Differences between revisions 23 and 85 (spanning 62 versions)
Revision 23 as of 2019-04-27 17:11:56
Size: 2385
Editor: vdelecroix
Comment:
Revision 85 as of 2019-07-19 15:18:28
Size: 7158
Editor: vdelecroix
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 3: Line 3:
The Sage days 100 workshop will take place in Bonn Germany, July 22nd - July 26th. It welcomes anyone who wishes to work with Sage, from complete beginners to advanced developers. Following a [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/Workshops|long tradition of similar workshops]], the Sage days 100 workshop will take place in Bonn Germany, July 22nd - July 27th. It welcomes anyone who wishes to work with !SageMath, from complete beginners to advanced developers. It will consist of tutorials, participant presentations and mostly free time to let participants work on their mathematical programming projects and get helped from more advanced users. The precise schedule of the workshop will be decided at the begining of the workshop and adapted according to the participant needs.
Line 5: Line 5:
There will be one day in the week dedicated to present Sage at Bonn University or Max-Planck Institut (for students, PhD students, Postdocs and professors). If you intend to come to this workshop, you are welcome to be involved in this. The afternoon of Wednesday 24th will be dedicated to a [[https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/de/node/9501|SageMath presentation at Max-Planck Institut]] (for students, PhD students, postdocs and professors). If you wish to be involved in this presentation, contact the organizer.
Line 7: Line 7:
== Dates and location == = Practical information =
Line 9: Line 9:
Precision about the location will come soon. == Location ==
Line 11: Line 11:
 * Expected arrival of participants: sunday 21st
 * Expected deprature: Friday 26th, saturday 27th or sunday 28th
All week
{{{
Room 0.016 (ground floor, left of the main entrance)
Institut für Informatik
Endenicher Allee 19A
Bonn
}}}
Line 14: Line 19:
It is of course possible to attend the workshop for less than the full week. Special Wednesday afternoon event
{{{
Lecture Hall (third floor)
Max-Planck Institut
Vivatsgasse 7
Bonn
}}}
Line 16: Line 27:
= Thematics =
== Links ==

 * [[https://hackmd.io/EvP0nhWsTc-1Ja0BY1wbvw|pad to report bugs / error in a worksheet / general question about SageMath]]
 * [[https://trac.sagemath.org/query?keywords=~days100&col=id&col=summary&col=status&col=type&col=priority&col=milestone&col=component&desc=1&order=status|trac tickets with days100 keyword]]


== Schedule ==

Begining of the workshop Monday 22nd
  * 9:30 - 10:00 welcome coffee
  * 10:00 - 10:30 A !SageMath and sage days panorama (by V. Delecroix)
  * 10:30 - 12:30 Participant presentations + schedule organization + get started with Sage
  * lunch and afternoon: as all other days

For all other days (Tuesday 22nd afternoon - Friday 26th afternoon)
||<#AADAFF> 9:00 - 10:30 ||<#F0F0AA> 10:30 - 11:00 ||<#FACACA> 11:00 - 12:30 ||<#F0F0AA> 12:30 - 14:00 ||<#DAAAFF> 14:00 - 15:30 ||<#F0F0AA> 15:30 - 16:00 ||<#FACACA> 16:00 - 17:30 ||<#AAFFAA> 17:30 - 18:00 ||
||<#AADAFF> morning session ||<#F0F0AA> coffe break ||<#FACACA> hacking ||<#F0F0AA> lunch break ||<#DAAAFF> afternoon session ||<#F0F0AA> coffe break ||<#FACACA> hacking||<#AAFFAA> status report ||

The hacking session are here to let people work on their own projects while having SageMath experts helping/answering. The tutorial sessions will consist of

||<#EEEEEE> Monday ||<#AADAFF> welcome ||<#DAAAFF> get started with SageMath ||
||<#EEEEEE> Tuesday ||<#AADAFF> package presentations ||<#DAAAFF> ? ||
||<#EEEEEE> Wednesday ||<#AADAFF> ? ||<#DAAAFF> (optional) [[https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/de/node/9501|Max-Planck afternoon]] ||
||<#EEEEEE> Thursday ||<#AADAFF> ? ||<#DAAAFF> ? ||
||<#EEEEEE> Friday ||<#AADAFF> ? ||<#DAAAFF> ?||

