You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Towards improving certain sections, notably the Features & Users pages, I think we could promote Cylc by incorporating carefully selected figures relating to these aspects.
I thought this merits its own Issue to e.g. #11 since it may require some discussion as to:
which figures are best to include (we don't want to include too many, I think, just highlight the ones which are especially impressive), possibilities being for example the number of:
institutions using Cylc, &/or the years they have been in use there;
batch systems (directly) supported: 8, according to the docs;
approaches for grouping & consolidating suite configuration (parameters, templating via Jinja2 or EmPy, families): 3
illustrative numbers of lines of code required to achieve basic suite setups (which should be small).
how we can keep such figures up-to-date. Note:
if possible we ideally could extract these figures automatically, but if not we should have a review period to check & update them as appropriate.
we could always provide a bound rather than a hard figure, e.g. 'more than 70' / '70+'.
Examples
Other projects quote impressive figures about their projects on their project homepages to good effect. Some examples are captured in screenshots below:
Towards improving certain sections, notably the Features & Users pages, I think we could promote Cylc by incorporating carefully selected figures relating to these aspects.
I thought this merits its own Issue to e.g. #11 since it may require some discussion as to:
8
, according to the docs;cylc
commands;suite.rc
configuration settings.3
Examples
Other projects quote impressive figures about their projects on their project homepages to good effect. Some examples are captured in screenshots below:
ZeroMQ:
AWS:
Dash:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: