The Xanadu Quantum Codebook is now known as the PennyLane Quantum Codebook and is hosted in the PennyLane website. Not all modules are yet published in this new version of the codebook, but they will all be available soon.
The Xanadu Quantum Codebook is an experimental, exercise-based introduction to quantum computing using PennyLane. This repository contains all the source text and coding challenge templates in the Codebook; the Codebook itself is available at codebook.xanadu.ai.
The Codebook is currently in the beta stage of development. If you find an error in the Codebook, something is not working as expected, or have other technical feedback, please open an issue in this repository.
If you are stuck on a coding exercise, or have questions about the content and material, please post a question on the PennyLane discussion forum under the "Codebook" category.
The Xanadu Quantum Codebook was written, developed, and reviewed by members of the Xanadu team. The current contents are the work of the following people:
Catalina Albornoz, Guillermo Alonso, Mikhail Andrenkov, Priya Angara*, Ali Asadi, Álvaro Ballon, Sanchit Bapat, Isaac De Vlugt, Olivia Di Matteo, Paul Finlay, Alberto Fumagalli, Andrew Gardhouse, Natalie Girard, Ant Hayes, Josh Izaac, Rafal Janik, Timjan Kalajdzievski, Nathan Killoran, Jay Soni, David Wakeham**.
(Funding support for our student authors was provided by the *Quantum Algorithms Institute and the **Mitacs Accelerate program.)
If you would like to acknowledge the Codebook in your work, please use the following format:
C. Albornoz, G. Alonso, M. Andrenkov, P. Angara, A. Asadi, A. Ballon, S. Bapat, I. De Vlugt, O. Di Matteo, P. Finlay, A. Fumagalli, A. Gardhouse, N. Girard, A. Hayes, J. Izaac, T. Kalajdzievski, N. Killoran, J. Soni, D. Wakeham. (2021) Xanadu Quantum Codebook.