Remaining tutorial sessions to be organized:
 * git + create a SageMath/Python module + automated testing
 * debugging and profiling
 * SageMath development
 * databases
 * Cython
Line 29: Line 72:
 * [[https://gitlab.com/jo314schmitt/admcycles|admcycles]]: tautological ring on M_{g,n}
 * [[https://bitbucket.org/t3m/snappy|snappy]]: 3-dim hyperbolic manifolds
 * [[https://gitlab.com/videlec/veerer/|veerer]]: train-tracks and veering triangulations
 * [[https://gitlab.com/videlec/surface_dynamics|surface_dynamics]]: translation surfaces
 * [[https://github.com/MarkCBell/flipper|flipper]]: mapping class group (via flips in triangulation)
 * [[https://github.com/MarkCBell/curver|curver]]: mapping class group (via curve complex)
 * [[https://gitlab.com/jo314schmitt/admcycles|admcycles]]: tautological ring on M_{g,n} (Aaron Pixton, Johannes Schmitt, Jason van Zelm)
 * [[https://bitbucket.org/t3m/snappy|snappy]]: 3-dim hyperbolic manifolds (Marc Culler, Nathan Dunfield, and Matthias Goerner)
 * [[https://gitlab.com/videlec/veerer/|veerer]]: train-tracks and veering triangulations (Vincent Delecroix)
 * [[https://gitlab.com/videlec/surface_dynamics|surface_dynamics]]: translation surfaces (Vincent Delecroix)
 * [[https://github.com/MarkCBell/flipper|flipper]]: mapping class group (via flips in triangulation) (Mark Bell)
 * [[https://github.com/MarkCBell/curver|curver]]: mapping class group (via curve complex) (Mark Bell)
 * [[https://github.com/coulbois/sage-train-track|sage-train-track]]: free group automorphisms (Thierry Coulbois)

We will have 20 min presentations of each package emphasizing:
 * What the package is useful for?
 * What should I do if I want to use the package? ie, installation and first steps tutorials
 * What is currently under active development?
 * Wishlist features / possible research experimentations (with the hope that more people get involved)

== Worksheets ==

  * [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/days100?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=Computing+modular+group+cohomology.ipynb|Computing modular group cohomology.ipynb]]: Computation of modular cohomology rings of finite groups with Sage
  * [[attachment:How_to_implement_new_algebraic_structures.ipynb]]: A tutorial on parents, elements, categories and coercion
Line 40: Line 95:
 * Vincent Delecroix  * Vincent Delecroix (CNRS, LaBRI Bordeaux, France - MPIM Bonn, Germany)
Line 43: Line 98:
 * Mark Bell  * Mark Bell (UK)
 * Luke Jeffreys (Glasgow, UK)
 * [[https://people.math.ethz.ch/~schmittj/|Johannes Schmitt]] (Zurich, Switzerland)
 * [[https://www.math.u-psud.fr/~lelievre/|Samuel Lelièvre]] (Paris, France)
 * [[https://irma.math.unistra.fr/~chapoton/|Frédéric Chapoton]] (Strasbourg, France)
 * [[https://www.i2m.univ-amu.fr/perso/thierry.coulbois/|Thierry Coulbois]] (Marseille, France)
 * [[http://page.mi.fu-berlin.de/labbe|Jean-Philippe Labbé]] (Berlin, Deutschland)
 * [[https://www.mi.fu-berlin.de/math/groups/ag-diskret-algebra-geom/members/Wimi/sophia_elia.html|Sophia Elia]] (Berlin, Deutschland)
 * Sebastian Oehms (Stuttgart, Germany)
 * [[https://www.mi.fu-berlin.de/math/groups/discgeom/members/rastanawi.html|Laith Rastanawi]] (Berlin, Deutschland)
 * Vanessa Paluch (Bonn University)
 * Shreya Kapoor (Bonn University)
 * Julian Ritter (LIX Paris)
 * Ingrid Irmer (MPIM, Bonn)
 * Hankyung Ko (MPIM, Bonn)
 * Saul Schleimer (Warwick, UK)
 * Brian Winn (Loughborough University, UK)
 * Hisatoshi Kodani (MPIM, Bonn)
 * [[https://sites.google.com/site/tutamnguyenphan/|Tam Nguyen-Phan]] (MPIM, Bonn)
 * [[http://people.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/stavros/| Stavros Garoufalidis]] (MPIM, Bonn)
 * [[http://cg.cs.uni-bonn.de/de/mitarbeiter/dipl-inform-christoph-lueders/|Christoph Lüders]] (Bonn University)
 * Sophia Krix (Bonn University)
Line 49: Line 125:
With material help from the Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique. With material help from the Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique (France) and the Computer Science Department at Bonn University (Germany).
Line 53: Line 129:
 * [[http://www.labri.fr/perso/vdelecro/|Vincent Delecroix]] ([[https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/|Max-Planck (Bonn)]] and [[https://www.u-bordeaux.fr/|Université de Bordeaux]])  * [[http://www.labri.fr/perso/vdelecro/|Vincent Delecroix]] (CNRS, LaBRI Bordeaux, France - MPIM Bonn, Germany)

