Reach out of you need help!

And, just a minor clarification, the interpolation bits are in the CompEcon 
(not QuantEcon) repo. Eventually they will probably make there way under 
the QuantEcon umbrella, but they aren't quite polished enough. Sorry for 
the unfortunate similarity between the names. The CompEcon name was 
inherited from the Miranda and Fackler Matlab toolbox upon which my Julia 
interpolation routines are based. 

Good luck on your thesis!

On Monday, August 31, 2015 at 10:08:09 AM UTC-4, Nils Gudat wrote:
>
> I wish I wouldn't have to submit my PhD thesis in 5 weeks, between this 
> and Mike's new work on the julia atom client there's never been so much 
> stuff that I would happily try to contribute too...
> I'll see how the QuantEcon bit works, but otherwise I might just have a go 
> at the gradient implementation (although I've never actually used meta 
> programming, so while the linear gradient function might seem trivial, 
> implementing it won't be trivial to me!)
>

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