Re: Reproducible computational science

2020-04-15 Thread Edward K. Ream
On Wed, Apr 15, 2020 at 1:21 PM Kent Tenney  wrote:

Good to hear from you, Kent.

I'm not interested in reproducibility, but I think the notion of
> a Leo 'schema' is a great pattern: Domain Specific Leo,
> a configuration of Leo dedicated to a problem domain
> where the menus, buttons, scripts, commands etc have
> been optimized for, in this case, reproducibility research.
>
> Other candidates for a specialized Leo would be database
> management, frameworks like Flask, Django, React etc
>
> For each, the specialized Leo would be focused on files,
> commands, queries, rendering, documentation etc
> germane to the domain.
>
> Leo is so expansive it strikes me as a programming language,
> these instances which encapsulate specifics looking like
> applications built with the Leo language.
>

This is exactly what I had in mind when I talked about Leo outlines as
graphs, scripts creating projections, etc.

Leonine scripts applied to Leo outlines is a new world, not just a new
programming language.

Edward

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Re: Reproducible computational science

2020-04-15 Thread Kent Tenney
I'm not interested in reproducibility, but I think the notion of
a Leo 'schema' is a great pattern: Domain Specific Leo,
a configuration of Leo dedicated to a problem domain
where the menus, buttons, scripts, commands etc have
been optimized for, in this case, reproducibility research.

Other candidates for a specialized Leo would be database
management, frameworks like Flask, Django, React etc

For each, the specialized Leo would be focused on files,
commands, queries, rendering, documentation etc
germane to the domain.

Leo is so expansive it strikes me as a programming language,
these instances which encapsulate specifics looking like
applications built with the Leo language.

Thanks,
Kent

On Tue, Apr 7, 2020 at 2:57 PM Brad  wrote:

> Hello All,
>
> As I see it, one of the more important trends in computational sciences is
> reproducibility. I have tried out a number of platforms that attempt to
> enable reproducibility and capture the provenance necessary to faithfully
> recapitulate computational analyses; however, I found them burdensome in
> terms of the imposed workflows.
>
> I wonder if Leo could be a compelling platform for this use case.
>
> The idea would be to have a sharable Leo file of a given format that would
> include enough information (exact code, data, specifics of the platform and
> libraries, etc.) such that the 'sharee' could exactly re-create the results
> of the 'sharer'.
>
> It seems that Leo is a rich enough platform that a 'schema' could be
> created to facilitate this kind of sharing.
>
> Is anyone else interested in this use case?
>
> Kind regards,
> Brad
>
>
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> .
>

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