Scientific Libraries in Python
Chris Barker
chrishbarker at home.net
Tue Nov 13 15:14:59 EST 2001
More information about the Python-list mailing list
Tue Nov 13 15:14:59 EST 2001
- Previous message (by thread): Scientific Libraries in Python
- Next message (by thread): Scientific Libraries in Python
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Horatio Davis wrote: > What I am advocating is a standard extension library for doing scientific > computing in Python, in the same way that Numeric is the de-facto standard > extension library for doing number crunching in Python. > > Of course, this thread has seen no comment yet from the authors of scipy > and Scientific Python (which seem to be the two key codebases), or the > other software projects which build on these. There might be some > perfectly obvious reason why this is a horribly bad idea... But Scientific Python already is exactly what you are advocating! It isn't the least bit complete, but as far as I can tell, it's goals are exactly what you want. The only question is why other folks are still doing their own little projects, rather than contibuting to SciPy. One anser, with Scientific Pyhton at least, is that it waws around long before the SciPy project got started. -Chris -- Christopher Barker, Ph.D. ChrisHBarker at home.net --- --- --- http://members.home.net/barkerlohmann ---@@ -----@@ -----@@ ------@@@ ------@@@ ------@@@ Oil Spill Modeling ------ @ ------ @ ------ @ Water Resources Engineering ------- --------- -------- Coastal and Fluvial Hydrodynamics -------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Previous message (by thread): Scientific Libraries in Python
- Next message (by thread): Scientific Libraries in Python
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Python-list mailing list