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List:       kde-edu
Subject:    GSoC Question
From:       Alexander_Rössler <mail.aroessler () gmail ! com>
Date:       2012-03-19 7:37:13
Message-ID: CAMWOpydjEQefqj2ngug9EdbZcZT_AJH348AtZbYtEGgBQCCm=A () mail ! gmail ! com
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Hello,

I'm an electronic engineering student from Austria and I have a question to
KDEs GSoC.
There are a lot of good ideas for GSoC, I'm already preparing a proposal
for kdevelop. However, I was also thinking about the open source project I
have started last year. It's an application for calculation of physical
expressions (and of course non-physical expressions). It is a mix between
an algebra system and a pocket calculator, more precise: its a text editor
with advanced calculation features, especially for technicians and people
who often have to calculate formulas with physical units. The program I'm
talking about is PhyxCalc (
http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/PhyxCalc?content=149161). PhyxCalc
was originally coded in Delphi, last year I contacted the author of the
application and we started to develop an opensource version in
the Christmas holidays. The author helped me a lot, especially with the
algorithms for the parser, but I commited most of the code. Why I'm writing
this? I realized that KDE has a calculator (KCalc) and a function plotter
(KAlgebra), but maybe the KDE project might be interested in a more
advanced calculation application. It would be nice for me to work for this
project on GSoC (yes I will work on this project also without GSoc, but I
could code a lot more if I would get paid for it). If you are interested,
I'll make a proposal. (I sent this email before to kde-devel and was
suggested to this mailing list)

Regards
Alexander Rössler (aka Strahlex)

[Attachment #5 (text/html)]

<span style>Hello,</span><div style><br></div><div style>I&#39;m an electronic \
engineering student from Austria and I have a question to KDEs GSoC.</div><div \
style>There are a lot of good ideas for GSoC, I&#39;m already preparing a proposal \
for kdevelop. However, I was also thinking about the open source project I have \
started last year. It&#39;s an application for calculation of physical expressions \
(and of course non-physical expressions). It is a mix between an algebra system and a \
pocket calculator, more precise: its a text editor with advanced calculation \
features, especially for technicians and people who often have to calculate formulas \
with physical units. The program I&#39;m talking about is PhyxCalc (<a \
href="http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/PhyxCalc?content=149161" target="_blank" \
style="color:rgb(17,85,204)">http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/PhyxCalc?content=149161</a>). \
PhyxCalc was originally coded in Delphi, last year I contacted the author of the \
application and we started to develop an opensource version in the Christmas \
holidays. The author helped me a lot, especially with the algorithms for the parser, \
but I commited most of the code. Why I&#39;m writing this? I realized that KDE has a \
calculator (KCalc) and a function plotter (KAlgebra), but maybe the KDE project might \
be interested in a more advanced calculation application. It would be nice for me to \
work for this project on GSoC (yes I will work on this project also without GSoc, but \
I could code a lot more if I would get paid for it). If you are interested, I&#39;ll \
make a proposal. (I sent this email before to kde-devel and was suggested to this \
mailing list)</div> <div style><br></div><div style>Regards</div><div style>Alexander \
Rössler (aka Strahlex)</div>



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