Introduction and motivationsļƒ

The FluidDyn project first emerges from the work of Pierre Augier, a researcher in fluid dynamics strongly interesting by programming and open-source. Then, other people worked on this collaborative project. However, for this introduction, it is simpler for me (Pierre) to use I instead of we. These are my ideas and it is better if people can use and develop FluidDyn packages without sharing them.

For a better and less personal presentation, one can read our metapaper presenting the FluidDyn project and the fluiddyn package (published in the Journal of Open Research Software (JORS)).

If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please do not hesitate to fill an issue in the main repository or simply discuss with us on our chat rooms.

How FluidDyn startedļƒ

I am currently a CNRS researcher at LEGI (UGA, CNRS, in Grenoble) but I started to work on FluidDyn when I was at KTH (Stockholm) and DAMTP (Cambridge).

I did my PhD on stratified turbulence and instabilities at LadHyx (Paris). During my PhD years, I worked mainly with Bash, Fortran and Matlab. Some days after my PhD defense in 2011, I was introduced by a couple of geek friends to a funny programming language šŸ which could replace Matlab for what we did with it.

I started to work with Python and liked it a lot. Python for sciences wasnā€™t what it is today but it was in many aspects much nicer than the infernal trio Bash / Fortran / Matlab šŸ˜Š (letā€™s stress that Bash and Fortran are great tools!).

By using Python (and reading/watching stuffs), I started to learn a lot about programming, computers, software engineering and open-source. I also saw how other scientific communities were using Python and scientific open-source projects much more than in fluid dynamics, for example astrophysics (with in particular Astropy).

So I started to work on packages specialized for different aspects of my research (fluidlab, fluidimage, fluidfft, fluidsim, ā€¦). We also needed one base package (called fluiddyn) to gather code useful for the specialized packages.

Design Goalsļƒ

I work on the project FluidDyn first to have good tools for my research, where I mainly do laboratory experiments, image analysis and numerical simulations. My point of view is that to get good tools, they must really be ā€œcollaborativeā€ and built with the tools and methods of open-source dynamics.

So FluidDyn is also for me a way to contribute to launch a collaborative dynamics in coding in the field of (geophysical) fluid dynamics. I see the opportunities for my community of using open-source tools and methods. It seems to me that we could greatly improve our global productivity since the way it works now is really not optimal.

Numerics is everywhere in research: for numerical simulations but also for analytic and experimental studies. Unfortunately, many researchers have contempt for coding and software. Many very bad practices are so common that there is a huge waste of time, energy, ideas and money! So many lines of code are badly coded so they are surely full of bugs and of course not reusable. So many pieces of code are lost when the PhD student who has written them goes away.

A big change seems to be necessary but it is a real challenge. First, the organization of research does not helpā€¦ The competition between researchers, groups and universities is strong, which discourage collaborations and planning in the community.

Then, bad habits are difficult to give up, especially when they are efficient on the short range and when the bosses in research feel uncomfortable with new tools and methods.

The example of the dominant languages/tools is interesting. Bash (or even csh, with awk and sed) should be used only for very specific and simple tasks. Compiled languages (Fortran, C and C++) should not be used for everything. Even though the commercial programs like Matlab or Labview can be useful and efficient for individuals and groups, they have huge limitations (in particular for collaborations) and are for the community a problem.

Finally, education is also an issue. It is interesting to see universities, institutes and laboratories paying big amounts of money to be able to use Matlab and Labview for research and at the same time learning these tools to their students instead of open-source alternatives.

I think open-source, Python and its scientific environment are a great opportunity for science and fluid dynamics. FluidDyn is a tool to test this hypothesis and to increase equality, freedom and efficiency in fluid dynamics with open-source methods.

Open-sourceļƒ

FluidDyn is an open-source project. The package fluidyn is distributed under the CeCILL-B License, a BSD compatible french license done in particular by the CNRS.

Python programming languageļƒ

FluidDyn is mostly a set of Python packages. They are written mostly in Python with also small bits of Cython, C and C++. Since it is still necessary to convince some people in the field that it is efficient to use Python, here is a list of some reasons for using this language in research.

  • Free and open-source: the main implementations of the language (Cpython, PyPy, etc.) and the libraries.

  • Clear and easily readable code by structure.

  • Easy to learn: good documentation, intuitive syntax and ā€œThere should be oneā€“ and preferably only one ā€“obvious way to do itā€ principle.

  • Multi-paradigm programming language: sequential, object-oriented and functional.

  • Portability: Linux-GNU, Unix in general so Mac OS and also Windows!

  • Simple install procedure for packages.

  • General-purpose useful outside science: from simple scripting to complex object-oriented software and web development (for example Youtube and Dropbox are partly written in Python). Thus it is very useful to learn Python.

  • Large and professional community.

  • Easy to optimise, in particular with profiling tools (cProfile, pstats) and Python ā€œcompilersā€ like Cython and Pythran.

  • Easily extended with modules written in C, C++ or Fortran.

  • Easy to implement tests (unittest).

  • Many scientific libraries and software:

    • SciPy: fundamental library for scientific computing,

    • NumPy: base N-dimensional array package,

    • Matplotlib: comprehensive 2D Plotting,

    • IPython: enhanced Interactive Console,

    • Sympy: symbolic mathematics,

    • Pandas: data structures & analysis,

    • h5py: pythonic interface to the HDF5 binary data format.

    • mpi4py: MPI for Python.

If you use Matlab, these comparisons can be interesting:

Documented and testedļƒ

The FluidDyn project is a framework for developing research codes. It should show good practices and clean examples. It has also to be quite stable and sure. Therefore, a lot of effort is put in having unit tests and a quite good documentation with examples and tutorials.

Why specialized in fluids?ļƒ

Many tasks that can be done using FluidDyn are not specific to fluid dynamics research. But it is simpler to write a more specific software so FluidDyn is first thought to be used specifically for fluid dynamics.

There are other specific Python packages for other subjects, like astronomy (Astropy) and biology (Biopython).