# A Python library to study linear algebra The goal of the `lalib` project is to create a library written in pure [Python](https://docs.python.org/3/) (incl. the [standard library](https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html)) and thereby learn about [linear algebra](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_algebra) by reading and writing code. ## Contributing & Development This project is open for any kind of contribution, be it by writing code for new features or bugfixes, or by raising [issues](https://github.com/webartifex/lalib/issues). All contributions become open-source themselves, under the [MIT license](https://github.com/webartifex/lalib/blob/main/LICENSE.txt). ### Local Develop Environment In order to play with the `lalib` codebase, you need to set up a develop environment on your own computer. First, get your own copy of this repository: `git clone git@github.com:webartifex/lalib.git` While `lalib` comes without any dependencies except core Python and the standard library for the user, we assume a couple of packages and tools be installed to ensure code quality during development. These can be viewed in the [pyproject.toml](https://github.com/webartifex/lalib/blob/main/pyproject.toml) file and are managed with [poetry](https://python-poetry.org/docs/) which needs to be installed as well. `poetry` also creates and manages a [virtual environment](https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html) with the develop tools, and pins their exact installation versions in the [poetry.lock](https://github.com/webartifex/lalib/blob/main/poetry.lock) file. To replicate the project maintainer's develop environment, run: `poetry install` ### Branching Strategy The branches in this repository follow the [GitFlow](https://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/) model. Feature branches are rebased onto the [develop](https://github.com/webartifex/lalib/tree/develop) branch *before* being merged. Whereas a rebase makes a simple fast-forward merge possible, all merges are made with explicit and *empty* merge commits. This ensures that past branches remain visible in the logs, for example, with `git log --graph`.