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This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 29, 2023. It is now read-only.
I've notice that this awesome list of scientific computing goes beyond the theoretical knowledge and also contains information about scientific programming languages. At the moment, there is only Python, which is kinda lost among the other scientific topics. I would like to contribute with the contents with the programming language that I am use for science (Python, Matlab, Julia, and R). However, it seems a little tangled if put a new topic among other purely theoretical topic (e.g., Linear Algebra).
Shouldn't it better to split the table of contents between scientific programming languages and field of knowledge? In that way we could separate the theoretical topics from contents that concerns the programming language itself.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Hey @tapyu , I was happy to merge your PRs initially, but looks like you have much more energy than the AeroPython project itself 😄 we archived our flagship repo months ago and there's nobody looking at these other than myself, and I've moved on too.
Would you be happy for us to transfer this repo to you?
I see... Yes, for me, no problem. You can transfer it to me. I was initially looking for this kind of repository to share my scientific contents for both both theoretical and technical contents. I found this repository which is much more popular, but it seems to be focused only on technical resources (packages and toolboxes) rather than theoretical resources. That is why I decided to contribute here.
Dears,
I've notice that this awesome list of scientific computing goes beyond the theoretical knowledge and also contains information about scientific programming languages. At the moment, there is only Python, which is kinda lost among the other scientific topics. I would like to contribute with the contents with the programming language that I am use for science (Python, Matlab, Julia, and R). However, it seems a little tangled if put a new topic among other purely theoretical topic (e.g., Linear Algebra).
Shouldn't it better to split the table of contents between scientific programming languages and field of knowledge? In that way we could separate the theoretical topics from contents that concerns the programming language itself.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: