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The first paragraph is not quite technically correct. It's
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not a bad start, but should be refined a bit.
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==Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment==
Now you have something to pull apart...RoseParks
[[File:Sciences humaines.svg|40px]] This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between <span class="mw-formatted-date" title="2021-08-28">28 August 2021</span> and <span class="mw-formatted-date" title="2021-12-10">10 December 2021</span>. Further details are available [[Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/University_of_Arizona/Linguistics_in_the_Digital_Age_(Fall_2021)|on the course page]]. Student editor(s): [[User:Madelynrahman|Madelynrahman]].


{{small|Above undated message substituted from [[Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment]] by [[User:PrimeBOT|PrimeBOT]] ([[User talk:PrimeBOT|talk]]) 05:48, 17 January 2022 (UTC)}}
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== Removal of content ==
I deleted the section '''Linear equations''' rather than wasting time cleaning it up, since everything is covered in far more detial and in better presentation in the main article '''[[Linear differential equation]]'''.


Furthermore the subsections within that section: '''Fundamental systems for homogeneous equations with constant coefficients''' and '''General Case''', had zero references and were not exactly easy for a reader to follow anyway... they are no more. <span style="font-family:'TW Cen MT';">[[User:F=q(E+v^B)|'''F''' =]] [[User talk:F=q(E+v^B)|q('''E+v×B''')]] [[Special:Contributions/F=q(E+v^B)|⇄ ∑<sub>i</sub>c<sub>i</sub>]]</span> 09:34, 31 May 2012 (UTC)
Just a typesetting note: when doing some minor copyediting here, I discovered that using an ordinary apostrope (') for the "prime" sign really wreaks havoc on the Wiki software (especially when doubled), since it tries to interpret them as bold, italics, etc. The "correct" thing to do would be to use <code>&amp;prime;</code>, but some browsers won't handle that well, and there's no other tricky notation on this page to justify the use of special characters. So I have used the bare-acute-accent character '''´''' (decimal 0180) for the prime symbol. It should work on all browsers using either ISO or Windows ANSI, and doesn't screw up the Wiki software. --LDC


:There was a link to the section '''Linear ordinary differential equations''' in the article [[Stiff equation]]. I just now updated the link to point to the section '''Reduction of order''' instead, as this section describes not only the reduction of order but also the vector representation of such a system. Please consider leaving the existing section in place so that the vector representation will still be described in a convenient place. If the vector representation is deleted, it should be moved somewhere and documented in the talk pages for its source and destination pages. — [[User:Anita5192|Anita5192]] ([[User talk:Anita5192|talk]]) 17:48, 31 May 2012 (UTC)
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::Of course I'll leave that section alone - thats relavent! My only implications were that the theory of linear equations should be kept in the other article (which is also in bad shape in places.....), rather than repeating too much here. Thank you for feedback - appreciated. =) <span style="font-family:'TW Cen MT';">[[User:F=q(E+v^B)|'''F''' =]] [[User talk:F=q(E+v^B)|q('''E+v×B''')]] [[Special:Contributions/F=q(E+v^B)|⇄ ∑<sub>i</sub>c<sub>i</sub>]]</span> 23:27, 31 May 2012 (UTC)
Superb!


== Global uniqueness and maximum domain of solution ==
Now for the nits... (heh) For an ODE, we really speak of a function x of
It would be nice to have a counter-example with domain ℝ\{x_0 + 1/y_0}, that satisfies the initial condition, but has a different definition on the other interval.
a single parameter t, that is, x = x(t)...
[[User:Soulpa7ch|Soulpa7ch]] ([[User talk:Soulpa7ch|talk]]) 18:49, 17 September 2012 (UTC)


== Error! ==
The really frustrating thing about math is that so much of the
f(x, y) = y^2
notation I learned in
is *not* Lipschitz continuous. Please rectify or make clear (that you mean "locally Lipschitz"). <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/2607:4000:200:12:21A:92FF:FE83:373|2607:4000:200:12:21A:92FF:FE83:373]] ([[User talk:2607:4000:200:12:21A:92FF:FE83:373|talk]]) 23:24, 21 January 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
lower division I more or less had to unlearn in upper division or grad
level classes.


