Developer Guidelines The set of developers for Numerical Python is called the Nummies. The chairperson of this group is called the NummieHead. A well-behaved Nummie will: Fix bugs at will, without prior consultation. Add new features only after consultation with other Nummies by using the developer mailing list. You can make a branch in CVS if needed for development. When successful, integrate changes to the main line. Not leave the repository in a state where it won't build, ever. The NummieHead has a veto on adding features. This provision is intended to encourage discussion of the "big picture" and the needs of the diverse customer base. The Nummies control their own membership, and these rules. Protocol: When first met at a International Python Conference, the NummieHead should be greeted with a salute using more than one finger and the cry, "Ni-Ni-Numpy"; the reply is "Num-Num-Ni". The historic roster of NummieHeads is: Paul F. Dubois, January 2000- April 2003 (self-appointed) Todd Miller, May 2003- The history roster of Nummies is: Jim Hugunin wrote the original implementation. Paul F. Dubois was the first Head, took the software to Sorce Forge, and managed the Numeric releases up through 23.0. David Ascher wrote the original document and tutorial. Travis Oliphant has fixed and improved many parts. Charles G. Waldman J. Todd Miller is lead developer on Numarray, and the second Head. Konrad Hinsen did a lot of work on the original design. Jack Jansen kept Numeric working on the Mac. Paul Barrett Jochen Kupper Perry Greenfield is working on Numarray.