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== Technical/Scholarly Publications mentioning Sage ==
If you use Sage in a book, paper, website, etc., please email me at [email protected] and reference Sage as follows:
== Technical/Scholarly Publications Citing Sage ==
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{{{William Stein, Sage Mathematics Software (Version 2.7), The Sage Group, 2007, http://www.sagemath.org/.}}} If you use Sage in a book, paper, website, etc., please [[http://www.sagemath.org/contact.html | contact us]] about details of the publication, e.g. where is it published, provide a link to your publication. Alternatively, send us a [[ https://github.com/sagemath/publications/ | pull request ]].
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 . 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: Please reference Sage as follows:

{{{
W. A. Stein et al. Sage Mathematics Software (Version x.y.z),
   The Sage Development Team, YYYY, http://www.sagemath.org.
}}}

where you should change `x.y.z` to the exact version number you used for your publication. Also change `YYYY` to the year that reflects the version of Sage you used for the publication.

=== BibTex ===
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       Key = {SAGE},
       Author = {William Stein},
       Organization = {The Sage~Group},
       Title = {{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion 2.7)},
       note= {{\tt http://www.sagemath.org}},
       Year = 2007}
  Key = {Sage},
  Author = {W.\thinspace{}A. Stein and others},
  Organization = {The Sage Development Team},
  Title = {{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion x.y.z)},
  note = {{\tt http://www.sagemath.org}},
  Year = {YYYY},
}
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To reference Sage using TeX, use: '''DOIs'''

Include them as doi = {dx.doi.org/...}

 * 6.6: http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17093
 * 6.7: http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.28513
 * 6.8: http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.28514

=== TeX ===
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\bibitem[SAGE]{sage}
Stein, William, \emph{Sage {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion 2.7)},
The Sage~Group, 2007, {\tt http://www.sagemath.org}.
\newcommand{\etalchar}[1]{$^{#1}$}
\bibitem[S{\etalchar{+}}09]{sage}
W.\thinspace{}A. Stein et~al., \emph{{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion
  x.y.z)}, The Sage Development Team, YYYY, {\tt http://www.sagemath.org}.
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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.
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== Articles mentioning Sage ==
 * 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
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). Also, you may use the {{{get_systems}}} method:
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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.
== 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
{{{
sage: from sage.misc.citation import get_systems
sage: get_systems("integrate(cos(x^2), x)")
['MPFI', 'ginac', 'GMP', 'Maxima']
}}}
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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. Similarly, consider finding out who wrote the Sage code you're using and acknowledge them explicitly as well.


=== EndNote (RIS file) ===

[[http://sagemath.org/files/sage.ris|sage.ris]]

== Books and Articles mentioning Sage ==

Please see http://www.sagemath.org/library-publications.html

Technical/Scholarly Publications Citing Sage

If you use Sage in a book, paper, website, etc., please contact us about details of the publication, e.g. where is it published, provide a link to your publication. Alternatively, send us a pull request.

Please reference Sage as follows:

W. A. Stein et al. Sage Mathematics Software (Version x.y.z),
   The Sage Development Team, YYYY, http://www.sagemath.org.

where you should change x.y.z to the exact version number you used for your publication. Also change YYYY to the year that reflects the version of Sage you used for the publication.

BibTex

@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 x.y.z)},
  note         = {{\tt http://www.sagemath.org}},
  Year         = {YYYY},
}

DOIs

Include them as doi = {dx.doi.org/...}

TeX

\newcommand{\etalchar}[1]{$^{#1}$}
\bibitem[S{\etalchar{+}}09]{sage}
W.\thinspace{}A. Stein et~al., \emph{{S}age {M}athematics {S}oftware ({V}ersion
  x.y.z)}, The Sage Development Team, YYYY, {\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). Also, you may use the get_systems method:

sage: from sage.misc.citation import get_systems
sage: get_systems("integrate(cos(x^2), x)")
['MPFI', 'ginac', 'GMP', 'Maxima']

Similarly, consider finding out who wrote the Sage code you're using and acknowledge them explicitly as well.

EndNote (RIS file)

sage.ris

Books and Articles mentioning Sage

Please see http://www.sagemath.org/library-publications.html

Publications_using_SageMath (last edited 2020-10-07 11:21:00 by dimpase)