== Argument of function belongs in numerator ==
In the [[Ordinary Differential Equation#Background|Background]] section, I moved the argument of ''x''(''t'') back into the numerator of the derivative because that is where it commonly is placed in textbooks. See, e.g., Simmons, George F. ''Differential Equations with Applications and Historical Notes''. p.123. — [[User:Anita5192|Anita5192]] ([[User talk:Anita5192|talk]]) 20:32, 6 November 2014 (UTC)


== Proposed merge with [[Strang splitting]] ==
<hr>
seems to be one of the possible solutions [[User:Shrikanthv|Shrikanthv]] ([[User talk:Shrikanthv|talk]]) 10:53, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
:Operator splitting is used for dimensional splitting of Partial differential equations as well, which has (almost 😉) nothing to do with ODEs. Merging strang splitting ''here'' thus doesn't make sense. I'd support merging strang splitting into a general article on splitting methods though. -- [[User:Pberndt|Pberndt]] ([[User talk:Pberndt|talk]]) 08:54, 19 April 2016 (UTC)


== More rigor in the definitions of <math>n</math>th order ODEs ==
Perhaps some mention of the different types of differential equations and methods for solving them would be appropriate (i.e. linear first and second order, etc.) --BlackGriffen
In the definition of an <math>n</math>th order linear ODE <math>\left( y^{(n)} = \sum_{i=0}^{n-1}a_i(x)y^{(i)} + r(x) \ \forall x \in I \right)</math>, all the article says is that the <math>a_i</math> and <math>r</math> are continuous. It doesn't even say <math>\forall x \in I</math> at the end of the equation. I think we should give the domains and codomains of all the functions in the equation, i.e. we should say that <math>a_0, a_1, ..., a_{n-1}, r: I \to \mathbb{R}</math> are continuous and <math>y: I \to \mathbb{R}</math> is <math>n</math> times differentiable (from which it follows from the equation that <math>y</math> is actually <math>n</math> times continuously differentiable).


In the definition of a general <math>n</math>th order ODE (implicit form <math>F(x, y, y', ..., y^{(n)}) = 0 \ \forall x \in I)</math> and explicit form <math>y^{(n)} = F(x, y, y', ..., y^{(n-1)}) \ \forall x \in I)</math>), the article says even less. Again there is no <math>\forall x \in I</math>, and it doesn't say that <math>y: I \to \mathbb{R}</math> should be <math>n</math> times differentiable. The most problematic part however is that nothing at all is said about <math>F</math>. In the implicit case, its domain and codomain are given by <math>F: I \times U \to \mathbb{R}</math> where <math>U \subseteq \mathbb{R}^{n+1}</math>, and in the explicit case it is <math>F: I \times U \to \mathbb{R}</math> where <math>U \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n</math>.
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In the same way that we demand that <math>a_0, a_1, ..., a_{n-1}, r: I \to \mathbb{R}</math> are continuous in the definition of a linear ODE, are there any agreed upon assumptions on <math>F</math> in the definition of a general ODE? Later in the article in the 'Local existence and uniqueness theorem simplified' section, when talking about the first order system <math>\vec{y}' = \vec{F}(x, \vec{y})</math> (where yet again all the terms are not fully explained, or even made clear that they are vector quantities), it says that we should have <math>\vec{F}</math> and <math>\frac{\partial \vec{F}}{\partial \vec{y}}</math> continuous in some vicinity of the initial condition in order to guarantee the existence and uniqueness of a solution. Is there a similar result which applies to the general <math>n</math>th order ODE <math>F(x, y, y', ..., y^{(n)}) = 0 \ \forall x \in I</math> or <math>y^{(n)} = F(x, y, y', ..., y^{(n-1)}) \ \forall x \in I</math>? (I could probably figure it out by converting them into first order systems and reverse engineering, but I'll see what you guys say first).
No talk at all about the relationship to Vector fields, which are really ODEs wearing funny hats, except they exist on differential manifolds and can be defined without co-ordinates.
:Would you like to add a paragraph about that connection? [[user:AxelBoldt|AxelBoldt]]