Following a long tradition of similar workshops, the Sage days 100 workshop will take place in Bonn Germany, July 22nd - July 27th. It welcomes anyone who wishes to work with SageMath, from complete beginners to advanced developers. It will consist of tutorials, participant presentations and mostly free time to let participants work on their mathematical programming projects and get helped from more advanced users. The precise schedule of the workshop will be decided at the begining of the workshop and adapted according to the participant needs.

The afternoon of Wednesday 24th will be dedicated to a SageMath presentation at Max-Planck Institut (for students, PhD students, postdocs and professors). If you wish to be involved in this presentation, contact the organizer.

Practical information

Location

All week

Room 0.016 (ground floor, left of the main entrance)
Institut für Informatik
Endenicher Allee 19A
Bonn

Special Wednesday afternoon event

Lecture Hall (third floor)
Max-Planck Institut
Vivatsgasse 7
Bonn

Schedule

Begining of the workshop Monday 22nd

  • 9:30 - 10:00 welcome coffee
  • 10:00 - 10:30 A SageMath and sage days panorama (by V. Delecroix)

  • 10:30 - 12:30 Participant presentations + schedule organization + get started with Sage
  • lunch and afternoon: as all other days

For all other days (Tuesday 22nd afternoon - Friday 26th afternoon)

9:00 - 10:30

10:30 - 11:00

11:00 - 12:30

12:30 - 14:00

14:00 - 15:30

15:30 - 16:00

16:00 - 17:30

17:30 - 18:00

morning session

coffe break

hacking

lunch break

afternoon session

coffe break

hacking

status report

The hacking session are here to let people work on their own projects while having SageMath experts helping/answering. The tutorial sessions will consist of

Monday

welcome

get started with SageMath

Tuesday

package presentations

?

Wednesday

?

(optional) Max-Planck afternoon

Thursday

?

?

Friday

?

?

Remaining tutorial sessions to be organized:

  • git + create a SageMath/Python module + automated testing
  • debugging and profiling
  • SageMath development

  • databases
  • Cython

Broad mathematical thematics

Combinatorics, geometry and dynamics on real surfaces (complex curves). Here is a non-exhaustive list

  • moduli space of curves, differentials, spin structures
  • enumerative geometry, integral points in polytopes and (quasi-)modular forms
  • geometry and dynamics of flat and hyperbolic surfaces
  • braid groups, mapping class groups

Relevant Sage packages

  • admcycles: tautological ring on M_{g,n} (Aaron Pixton, Johannes Schmitt, Jason van Zelm)

  • snappy: 3-dim hyperbolic manifolds (Marc Culler, Nathan Dunfield, and Matthias Goerner)

  • veerer: train-tracks and veering triangulations (Vincent Delecroix)

  • surface_dynamics: translation surfaces (Vincent Delecroix)

  • flipper: mapping class group (via flips in triangulation) (Mark Bell)

  • curver: mapping class group (via curve complex) (Mark Bell)

  • sage-train-track: free group automorphisms (Thierry Coulbois)

We will have 20 min presentations of each package emphasizing:

  • What the package is useful for?
  • What should I do if I want to use the package? ie, installation and first steps tutorials
  • What is currently under active development?
  • Wishlist features / possible research experimentations (with the hope that more people get involved)

Worksheets

Organization

Participants

Funding

The workshop is funded by OpenDreamKit align="middle"

With material help from the Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique (France) and the Computer Science Department at Bonn University (Germany).

Organizer

days100 (last edited 2019-09-04 13:12:14 by slelievre)