EmbedIO
astropy
EmbedIO | astropy | |
---|---|---|
3 | 26 | |
1,430 | 4,242 | |
0.6% | 1.8% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
12 months ago | 7 days ago | |
C# | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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EmbedIO
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Make MAUI app run a Web API Controller
I haven't used it, but EmbedIO looks like it's another option: https://github.com/unosquare/embedio
- There is framework for everything.
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C# web framework without .net??
You could do something like EmbedIO or self-host an OWIN endpoint. But it's not going to "strip away all the magic" so you can learn C# or .Net or all the other stuff easier. You're just moving the goalpost a bit.
astropy
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Julia 1.10 Released
Astropy [0] lives at the heart of most work. It has a Python interface, often backed by Fortran and C++ extension modules. If you use Astropy, you're indirectly using libraries like ERFA [6] and cfitsio [7] which are in C/Fortran.
I personally end up doing a lot of work that uses the HEALPix sky tesselation, so I use healpy [2] as well.
Openorb is perhaps a good example of a pure-Fortran package that I use quite. frequently for orbit propagation [3].
In C, there's Rebound [4] (for N-body simulations) and ASSIST [5] (which extends Rebound to use JPL's pre-calculated positions of major perturbers, and expands the force model to account for general relativity).
There are many more, these are just ones that come to mind from frequent usage in the last few months.
[0] https://www.astropy.org/
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Skyfield: Elegant Astronomy for Python
Users interested in a broader range of astronomical tools beyond coordinate transformations may be interested in https://www.astropy.org/ and its affiliated packages.
- Astropy: Common core package for Astronomy in Python
- [R] Astronomia ex machina: a history, primer and outlook on neural networks in astronomy
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License Adherence Help
I'm working on a pure Rust approximation of astropy. Up til now, I was able to recreate the intent by looking at an external API, but I'm moving on to functionality that I don't understand enough to implement without basically copying the code. Astropy uses the BSD-3 license, and it wraps the ERFA library which uses a custom license. My project currently uses the MIT license. My PR is here - my question is have I attributed everything correctly, or is there anything I need to change for everything to be above-board?
- Astro physics data analysis
- I'm a mechanical engineer with a solid background in Python and experience earlier in my career in natural science/physics. Are there any meaningful, active, open source opportunities in space science?
- OpenSource voltado à ciência
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Astronomical Calculations for Hard SF in Common Lisp
For folks who might be interested in astronomical calculations but who don't want to roll their own library, astropy (https://www.astropy.org/) is widely used by professional astronomers.
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Looking to study data from JWST's spectroscopy instruments
I agree with the other commenter. Check out their github. If you’re looking to build your skills long term (and have some experience with python) it’s worth checking out astropy and their fits file handling routines.
What are some alternatives?
Kestrel
Pandas - Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more
BeetleX - high performance dotnet core socket tcp communication components, support TLS, HTTP, HTTPS, WebSocket, RPC, Redis protocols, custom protocols and 1M connections problem solution
SciPy - SciPy library main repository
UploadStream - high performance file upload streaming for dotnet
Dask - Parallel computing with task scheduling
XSP - Mono's ASP.NET hosting server. This module includes an Apache Module, a FastCGI module that can be hooked to other web servers as well as a standalone server used for testing (similar to Microsoft's Cassini)
Numba - NumPy aware dynamic Python compiler using LLVM
NetCoreServer - Ultra fast and low latency asynchronous socket server & client C# .NET Core library with support TCP, SSL, UDP, HTTP, HTTPS, WebSocket protocols and 10K connections problem solution
SymPy - A computer algebra system written in pure Python
NancyFx - Lightweight, low-ceremony, framework for building HTTP based services on .Net and Mono. Note: This project is no longer maintained and has been archived.
PyDy - Multibody dynamics tool kit.