So in summary, 1) do you guys think that we should modify the definitions of linear and general ODEs by explaining all the terms in the equations more fully, and 2) are there agreed upon assumptions on <math>F</math> in the literature in the definition of a general (implicit and explicit) <math>n</math>th order ODE? At the moment, having <math>F</math> being identically <math>1</math> for an implicit <math>n</math>th order ODE satisfies the definition given in the article. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Joel Brennan|Joel Brennan]] ([[User talk:Joel Brennan#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Joel Brennan|contribs]]) 14:56, 21 April 2018 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
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Is there any reason why this article uses the plural title?
:nope. should be fixed. [[user:AxelBoldt|AxelBoldt]]
:yep. "Differential Equations" is the name of a field of study in math. A "differential equation" (singular) would be the object of that field of study. I will move the article to the singular, leaving a link from the plural. [[user:Ed Poor|Ed Poor]]


: I agree with your first point, although for the sake of compactness I would include the assumptions valid for all the definitions in advance rather than in every definition. I'm sorry that I cannot answer to your second point. I also think that, after the general definition it would not be correct saying "There are further classifications". It could be said "general definitions for particular types of differential equations". However, i find it redundant and in some cases wrong what is presented. For instance, the type "homogeneous" refers only to linear equations so it is misleading this presentation. I would perhaps delete all this and just say that there are different particular types of equations, and provide the links to the correspondent articles, which I think are ok. What do you think? [[User:Conjugado|Conjugado]] ([[User talk:Conjugado|talk]]) 19:11, 2 January 2019 (UTC)
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I believe that the history section here ought to be rewritten preferrably by someone who knows something about it and doesn't simply 'copy' a 100+ year old book on the subject - and doesn't tell that's what have been done! I see that there are a number of references to 'recent works', 'the modern school' and so on, when referring to texts written well over a century ago! 'Recent writers' refer to (amongst others) [[Felix Klein|Klein]] (-1925), [[Weierstrass]] (-1897) and [[Frobenius]] (1849-1917).
Do you agree that the history part here should be deleted?
[[User:Mikez|Mikez]] 18:00, 23 Feb 2004 (UTC)


== Software section ==
Please don't delete. Quite a bit of work has been done already - obviously it is still in a bad state, but starting again with nothing isn't a good idea. In the end there will have to be major changes - of course.
The software section doesn't actually include ODE solver software, but instead links to languages which have submodules that can solve ODEs. I tried to improve the software section by
linking directly to one of the more popular submodules, DifferentialEquations.jl solvers, but [[User:MrOllie|MrOllie]] keeps deleting the reference. Should this section instead be renamed
to "Languages with ODE Solver Software"? If that's the case, languages like Python, R, etc. should probably be removed, since their ODE solvers are wrappers for the C++ and Fortran
implementations of methods like dopri5, dop853, and lsode. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.232.17.207|71.232.17.207]] ([[User talk:71.232.17.207#top|talk]]) 12:26, 18 October 2019 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:The section should include only entries with some demonstrated notability in the form of a preexisting Wikipedia article. See [[WP:WTAF]] - [[User:MrOllie|MrOllie]] ([[User talk:MrOllie|talk]]) 12:28, 18 October 2019 (UTC)
[[User:Charles Matthews|Charles Matthews]] 18:13, 23 Feb 2004 (UTC)


