Hi everyone. As many of you may have noticed, Google has announced the results for Google Summer of Code. I am proud to announce that seven students have been accepted to work on SymPy/CSymPy, and one student has been accepted to work on PyDy. The following projects have been accepted:
Student (Project): Mentors - Abinash Meher (Ruby bindings to the CSymPy C++ symbolic library): Ondřej Čertík - Amit Kumar (Improving Solvers : Extending Solveset): Harsh Gupta and Sean Vig - Isuru Fernando (Make Sage use CSymPy as a symbolic engine): Ondřej Čertík - Sartaj Singh (Improving the series package and limits): Jim Crist - Shivam Vats (Fast Sparse Series Expansion): Thilina Rathnayake and Ondřej Čertík - Sudhanshu Mishra (Improving assumptions in SymPy): Aaron Meurer and Tim Lahey - Sumith (Implementing polynomial module in CSymPy): Sushant Hiray and Ondřej Čertík Additionally, the following proposal will be accepted through the PSF with PyDy. - Sahil Shekhawat (PyDy - Interactive Generation of System): Tarun Gaba and Jason Moore Join me in congratulating these students on their acceptance. I'd like to thank the Python Software Foundation and the Ruby Science Foundation for giving us the slots to accept these students under their umbrella. In case you don't know, Google Summer of Code is a program where Google pays students to write code for open source projects. SymPy was accepted as a mentoring organization this year. The goal of the program is to help the students learn new skills, in particular in our case: * contributing to opensource * working with the community * learn git, pull requests, reviews * teach them how to review other's people patches * do useful work for SymPy * have fun, and encourage the students to stay around To all the students who are accepted, you should be receiving an email from your mentor soon to discuss how you will be communicating over the summer about your project. You should meet with your mentor about once a week during the summer to go over your progress. You should either meet on a public channel (like Gitter), or else post minutes of your meeting in some public channel, so that the whole community can see your progress too. Some of you have been assigned two mentors. They will both work to keep you on track for different aspects of your proposal. If you have two mentors and one is not available for something, or does not know the answer, you can ask the other. I would like all of us to strongly encourage students this summer to submit pull requests early and often. This will go a long ways towards making sure that you don't end the summer with a ton of code written that never gets merged. Students should help review pull requests by other students, so that we don't get bogged down reviewing so much code. We also require that all students keep a weekly blog of their work over the summer. If you don't already have a blog, you should start one. I recommend using either Wordpress, Blogger, or creating your own blog on GitHub pages. If you are savvy enough to set it up, I recommend GitHub pages, but if you aren't, both Wordpress and Blogger are good enough. The only requirement is that it has an RSS feed, so we can put it on planet.sympy.org. Planet SymPy is also aggregated on Twitter at https://twitter.com/planetsympy. I also recommend that it have some kind of comments box, so that people can comment on your work. Once you have set up your blog, send a pull request adding it to https://github.com/sympy/planet.sympy.org/blob/master/planet.ini. Starting on the week of May 25 (when the GSoC period officially begins), we will expect you to have at least one blog post a week, describing your progress for that week, or something interesting about your project. If you don't have a post by the beginning of the day on Saturday, your mentor or I will email you to remind you about it. I will also blog throughout the summer on own blog at https://asmeurer.github.io/blog/. I invite other mentors who have blogs to do the same. And I encourage all community members to follow and comment on the student blogs, so you can see their progress. I would like to thank all the students who applied this year and everyone who submitted a patch. I would also like to thank all the mentors for helping review patches and proposals. This summer is looking to be another very productive one for SymPy, and I look forward to it! Aaron Meurer -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sympy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sympy. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sympy/CAKgW%3D6KLUw5CH3NbnDX2ot6wJ6M%3DHMWvyAJcd%2BDcWKVv8MXDFw%40mail.gmail.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
