The NumPy web team is excited to announce the launch of the newly redesigned numpy.org. To transform the website into a comprehensive, yet user-centric, resource of all things NumPy was a primary focus of this months-long effort. We thank Joe LaChance, Ralf Gommers, Shaloo Shalini, Shekhar Prasad Rajak, Ross Barnowski, and Mars Lee for their extensive contributions to the project.
The new site features a curated collection of NumPy related educational resources for every user level, an overview of the entire Python scientific computing ecosystem, and several case studies highlighting the importance of the library to the many advances in scientific research as well as the industry in recent years. The “Install” and “Get Help” pages offer advice on how to find answers to installation and usage questions, while those who are looking to connect with others within our large and diverse community will find the “Community” page very helpful.
The new website will be updated on a regular basis with news about the NumPy project development milestones, community initiatives and events. Visitors are encouraged to explore the website and sign up for the newsletter.
Next, the NumPy web team will focus on updating graphics and project identity (a new logo is coming!), adding an installation widget and translations, better integrating the project documentation via the new Sphinx theme, and improving the interactive terminal experience. Also, we are looking to expand our portfolio of case studies and would appreciate any assistance in this matter.
Best regards, Inessa Pawson NumPy web team
Dear Inessa,
The new design looks great, thanks for all the hard work from everyone! Is there a well-defined channel where we can file potential bug reports and feature requests for the website? Or do those just go on the main numpy repo as issues? Regards,
András
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 2:11 PM Inessa Pawson albuscode@gmail.com wrote:
The NumPy web team is excited to announce the launch of the newly redesigned numpy.org. To transform the website into a comprehensive, yet user-centric, resource of all things NumPy was a primary focus of this months-long effort. We thank Joe LaChance, Ralf Gommers, Shaloo Shalini, Shekhar Prasad Rajak, Ross Barnowski, and Mars Lee for their extensive contributions to the project.
The new site features a curated collection of NumPy related educational resources for every user level, an overview of the entire Python scientific computing ecosystem, and several case studies highlighting the importance of the library to the many advances in scientific research as well as the industry in recent years. The “Install” and “Get Help” pages offer advice on how to find answers to installation and usage questions, while those who are looking to connect with others within our large and diverse community will find the “Community” page very helpful.
The new website will be updated on a regular basis with news about the NumPy project development milestones, community initiatives and events. Visitors are encouraged to explore the website and sign up for the newsletter.
Next, the NumPy web team will focus on updating graphics and project identity (a new logo is coming!), adding an installation widget and translations, better integrating the project documentation via the new Sphinx theme, and improving the interactive terminal experience. Also, we are looking to expand our portfolio of case studies and would appreciate any assistance in this matter.
Best regards, Inessa Pawson NumPy web team _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 2:19 PM Andras Deak deak.andris@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Inessa,
The new design looks great, thanks for all the hard work from everyone! Is there a well-defined channel where we can file potential bug reports and feature requests for the website? Or do those just go on the main numpy repo as issues?
Hi András, please use https://github.com/numpy/numpy.org/issues
Cheers, Ralf
Regards,
András
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 2:11 PM Inessa Pawson albuscode@gmail.com wrote:
The NumPy web team is excited to announce the launch of the newly
redesigned numpy.org. To transform the website into a comprehensive, yet user-centric, resource of all things NumPy was a primary focus of this months-long effort. We thank Joe LaChance, Ralf Gommers, Shaloo Shalini, Shekhar Prasad Rajak, Ross Barnowski, and Mars Lee for their extensive contributions to the project.
The new site features a curated collection of NumPy related educational
resources for every user level, an overview of the entire Python scientific computing ecosystem, and several case studies highlighting the importance of the library to the many advances in scientific research as well as the industry in recent years. The “Install” and “Get Help” pages offer advice on how to find answers to installation and usage questions, while those who are looking to connect with others within our large and diverse community will find the “Community” page very helpful.
The new website will be updated on a regular basis with news about the
NumPy project development milestones, community initiatives and events. Visitors are encouraged to explore the website and sign up for the newsletter.
Next, the NumPy web team will focus on updating graphics and project
identity (a new logo is coming!), adding an installation widget and translations, better integrating the project documentation via the new Sphinx theme, and improving the interactive terminal experience. Also, we are looking to expand our portfolio of case studies and would appreciate any assistance in this matter.
Best regards, Inessa Pawson NumPy web team _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
On 5/24/20, Inessa Pawson albuscode@gmail.com wrote:
The NumPy web team is excited to announce the launch of the newly redesigned numpy.org. To transform the website into a comprehensive, yet user-centric, resource of all things NumPy was a primary focus of this months-long effort. We thank Joe LaChance, Ralf Gommers, Shaloo Shalini, Shekhar Prasad Rajak, Ross Barnowski, and Mars Lee for their extensive contributions to the project.
Beautiful! Thanks for all the hard work that went into this fantastic update.
Warren
The new site features a curated collection of NumPy related educational resources for every user level, an overview of the entire Python scientific computing ecosystem, and several case studies highlighting the importance of the library to the many advances in scientific research as well as the industry in recent years. The “Install” and “Get Help” pages offer advice on how to find answers to installation and usage questions, while those who are looking to connect with others within our large and diverse community will find the “Community” page very helpful.
The new website will be updated on a regular basis with news about the NumPy project development milestones, community initiatives and events. Visitors are encouraged to explore the website and sign up for the newsletter.