::So notability of an ODE solver is not defined in terms of users, Github metrics, citing articles, etc., but instead in terms of whether there's a preexisting Wikipedia article? It's fine if it's consistent, but that seems like an odd criteria. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.232.17.207|71.232.17.207]] ([[User talk:71.232.17.207#top|talk]]) 13:08, 18 October 2019 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
This now removed - hard to upgrade:


== India Education Program course assignment ==
''The modern school has also turned its attention to the
[[File:Wikipedia-Ambassador-Program-Logo.png|50px]] This article was the subject of an educational assignment supported by [[Wikipedia:Education program/Ambassadors|Wikipedia Ambassadors]] through the [[Wikipedia:India Education Program|India Education Program]].[[Category:India Education Program student projects|{{PAGENAME}}]] [[Category:India Education Program student projects]]
theory of [[differential invariant]]s, one of fundamental importance and
one which Lie has made prominent. With this theory are associated
the names of Cayley, Cockle, Sylvester, Forsyth, Laguerre, and
Halphen. Recent writers have shown the same tendency noticeable in
the work of Monge and Cauchy, the tendency to separate into two
schools, the one inclining to use the geometric diagram, and
represented by Schwarz, Klein, and Goursat, the other adhering to
pure analysis, of which Weierstrass, Fuchs, and Frobenius are
types. The work of Fuchs and the theory of [[elementary divisor]]s have
formed the basis of a late work by Sauvage (1895). Poincar\'e's
recent contributions are also very notable. His theory of [[Fuchsian equation]]s (also investigated by Klein) is connected with the general
theory. He has also brought the whole subject into close relations
with the [[theory of functions]]. Appell has recently contributed to the
theory of linear differential equations transformable into
themselves by change of the function and the variable. Helge von
Koch has written on infinite determinants and linear differential
equations. Picard has undertaken the generalization of the work of
Fuchs and Poincar\'e in the case of differential equations of the
second order. Fabry (1885) has generalized the normal integrals of
Thomé, integrals which Poincar\'e has called "intégrales
anormales," and which Picard has recently studied. Riquier
treated the question of the existence of integrals in any
differential system and gave a brief summary of the history to
1895. The later contributors include Brioschi,
Königsberger, [[Peano]], Graf, Hamburger, Graindorge, Schläfli,
Glaisher, Lommel, Gilbert, Fabry, Craig, and Autonne.''


{{small|The above message was substituted from {{tlc|IEP assignment}} by [[User:PrimeBOT|PrimeBOT]] ([[User talk:PrimeBOT|talk]]) on 19:51, 1 February 2023 (UTC)}}
[[User:Charles Matthews|Charles Matthews]] 11:52, 12 Apr 2004 (UTC)


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Ok...[[User:Mikez|Mikez]]

== L-H revert ==

Unfortunately, I can't make sense out of the sentence "Differential equation was born as the fundamental equation which describes the natural law." It contains grammatical errors which could be fixed, but the meaning is still too unclear to me. So I reverted. I notice that the sentence in question links to [[fundamental equation]]. I question whether this usage is standard.

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Seems like a lot of the history on this page may be a copyvio? We definitely at least need the source of all this stuff. I'm working on it to make sure the dead men don't seem to be alive :-)
- [[User:Gauge|Gauge]] 21:18, 4 Aug 2004 (UTC)

No, from an old PD source I believe: [[User:Recentchanges]] added this and similar stuff on a number of pages. [[User:Charles Matthews|Charles Matthews]] 06:15, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)

How much schooling do I have to go through in order to be able to understand ANY of this? I am just curious: what is the education level of the authors of this page?

