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on the occasion of the [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/ReleaseTours/sage-9.1|release of Sage 9.1]] on the occasion of the [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/ReleaseTours/sage-9.1|release of SageMath 9.1]]
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a 50-hour fully virtual event. [[https://framagenda.org/apps/calendar/p/WicjPweWZtNCQ8QM/timeGridWeek/2020-05-28|Calendar]], [[https://framagenda.org/remote.php/dav/public-calendars/WicjPweWZtNCQ8QM?export|subscription link]] a '''50-hour fully virtual event.''' [[https://framagenda.org/apps/calendar/p/WicjPweWZtNCQ8QM/timeGridWeek/2020-05-28|Calendar]], [[https://framagenda.org/remote.php/dav/public-calendars/WicjPweWZtNCQ8QM?export|subscription link]]

== About SageMath ==

[[https://www.sagemath.org/|Sage]] is a mature, comprehensive, free (open-source) mathematics software system based on Python, licensed under the GNU General Public License, that integrates computer algebra facilities and general computational packages.

Sage, first released in 2005, in over a decade of incubation in the [[https://github.com/sagemath/sage/tree/develop/build/pkgs|SageMath distribution, comprising 293 software packages]], has grown its own library of 1000 Cython and over 4400 Python modules, [[https://github.com/sagemath/sage/tree/develop/src/sage|ranging from sage.algebras.* over sage.geometry.* to sage.tensor.* ], with a total of over 2.2 million lines of code. [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/ReleaseTours/sage-9.0|SageMath 9.0]], released in January 2020, completed the transition of the Sage library to Python 3.
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 * Video conferencing (details and schedule to be announced on the Zulip stream)  * '''Video conferencing'''. We will be using a free (open source) software solution for videoconferencing: Discussions and talks will happen via [[https://bigbluebutton.org/|BigBlueButton]] (BBB; see [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BigBlueButton|Wikipedia page]]; [[https://bigbluebutton.org/open-source-license/|license]]). We will use the BBB servers at Orsay and/or other French institutions.

   * Details, schedule, how to access: will be announced on the Zulip stream.
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=== Confirmed Speakers ===

 * [[https://www.mathematik.uni-kl.de/agag/personen/dozenten/|Bill Hart]], TU Kaiserslautern, Germany
 * [[https://kskedlaya.org/|Kiran Kedlaya]], UC San Diego, USA
 * [[https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~mkoeppe/|Matthias Köppe]], UC Davis, USA
 * [[http://www.decom.ufop.br/haroldo/|Haroldo G. Santos]], Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Brazil
 * [[https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~anne/|Anne Schilling]], UC Davis, USA
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Organizer: [[http://www.ms.uky.edu/~yzh392/|Yuan Zhou]], University of Kentucky, USA

=== Sage in Education ===



=== Creating external packages ===

First steps and best practices in creating packages and Continuous Integration
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=== SageMath, Mathematical Libraries, and the Landscape of Computer Algebra Software ===

TBA
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==== Organizers ==== == Organizers of SageDays 109 ==

Global Virtual SageDays 109

on the occasion of the release of SageMath 9.1

held on Thursday, May 28, 2020 (any timezone in the world)

  • Beginning: May 28, 2020, 00:00 Kiribati time (UTC+14)
  • End: May 28, 2020, 23:59:59 Baker Island time (UTC-12)

a 50-hour fully virtual event. Calendar, subscription link

About SageMath

Sage is a mature, comprehensive, free (open-source) mathematics software system based on Python, licensed under the GNU General Public License, that integrates computer algebra facilities and general computational packages.

Sage, first released in 2005, in over a decade of incubation in the SageMath distribution, comprising 293 software packages, has grown its own library of 1000 Cython and over 4400 Python modules, ranging from sage.algebras.* over sage.geometry.* to sage.tensor.* ], with a total of over 2.2 million lines of code. [[https://wiki.sagemath.org/ReleaseTours/sage-9.0, released in January 2020, completed the transition of the Sage library to Python 3.

How to participate

Activities

To offer or request presentations on specific topics, please edit https://trac.sagemath.org/wiki/SagePresentationsMarketplace and/or post a message in the zulip stream #sd109

Confirmed Speakers

Introduction to Sage

Details TBA

Installfest

We give step-by-step instructions on how to install Sage 9.1 from source.

Experienced developers will help if any problems appear.

Spontaneous celebrations on completed installations are encouraged.

Sage User Forum

We would love to hear from users of SageMath how they use Sage... in research, in education, in applications, ...

Share your Sage wishlist

Format TBA

Organizer: Yuan Zhou, University of Kentucky, USA

Sage in Education

Creating external packages

First steps and best practices in creating packages and Continuous Integration

Introduction to Sage Development

For Sage users who wish to take the first (or the next) steps in Sage development.

Presentations: What's New in Sage 9.1

Organizer: Matthias Köppe

Following https://wiki.sagemath.org/ReleaseTours/sage-9.1

SageMath, Mathematical Libraries, and the Landscape of Computer Algebra Software

TBA

Big-picture Development Discussions

  • Modularization of Sage
  • Integration with the Python community
  • The next 10 years of Sage development

Nettoyage de Printemps (Spring Cleaning)

Organizers: Sébastien Labbé, Vincent Delecroix, Xavier Caruso

The aim is to go through the already existing trac tickets and

  • confirm if the bug is still present on recent development versions
  • provide code
  • make reviews

Organizers of SageDays 109

This is a community-organized event.

days109 (last edited 2020-06-01 19:19:52 by mkoeppe)