This would be a rather important addition to Sage. The ability to
model, analyse, simulate, and optimize extremely large and complex
physical systems efficiently, and using the standard modelica language
- and related tools - optionally for the purpose, is something that
would put Sage in substant
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 2:46 PM, Vincent D <20100.delecr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Jmodelica seems to be very interesting... but from
> http://www.jmodelica.org/page/14
> (or see the copy below) they argue that the software is their property
> (is that a problem for inclusion in Sage?). On the other
Hi!
On 20 Jul., 23:46, Vincent D <20100.delecr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> ...
> * You assign and transfer the copyright of your JModelica.org
> contribution to the Project owner to the extent permitted by
> applicable law. In return you receive back a broad license to re-use
> and distribute your
Jmodelica seems to be very interesting... but from
http://www.jmodelica.org/page/14
(or see the copy below) they argue that the software is their property
(is that a problem for inclusion in Sage?). On the other hand very few
is said about the user license "The code base is provided under
standard