:With nothing more than differential calculus you can understand what differential equations are and what it means to solve a differential equation. To get much into the theory of the subject, you need to go beyond first-year calculus. [[User:Michael Hardy|Michael Hardy]] 00:57, 1 Sep 2004 (UTC)

:As to education level of authors of this page, I suspect it varies greatly, since ''differential equations'' is (yes "is", not "are") one of those courses that very large numbers of students in many different fiedls are required to study. Generally that means lots of people who don't know much math have contributed here, probably including some who haven't gone beyond a couple of years of calculus. [[User:Michael Hardy|Michael Hardy]] 14:51, 1 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== Splitting up the page ==

I was thinking about reworking this page, and breaking out a lot of the topics into their own pages (like ordinary differential equation, method of undetermined coefficients, etc.). Does anyone object? -- [[User:Waltpohl|Walt Pohl]] 07:08, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)

:I don't object conceptually - indeed, something much like that is on [[User_talk:Ruakh|my to-do list]] - but I do advise caution, as many articles already exist on subtopics (for example, I came across [[variation of parameters]] after completely reworking the section on it in this article), and content from this article needs to be merged into those articles. The last thing we need is even more articles on subtopics duplicating each other. [[User:Ruakh|Ruakh]] 06:55, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)

:One thing I think should be done is get rid of the separate [[examples of differential equations]] article and move its content to this article and/or articles on subtopics. [[User:Ruakh|Ruakh]] 06:55, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)

:: You're right. That information should be integrated better. And thanks for pointing out the variation of parameters page -- I doubt I ever would have found it myself. -- [[User:Waltpohl|Walt Pohl]] 09:06, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Okay, I've formulated a possible (albeit complicated) plan of attack:

* Delete the current redirect at [[ordinary differential equation]]. Move this page there.
* Integrate the little bit about PDEs into the PDE page.
* Delete the current redirect at [[method of variation of parameters]]. Move [[variation of parameters]] there.
* Move the section on undetermined coefficients to [[method of undetermined coefficients]].
* Write a new [[differential equation]] page that's a lot shorter, and provides a less ODE-centric overview.
* I'm not quite sure what to do with [[examples of differential equations]]. A lot of it could be moved to a page on first-order linear ordinary differential equations. There's also the [[linear differential equation]] page to keep in mind.
-- [[User:Waltpohl|Walt Pohl]] 09:27, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 03:10, 9 March 2024


Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment

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This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 28 August 2021 and 10 December 2021. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Madelynrahman.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 05:48, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Removal of content

[edit]

I deleted the section Linear equations rather than wasting time cleaning it up, since everything is covered in far more detial and in better presentation in the main article Linear differential equation.

Furthermore the subsections within that section: Fundamental systems for homogeneous equations with constant coefficients and General Case, had zero references and were not exactly easy for a reader to follow anyway... they are no more. F = q(E+v×B) ⇄ ∑ici 09:34, 31 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

There was a link to the section Linear ordinary differential equations in the article Stiff equation. I just now updated the link to point to the section Reduction of order instead, as this section describes not only the reduction of order but also the vector representation of such a system. Please consider leaving the existing section in place so that the vector representation will still be described in a convenient place. If the vector representation is deleted, it should be moved somewhere and documented in the talk pages for its source and destination pages. — Anita5192 (talk) 17:48, 31 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Of course I'll leave that section alone - thats relavent! My only implications were that the theory of linear equations should be kept in the other article (which is also in bad shape in places.....), rather than repeating too much here. Thank you for feedback - appreciated. =) F = q(E+v×B) ⇄ ∑ici 23:27, 31 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Global uniqueness and maximum domain of solution

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It would be nice to have a counter-example with domain ℝ\{x_0 + 1/y_0}, that satisfies the initial condition, but has a different definition on the other interval. Soulpa7ch (talk) 18:49, 17 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Error!