Next, the NumPy web team will focus on updating graphics and project identity (a new logo is coming!), adding an installation widget and translations, better integrating the project documentation via the new Sphinx theme, and improving the interactive terminal experience. Also, we are looking to expand our portfolio of case studies and would appreciate any assistance in this matter.
Best regards, Inessa Pawson NumPy web team
This is an absolutely beautiful and very informative site! It is clear all the work and thought that went into it.
So please take the following input as a constructive suggestion from an outsider -- I am a long-time (30-year) Python user, and I follow this list but do not regularly use NumPy ... so again, an "outsider" perspective:
I would prefer to see the beautiful "ECOSYSTEM" section as the top section of the page, since it is kind of a "gateway" to all kinds of cool links, etc. -- and it is visually very interesting, as well.
The "features" boxes at the top of the page, while very good information, are not nearly as "useful" and they are static, so I would even suggest providing access to them via a "Features" menu item among the very top items (i.e., with "Installation", etc.).
Very humbly offered, with thanks for all the beautiful work.
Steve
This looks really great!
I love the Ecosystem section at the bottom!
Great job emphasising the importance, and the elegance of the library!
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 2:20 PM Stephen Waterbury waterbug@pangalactic.us wrote:
This is an absolutely beautiful and very informative site! It is clear all the work and thought that went into it.
So please take the following input as a constructive suggestion from an outsider -- I am a long-time (30-year) Python user, and I follow this list but do not regularly use NumPy ... so again, an "outsider" perspective:
I would prefer to see the beautiful "ECOSYSTEM" section as the top section of the page, since it is kind of a "gateway" to all kinds of cool links, etc. -- and it is visually very interesting, as well.
The "features" boxes at the top of the page, while very good information, are not nearly as "useful" and they are static, so I would even suggest providing access to them via a "Features" menu item among the very top items (i.e., with "Installation", etc.).
Very humbly offered, with thanks for all the beautiful work.
Steve
NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 8:19 PM Stephen Waterbury waterbug@pangalactic.us wrote:
This is an absolutely beautiful and very informative site! It is clear all the work and thought that went into it.
So please take the following input as a constructive suggestion from an outsider -- I am a long-time (30-year) Python user, and I follow this list but do not regularly use NumPy ... so again, an "outsider" perspective:
I would prefer to see the beautiful "ECOSYSTEM" section as the top section of the page, since it is kind of a "gateway" to all kinds of cool links, etc. -- and it is visually very interesting, as well.
The "features" boxes at the top of the page, while very good information, are not nearly as "useful" and they are static, so I would even suggest providing access to them via a "Features" menu item among the very top items (i.e., with "Installation", etc.).
Very humbly offered, with thanks for all the beautiful work.
Thanks for the feedback Steve. I have added your suggestion to https://github.com/numpy/numpy.org/issues/238.
Our strategy for the next while will be: 1. fix any bugs and correctness issues in content (done for everything already reported in this thread so far and on Twitter). 2. review remaining open PRs 3. prioritize from the large set of new ideas and already planned improvements. Tracking issue at https://github.com/numpy/numpy.org/issues/266
Cheers, Ralf
Steve
NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
More than awesome, now i feel that the logo is a bit outdated.
Kind Regards,
Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
https://www.github.com/Abdur-RahmaanJ
Mauritius
sent from gmail client on Android, that's why the signature is so ugly.
Hi all,
Great job!! Congratulations.
In the "Ecosystem" -> "Scientific Domains" section, I think the links for "bayesian inference" and "bio informatics" are wrong. The ones in "bayesian inference" should appear in "bio informatics" and vice versa. Also, in the "geographic processing" area appears Numpy.
Kind regards.
Sent with [ProtonMail](https://protonmail.com) Secure Email.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ On Monday, 25 de May de 2020 7:46, Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer arj.python@gmail.com wrote:
More than awesome, now i feel that the logo is a bit outdated.
Kind Regards,
Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
https://www.github.com/Abdur-RahmaanJ
Mauritius
sent from gmail client on Android, that's why the signature is so ugly.
This is so excellent! What a wonderful upgrade to the web-page.
Thank you for all the hard work and effort!
-Travis
On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 7:12 AM Inessa Pawson albuscode@gmail.com wrote:
The NumPy web team is excited to announce the launch of the newly redesigned numpy.org. To transform the website into a comprehensive, yet user-centric, resource of all things NumPy was a primary focus of this months-long effort. We thank Joe LaChance, Ralf Gommers, Shaloo Shalini, Shekhar Prasad Rajak, Ross Barnowski, and Mars Lee for their extensive contributions to the project.
The new site features a curated collection of NumPy related educational resources for every user level, an overview of the entire Python scientific computing ecosystem, and several case studies highlighting the importance of the library to the many advances in scientific research as well as the industry in recent years. The “Install” and “Get Help” pages offer advice on how to find answers to installation and usage questions, while those who are looking to connect with others within our large and diverse community will find the “Community” page very helpful.
The new website will be updated on a regular basis with news about the NumPy project development milestones, community initiatives and events. Visitors are encouraged to explore the website and sign up for the newsletter.
Next, the NumPy web team will focus on updating graphics and project identity (a new logo is coming!), adding an installation widget and translations, better integrating the project documentation via the new Sphinx theme, and improving the interactive terminal experience. Also, we are looking to expand our portfolio of case studies and would appreciate any assistance in this matter.
Best regards, Inessa Pawson NumPy web team _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
The new site looks really, really nice. Thank you all for your hard work on this. I think this will serve the community well for a long time to come!
-Peter