Differences between revisions 89 and 90
Revision 89 as of 2010-09-02 15:42:27
Size: 5848
Editor: slabbe
Comment:
Revision 90 as of 2010-09-02 15:51:38
Size: 5891
Editor: slabbe
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 85: Line 85:
  * [[attachment:The Fibonacci Word.sws]]

Sage Day 25.5: Introduction to Sage and Combinatorics

Version française ici

One Day : Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Location : SH-3420, LaCIM, UQAM, Montréal, Canada

Context

Held in sandwich between LaCIM 2010 - 20th aniversary and GASCom conferences, this day is an opportunity for their participants to learn more about Sage. Introductory talks will be given and possibly talks or discussions on Sage adapted to the audience of LaCIM 2010 (algebraic combinatorics, theoretical computer science, bioinformatic, physics and number theory) and GASCom (generation of combinatorial objects and bijective combinatorics). Students starting their Autumn semester will be invited as well. The goals are :

  • Introduce the audience to Sage and in particular its combinatorial features
  • Help people installing Sage on their computer
  • Present topics related to LaCIM 2010 and GASCom conferences (e.g. species theory) and how Sage can be helpful
  • Give the opportunity for Sage developpers to meet and discuss

Invited Speaker

  • Florent Hivert

Organizers

  • Alexandre Blondin Massé
  • Franco Saliola
  • Sébastien Labbé

About Sage

Sage is a free open-source mathematics software system licensed under the GPL. It combines the power of many existing open-source packages into a common Python-based interface. Its mission is to create a viable free open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica and Matlab.

A recent video screencast given by William Stein, the initiator of Sage, at Sage Days 25 in India :

An electronic book in french about mathematics and Sage, under the Creative Commons CC-by-sa license, was published recently :

Registration

If you want to participate, fullfil the following form. There is no fee to attend the event, but your answers to those five simple questions will help us to improve its organization.

Schedule

If you have any suggestions (a talk to give, a discussion topic, a special demand) feel free to contact us.

WARNING : The schedule below is subject to change.

08:30-09:00

Coffee

09:00-09:30

Installation of Sage (Windows instructions)

09:30-10:30

Introduction to Sage and Sage-Combinat, by Florent Hivert SageIntroductionHivert.pdf

10:30-11:00

Presentation of participants (name, occupation, objectives)

11:00-12:00

Finish the Installation of Sage & Basic tutorial

12:00-14:00

Lunch

14:00-14:30

Finish the Tutorial I

14:30-15:30

Teaching with Sage - Ressources available on the web, by Sébastien Labbé

Graph Theory, by Franco Saliola

Combinatorics on words, by Alexandre Blondin Massé

15:30-16:00

Coffee

16:00-17:00

Species theory and Sage Combinatorics Library, by Florent Hivert

animate and interact commands, using Sage from LaTeX, by Sébastien Labbé

17:00-19:00

Happy hour at Benelux (Belgium pub) at 245, Sherbrooke West Street

Tutorials for Sage Days 25.5 and Mini Demos

Teaching with Sage

Participants

  • Alexandre Blondin Massé
  • Ariane Garon
  • Carine Pivoteau
  • Charles Fortin
  • Christian Stump
  • Florent Hivert
  • Franco Saliola
  • Hugo Tremblay
  • Jean Berstel
  • Jean-Philippe Labbé
  • Johan Oudinet
  • John Mc Kay
  • Malcolm Harper
  • Marco Robado
  • Mathilde Bouvel
  • Mélanie Beck
  • Michèle Soria
  • Olivier Dubois
  • Olivier Picard
  • Pierre Bouchard
  • Rodrigo Matias
  • Samuel Boucher
  • Sébastien Labbé
  • Srecko Brlek
  • Sylvie Hamel
  • Thierry Monteil
  • Timothy Walsh
  • Vivien Ripoll
  • Yannic Vargas

days25.5 (last edited 2010-09-02 15:51:38 by slabbe)