[edit]

f(x, y) = y^2 is *not* Lipschitz continuous. Please rectify or make clear (that you mean "locally Lipschitz"). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2607:4000:200:12:21A:92FF:FE83:373 (talk) 23:24, 21 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Argument of function belongs in numerator

[edit]

In the Background section, I moved the argument of x(t) back into the numerator of the derivative because that is where it commonly is placed in textbooks. See, e.g., Simmons, George F. Differential Equations with Applications and Historical Notes. p.123. — Anita5192 (talk) 20:32, 6 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Proposed merge with Strang splitting

[edit]

seems to be one of the possible solutions Shrikanthv (talk) 10:53, 3 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Operator splitting is used for dimensional splitting of Partial differential equations as well, which has (almost 😉) nothing to do with ODEs. Merging strang splitting here thus doesn't make sense. I'd support merging strang splitting into a general article on splitting methods though. -- Pberndt (talk) 08:54, 19 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

More rigor in the definitions of th order ODEs

[edit]

In the definition of an th order linear ODE , all the article says is that the and are continuous. It doesn't even say at the end of the equation. I think we should give the domains and codomains of all the functions in the equation, i.e. we should say that are continuous and is times differentiable (from which it follows from the equation that is actually times continuously differentiable).

In the definition of a general th order ODE (implicit form and explicit form ), the article says even less. Again there is no , and it doesn't say that should be times differentiable. The most problematic part however is that nothing at all is said about . In the implicit case, its domain and codomain are given by where , and in the explicit case it is where .

In the same way that we demand that are continuous in the definition of a linear ODE, are there any agreed upon assumptions on in the definition of a general ODE? Later in the article in the 'Local existence and uniqueness theorem simplified' section, when talking about the first order system (where yet again all the terms are not fully explained, or even made clear that they are vector quantities), it says that we should have and continuous in some vicinity of the initial condition in order to guarantee the existence and uniqueness of a solution. Is there a similar result which applies to the general th order ODE or ? (I could probably figure it out by converting them into first order systems and reverse engineering, but I'll see what you guys say first).

So in summary, 1) do you guys think that we should modify the definitions of linear and general ODEs by explaining all the terms in the equations more fully, and 2) are there agreed upon assumptions on in the literature in the definition of a general (implicit and explicit) th order ODE? At the moment, having being identically for an implicit th order ODE satisfies the definition given in the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Joel Brennan (talkcontribs) 14:56, 21 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with your first point, although for the sake of compactness I would include the assumptions valid for all the definitions in advance rather than in every definition. I'm sorry that I cannot answer to your second point. I also think that, after the general definition it would not be correct saying "There are further classifications". It could be said "general definitions for particular types of differential equations". However, i find it redundant and in some cases wrong what is presented. For instance, the type "homogeneous" refers only to linear equations so it is misleading this presentation. I would perhaps delete all this and just say that there are different particular types of equations, and provide the links to the correspondent articles, which I think are ok. What do you think? Conjugado (talk) 19:11, 2 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Software section

[edit]

The software section doesn't actually include ODE solver software, but instead links to languages which have submodules that can solve ODEs. I tried to improve the software section by linking directly to one of the more popular submodules, DifferentialEquations.jl solvers, but MrOllie keeps deleting the reference. Should this section instead be renamed to "Languages with ODE Solver Software"? If that's the case, languages like Python, R, etc. should probably be removed, since their ODE solvers are wrappers for the C++ and Fortran implementations of methods like dopri5, dop853, and lsode. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.232.17.207 (talk) 12:26, 18 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

The section should include only entries with some demonstrated notability in the form of a preexisting Wikipedia article. See WP:WTAF - MrOllie (talk) 12:28, 18 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]
So notability of an ODE solver is not defined in terms of users, Github metrics, citing articles, etc., but instead in terms of whether there's a preexisting Wikipedia article? It's fine if it's consistent, but that seems like an odd criteria. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.232.17.207 (talk) 13:08, 18 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

India Education Program course assignment

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This article was the subject of an educational assignment supported by Wikipedia Ambassadors through the India Education Program.

The above message was substituted from {{IEP assignment}} by PrimeBOT (talk) on 19:51, 1 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]