Thanks Ralph. Reference books needed for scipy projects.
Hi everyone, For a couple of days I have been working out few project samples which could be tried out for scipy with a larger criteria. It would be helpful to me (in my work) if you guys can suggest any books or resources which could be used as a reference while trying out / going for any scipy project . Also, thank you Ralf for the reply mail. I thought the project "Enhance the Randomized Numerical Linear Algebra functionality" was not tried in 2018, so I thought of working on it this year. Anyways, I would come up with some cool projects for the scipy community very soon. Best, K. Kaushik Reddy.
On Fri, Jan 4, 2019 at 1:33 AM K. Kaushik Reddy <reddykaushik18@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi everyone,
For a couple of days I have been working out few project samples which could be tried out for scipy with a larger criteria. It would be helpful to me (in my work) if you guys can suggest any books or resources which could be used as a reference while trying out / going for any scipy project .
That's a bit too general of a question. SciPy covers so many topics, there's no one book that covers it. The SciPy docs ( http://scipy.github.io/devdocs/) are your best guide; many functions include references for further reading. Cheers, Ralf Also, thank you Ralf for the reply mail. I thought the project "Enhance the
Randomized Numerical Linear Algebra functionality" was not tried in 2018, so I thought of working on it this year. Anyways, I would come up with some cool projects for the scipy community very soon.
Best, K. Kaushik Reddy. _______________________________________________ SciPy-Dev mailing list SciPy-Dev@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/scipy-dev
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K. Kaushik Reddy -
Ralf Gommers