...
Yes there is already the same version for Pharo/Squeak on Squeaksource. There is actually a lot of code dispersed in several projects with some duplication also. The idea is to consolidate everything.
Regards,
It can imagine that it would be useful for the ST community to have this cross dialect. Are there any plans in this direction?
Ciao, Steffen
Am 20.03.2012, 10:34 Uhr, schrieb Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com:
2012/3/20 Steffen Märcker merkste@web.de:
Hi,
There's a package "Numerical Methods" in Cincoms Public Repository which is
- I think - based on the book "Object-Oriented Implementation of
Numerical Methods". Is this package already ported? If not, it might be a good starting point. But it needs more documentation...
Yes there is already the same version for Pharo/Squeak on Squeaksource. There is actually a lot of code dispersed in several projects with some duplication also. The idea is to consolidate everything.
Regards,
2012/3/20 Steffen Märcker merkste@web.de:
It can imagine that it would be useful for the ST community to have this cross dialect. Are there any plans in this direction?
Yes in a perfect world, but having already something working on Pharo is a first step. After that people could adapt to other flavors if they want.
Regards,
On Mar 20, 2012, at 10:34 AM, Serge Stinckwich wrote:
2012/3/20 Steffen Märcker merkste@web.de:
Hi,
There's a package "Numerical Methods" in Cincoms Public Repository which is
- I think - based on the book "Object-Oriented Implementation of Numerical
Methods". Is this package already ported? If not, it might be a good starting point. But it needs more documentation...
Yes there is already the same version for Pharo/Squeak on Squeaksource. There is actually a lot of code dispersed in several projects with some duplication also. The idea is to consolidate everything.
Yes!
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
It is already ported.
Stef
On Mar 20, 2012, at 10:30 AM, Steffen Märcker wrote:
Hi,
There's a package "Numerical Methods" in Cincoms Public Repository which is - I think - based on the book "Object-Oriented Implementation of Numerical Methods". Is this package already ported? If not, it might be a good starting point. But it needs more documentation...
Regards, Steffen
Am 20.03.2012, 04:35 Uhr, schrieb Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com:
Hi all,
we talked recently on the moose mailing-list about having a more robust library for doing mathematical stuff in Smalltalk like SciPython or SciRuby (see below). If there is enough interested, i'm wondering if we could propose a Google Summer of Code project about that. I could write a draft for the project.
Regards,
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Serge Stinckwich serge.stinckwich@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 4:45 AM, Stéphane Ducasse Stephane.Ducasse@inria.fr wrote:
could be interesting to see if we need to some numerical analysis in moose and pharo.
I will create a configuration
MCSqueaksourceRepository location: 'http://squeaksource.com/DHBNumerical' user: '' password: ''
Thank you. I'm definitively interested by having more mathematical stuff available in Pharo. There is Scipy [1] since a long time for Python and more recently Ruby community do the same with SciRuby [2].
Some time ago, i wrote several random number generators [3] that might be integrated in a numeral analysis packages.
At the moment, i'm mostly interested by Runge-Kutta methods [4] in order to solve some ordinary differential equations. I already find some code on the web like this one: http://live.exept.de/doc/online/english/programming/goody_stmath.html
What is really important is to be able to test the result of such algorithms.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy [2] http://sciruby.com/ [3] http://www.squeaksource.com/Random.html [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%E2%80%93Kutta_methods
Regards,
Serge Stinckwich UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC), Hanoi, Vietnam Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk http://doesnotunderstand.org/
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev