Thanks, Rene. Good feedback. Yes, I emphasise that this is a prospective library and that I am on hallowed ground :-)
Some work is getting done on BPL building that might help out with that. Otherwise ask in the Boost Build list if you need help with BBv2 usage.
I look forward to seeing these results. I'll keep the VC projects and makefile in there until we (hopefully) get approval. We have a number of users already doing RNA-SEQ and CRISPR searches (Wikipedia is your friend). The documentation has to work for someone not familiar with biology. Andy. On 04/06/2015 15:29, Rene Rivera wrote:
On Thu, Jun 4, 2015 at 9:10 AM, Andy Thomason
wrote: I am getting close to rolling out the first draft of our genetics library.
Interesting :-)
https://github.com/andy-thomason/Boost.Genetics
* documentation
Please make it clear in the readme and docs that this is a "prospective" Boost library.
I'd also apreciate help with the build system as getting a build
on 64 bit windows is a challenge for Boost.Python at present and some wisdom would go far.
Some work is getting done on BPL building that might help out with that. Otherwise ask in the Boost Build list if you need help with BBv2 usage.
Are there plans for VC2013/15 solution generation from BJAM?
That would be useful.
Not at present.
Is there a continuous integration system we could use to pre-check
the library?
There are some projects that use Travis-CI, and I've been using both Travis-CI and Appveyor (and will be trying some others soon) for Predef for eventual general use for all libraries. But the regular Boost testing is not designed to test non-accepted libraries.
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