| 
 | 
Literate Programming and Reproducible Research  Literate Programming and Reproducible Research
 
 Literate Programming:The term "literate programming" was introduced by Don Knuth in the early 1980's,
with the idea that a computer program should be documented in a manner that is
readable by humans.
 
 Reproducible Research:
When a project is complete (e.g. a paper is published), the
computational tools and data should be preserved in a manner that allows one
to reproduce the final products (e.g., figures, tables, error values) and to
later understand the methods used and the implementation (including all
parameter values).
 
 
The paper should contain all details that can be reasonably included.
Other details should be available on-line.
 
 
 Some links to recent articles and editorials:
 R. D. Peng, Reproducible research and Biostatistics,
Biostatistics 10 (2009), pp. 405-408.
link  
 P.N. Schofield, et.al., Post-publication sharing of data and tools,
Nature 461 (2009), pp. 171-173 
link  
 N. Barnes, Publish your computer code: it is good enough, Nature 467
(2010) p. 753.
link  
 Z. Merali, Computational science: ...Error
Why scientific programming does not compute.
Nature 467(2010), pp. 775-777.
link  
 K. A. Baggerly and D. A. Berry, Reproducible Research,
AMSTAT NEWS, Jan. 1, 2011
link  
 
S. Fomel and J. Claerbout
"Reproducible Research", Guest Editors' Introduction to a Special Issue of
CiSE.
link  
 NSF to require data management plan
article  
FAQ  
 
 
 
 Some links to my recent attempts in this direction:
 Top 10 Reasons to Not Share Your Code
(and why you should anyway)
 Minisymposium talk at the SIAM CSE meeting, March, 2011.
... Slides from other
talks
  My thoughts   for the Roundtable
on
"Data and Code Sharing in the Computational Sciences",
Hosted by the Information Society Project, Yale Law School,
November 21, 2009  ...
Many references  
  Publication resulting from the Roundtable   with some recommendations.
 
  Papers that include Clawpack  code.  
  Slides from CSGF   
Keynote talk   at the DOE Computational Sciences Graduate
Fellowship Workshop, Washington DC, 2008
  CiSE 2009 paper   
on Python Tools for Reproducible Research on Hyperbolic Problems (in a
special issue on reproducible research)
  ICM 2006 paper   
on Wave Propagation Software, Computational Science, and Reproducible Research
  mathcode2html  
  EagleClaw  
  Clawpack  documentation page on saving and sharing code.  
 
 
 Other links:
  Overview of literate programming  
  wikipedia
entry on literate programming  
  A bibliography of literate programming   by N.H.F Beebe
  CWEB   Combines C and
latex
  CWEB programs by Knuth  
  Noweb  
  Doxygen  
  AMRITA  
  www.springerlink.com/content/t73q6574726k4777/   paper by Quirk
  Sweave   ...
Sweave example   combines R and
latex
  Brad Bell's OMhelp  
  WaveLab and Reproducible Research   paper by Buckheit and Claerbout
  Matt Schwab and Jon Claerbout's page  
  EPFL Audiovisual Communications Lab page  
  Slides from talk by Gentleman  
  Madagascar software  
  J. Kovacevic, "How to encourage and publish reproducible research" 
pdf  
  G. Baiocchi, "Reproducible research in computational economics: guidelines, integrated
approaches, and open source software", 
journal  
  V. Stodden, Enabling Reproducible
Research: Licensing for Scientific Innovation, 2009.
www.ijclp.net/issue_13.html  
  V. Stodden, The Legal
Framework for Reproducible Scientific Research: Licensing and Copyright,
Computing in Science and Engineering, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 35-40, Jan./Feb.,
2009.www.stanford.edu/~vcs/papers/LFRSR12012008.pdf  
 Journal of Statistical Software  
 
 
 
 
·
 Randall J. LeVeque  
     ·
 
 
 |