Also at the sprints, Mateusz worked on an extension for our Sphinx docs that puts a SymPy Live console right in the docs. You can then click on “evaluate” next to any of the code examples, and it will run it in SymPy live. And of course, you can then edit it and play around with it. He already had a working version of this by the end of the sprints (with a few bugs still), but I don’t think he has pushed it to GitHub yet. I think this is going to be a landmark change for our documentation. SymPy Live runs on the App Engine, so this approach can be applied to any library that can run in pure Python 2.5, and I think a lot of such projects are going to be jealous this and want to start using it, because it’s very impressive and useful.

We also had a couple of people from the conference come to our table and work on SymPy. These were people who were new to SymPy, and I think attended our tutorial. One of them, Emma Hogan, worked a little bit on improving our documentation, and has submitted a pull request.