-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Re: [scikit-learn] Topic for thesis work on scikit learn
Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2018 10:16:36 -0500
From: Andreas Mueller <t3k...@gmail.com>
To: Gaurav Dhingra <gauravdhingra.g...@gmail.com>
Hi Gaurav.
Is your mentor experienced in contributing to sklearn? Will they be able
to review your code to the scikit-learn standards?
Have you worked on any other pull requests so far?
Getting anything into scikit-learn without close collaboration with the
community is quite tricky.
Having a faster K-means implementation based on recent research in the
area would be interesting,
There's also interest in adding Robust PCA, probabilistic inference
trees, and improving the latent dirichlet alloctation code.
You can find issues on any of these in the issue tracker, which also has
many more feature requests.
Andy
On 12/31/2017 05:46 AM, Gaurav Dhingra wrote:
Hi Andreas,
I think I'll get access to a local mentor from my college, so I think
I rule that issue out, though for technicalities still I would /like/
to be more dependent on feedback from the scikit-learn community,
since my aim wouldn't be to make something for my own use but rather
something that would be more useful for the scikit-learn community, so
that it eventually gets merged into master.
I'm currently looking for topic that I can take up, I tried looking
into scikit-learn wiki but it doesn't mention for what I'm looking for
(no topic is mentioned). Do you have some topic in mind that could be
useful for addition to scikit-learn? Even if you could direct me to
appropriate links I would be happy to look into those.
On Wednesday 01 November 2017 01:43 AM, Andreas Mueller wrote:
Hi Gaurav.
Do you have a local mentor? I think having a mentor that can guide
you during a thesis is very important.
You could get some feedback from the community for a contribution,
but that can be slow,
and is entirely on volunteer basis, so there is no guarantee that
you'll get the necessary feedback in time
to finish your thesis.
Mentoring a thesis - in particular without knowing you - is a serious
commitment, so I'm not sure someone
from inside the project will want to do this. I saw you already made
a contribution in
https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pull/10005
but that's a very different scope than doing what I expect would be
several month of work.
Though in this regard I've made a few more contributions, here is the
link https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pulls/gxyd, though I
know none of them is a big contribution. If you think I should work on
a big enough PR, can you please suggest me some issue in that regard?
Thanks.
Best,
Andy
On 10/31/2017 03:31 PM, Gaurav Dhingra wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am a final year (5th year) undergraduate Applied Mathematics
student in India. I am thinking of doing my final year thesis by
doing some work (coding part) on scikit learn, so I was thinking if
anyone could tell me if there are available topics (not necessarily
names of those topics) that I could work on being an undergraduate
student? I would want to expand upon this in December when my exams
will be over. But in the mean time would want to take a step in that
direction by just knowing if there will be available topics that I
could work on.
It could be the case that available topics are not so easy for an
undergraduate, still in that case I would like to do some research
on the topics first.
_______________________________________________
scikit-learn mailing list
scikit-learn@python.org
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/scikit-learn
--
Gaurav Dhingra
(sent from Thunderbird email client)
_______________________________________________
scikit-learn mailing list
scikit-learn@python.org
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/scikit-learn