The Guide to Available Mathematical Software (GAMS) is a project of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to classify mathematical software by the type of problem that it solves. GAMS became public in 1985.[1] It indexes Netlib and other packages, some of them public domain software and some proprietary software.[2][3][4][5]
References
edit- ^ Altman, Micah; Gill, Jeff; McDonald, Michael P. (2004), Numerical Issues in Statistical Computing for the Social Scientist, Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics, vol. 508, John Wiley & Sons, p. 92, ISBN 9780471475743
- ^ Skiena, Steven S. (1998), The Algorithm Design Manual, Springer, p. 429, ISBN 9780387948607
- ^ Krommer, Arnold R.; Ueberhuber, Christoph W. (1998), Computational Integration, SIAM, p. 68, ISBN 9780898713749
- ^ Kincaid, David; Cheney, Ward (2002), Numerical Analysis: Mathematics of Scientific Computing, Pure and applied undergraduate texts, vol. 2 (3rd ed.), American Mathematical Society, p. 732, ISBN 9780821847886
- ^ Johnson, Richard W. (2016), Handbook of Fluid Dynamics (2nd ed.), CRC Press, p. 33-18, ISBN 9781439849576
External links
edit- Guide to Available Mathematical Software (GAMS project home page.)