great idea !
Best regards to everybody,
Junior
On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 12:52 PM, Stéphane Adjemian
<stephane.adjemian@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear all,
The Dynare team is pleased to announce the creation of the Dynare
Working Papers series [1]. The Dynare Working Papers series is intended
for the following kind of contributions:
* methodological papers related to current or forthcoming Dynare
functionality;
* papers in quantitative macroeconomics whose results (or portion
thereof) have been obtained with the help of Dynare.
Authors are encouraged to submit papers falling into one of the two
aforementioned categories, even if they have already been published in
another working papers series. Note that contributions not directly
related to Dynare, but still pertaining to the fields of numerical
methods or of quantitative macroeconomics, are also welcome.
Submissions should be sent by e-mail to: wp@dynare.org. We commit
ourselves to giving a fast and fair editorial decision, but please
forgive us if you do not receive a full-fledged referee report in
return.
The goal of this series being state of the art dissemination, the source
code of computer programs used in the paper should also be included in
the submission (this covers Dynare MOD files and/or any other program,
whether written in MATLAB, Octave, Fortran, C, C++, etc). If the
submission is accepted, the source code will be made publicly available
on our website.
Papers and codes published in the series are automatically added to the
RePEc [2] database.
We are waiting for your contributions!
Stéphane and Sébastien.
[1] http://www.dynare.org/wp
[2] http://ideas.repec.org/s/cpm/dynare.html
_______________________________________________
Dev mailing list
Dev@dynare.org
https://www.dynare.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dev
--
"You can never know everything", Lan said quietly, "and part of what you know is always wrong. Perhaps even the most important part. A portion of wisdom lies in knowing that. A portion of courage lies in going on anyway." Robert Jordan, Winter's Heart, Book IX of the Wheel of Time.
We have not succeeded in answering all of our problems. The answers we have found only serve to raise a whole set of new issues. In some ways we are as confused as ever, but we believe we are confused on a higher level and about more important things. (cited in Øksendal, 1985)