On 14Nov2015 08:37, Laura Creighton wrote:
In a message of Sat, 14 Nov 2015 00:38:41 -0500, Terry Reedy writes:
On 11/13/2015 10:58 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Nov 9, 2015 7:41 PM, "Heather Piwowar" wrote:
4. http://depsy.org/tag/scientific%252Fengineering
FYI, the depsy.org site is completely
In a message of Sat, 14 Nov 2015 00:38:41 -0500, Terry Reedy writes:
>On 11/13/2015 10:58 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
>> On Nov 9, 2015 7:41 PM, "Heather Piwowar" wrote:
>>>
>>> Today's scientists often turn to Python to run analysis, simulation, and
>> other sciency tasks.
>>>
>>> That makes us wonder:
On Sat, 14 Nov 2015 02:58 pm, Ian Kelly wrote:
> FYI, the depsy.org site is completely unusable on my Android phone.
On Firefox under Linux, the page comes up blank.
If I use the NoScript plugin to allow Javascript from the despy.org site,
the page now takes twice as long to load, and still come
On 11/13/2015 10:58 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Nov 9, 2015 7:41 PM, "Heather Piwowar" wrote:
Today's scientists often turn to Python to run analysis, simulation, and
other sciency tasks.
That makes us wonder: which Python libraries are most influential in
scientific research?
Numpy, scipy,
On Nov 9, 2015 7:41 PM, "Heather Piwowar" wrote:
>
> Today's scientists often turn to Python to run analysis, simulation, and
other sciency tasks.
>
> That makes us wonder: which Python libraries are most influential in
scientific research?
>
> We just released a tool (built in Python, of course)
Today's scientists often turn to Python to run analysis, simulation, and other
sciency tasks.
That makes us wonder: which Python libraries are most influential in scientific
research?
We just released a tool (built in Python, of course) to answer that question.
It's called Depsy [1], it's fun