Presenters-0606: Difference between revisions
From CSDMS
m Text replacement - "Carbonates and Biogenics Focus Research Group, " to "" |
m Add youtube views template if missing |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
|CSDMS meeting abstract presentation=Increasing physical complexity, spatial resolution, and technical coupling of numerical models for various earth systems require increasing computational resources, efficient code bases and tools for analysis, and community codevelopment. In these arenas, climate technology industries have leapfrogged academic and government science, particularly with regards to adoption of open community code and collaborative development and maintenance. In this talk, I will discuss industry coding practices I learned to bring into my workflow for efficient and rapid development, easier maintenance, collaboration and learning, and reproducibility. | |CSDMS meeting abstract presentation=Increasing physical complexity, spatial resolution, and technical coupling of numerical models for various earth systems require increasing computational resources, efficient code bases and tools for analysis, and community codevelopment. In these arenas, climate technology industries have leapfrogged academic and government science, particularly with regards to adoption of open community code and collaborative development and maintenance. In this talk, I will discuss industry coding practices I learned to bring into my workflow for efficient and rapid development, easier maintenance, collaboration and learning, and reproducibility. | ||
|CSDMS meeting youtube code=gYl_f3dcfc8 | |CSDMS meeting youtube code=gYl_f3dcfc8 | ||
|CSDMS meeting youtube views={{Youtube_gYl_f3dcfc8}} | |||
|CSDMS meeting participants=0 | |CSDMS meeting participants=0 | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 17:22, 28 May 2025
CSDMS 2023: Patterns and Processes Across Scales
How industry develops and manages scientific code
Abstract
Increasing physical complexity, spatial resolution, and technical coupling of numerical models for various earth systems require increasing computational resources, efficient code bases and tools for analysis, and community codevelopment. In these arenas, climate technology industries have leapfrogged academic and government science, particularly with regards to adoption of open community code and collaborative development and maintenance. In this talk, I will discuss industry coding practices I learned to bring into my workflow for efficient and rapid development, easier maintenance, collaboration and learning, and reproducibility.
Please acknowledge the original contributors when you are using this material. If there are any copyright issues, please let us know (CSDMSweb@colorado.edu) and we will respond as soon as possible.
Of interest for: