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== Articles mentioning Sage == * N. M. Dunfield and D. Ramakrishnan, "Increasing the number of fibered faces of arithmetic hyperbolic 3-manifolds." http://arxiv.org/abs/0712.3243 * David Joyner and William Stein, "Open source mathematical software," Opinion Column, AMS Notices, November 2007, http://www.ams.org/notices/200710/ * Jaap Spies, "Dancing School problems, Permanent solutions of Problem 29," NAW 5/7, nr. 4, December 2006, pp. 283-285. http://www.jaapspies.nl/mathfiles/dancingschool.pdf |
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* B. Bektemirov, B. Mazur, W. Stein and M. Watkins, "Verification of the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture for Specific Elliptic Curves," Bulletin of the AMS, 44 (2007), 233-254. http://www.ams.org/journals/bull/2007-44-02/home.html * D. Joyner and A. Ksir, "Automorphism groups of some AG codes," IEEE Trans. Info. Theory, vol 52, July 2006, pp 3325-3329. |
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== Theses mentioning Sage == * Gregory Bard, "Algorithms for Solving Linear and Polynomial Systems of Equations over Finite Fields with Applications to Cryptanalysis," Ph.D. thesis (CS, Univ. Maryland, 2007), http://www.sagemath.org/pub/bard-thesis.pdf, http://www.cs.umd.edu/~jkatz/THESES/bard_thesis.pdf * M. Albrecht, "Algebraic Attacks on the Courtois Toy Cipher", Diplomarbeit - Universitat, Bremen, Jan 2007. http://www.sagemath.org/pub/albrecht-thesis.pdf, http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~malb/binary/thesis-1.0.pdf http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~malb/binary/thesis-1.0.pdf http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/%7Emalb/binary/thesis-1.0.pdf == Books mentioning Sage == * W. Stein, "Modular Forms, a Computational Approach," Graduate Studies in Mathematics, AMS, Feb. 2007. http://www.ams.org/bookstore-getitem/item=gsm-79 |
== Books and Articles mentioning Sage == |
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* D.Joyner, "Adventures with group theory: Rubik's cube, Merlin's machine, and other mathematical toys, 2nd edition", The Johns Hopkins Univer. Press, 2008. | Please see http://sagemath.org/library/publications.html |
Technical/Scholarly Publications mentioning Sage
If you use Sage in a book, paper, website, etc., please email me at wstein@gmail.com and reference Sage as follows:
William Stein et al., Sage Mathematics Software (Version 3.4), The Sage Development Team, 2009, http://www.sagemath.org/.
- where you should change the version number and the year to reflect the version of Sage that you used for the publication. To reference Sage using Bibtex, use:
@manual{sage, Key = {SAGE}, Author = {W.\thinspace{}A. Stein and others}, Organization = {The Sage~Development Team}, Title = {{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion 3.3)}, note= {{\tt http://www.sagemath.org}}, Year = 2009}
To reference Sage using TeX, use:
\newcommand{\etalchar}[1]{$^{#1}$} \bibitem[S{\etalchar{+}}09]{sage} W.\thinspace{}A. Stein et~al., \emph{{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion 3.3)}, The Sage~Development Team, 2009, {\tt http://www.sagemath.org}.
Also, be sure to find out what components of Sage, e.g., Numpy, PARI, GAP, that your calculation uses, and properly attribute those systems (for example, ask on sage-devel). Similarly, consider finding out who wrote the Sage code you're using and acknowledge them explicitly as well.