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write iminuit JOSS paper #309

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HDembinski opened this issue Sep 11, 2018 · 7 comments
Open

write iminuit JOSS paper #309

HDembinski opened this issue Sep 11, 2018 · 7 comments
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@HDembinski
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@cdeil Could you remind me where I can find the paper template that you showed me a while ago?

@HDembinski HDembinski self-assigned this Sep 11, 2018
@HDembinski HDembinski added this to the 1.4 milestone Sep 11, 2018
@cdeil
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cdeil commented Sep 11, 2018

It's here: hipspy/hips#125

@HDembinski
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Thanks!

@cdeil
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cdeil commented May 5, 2019

@HDembinski - do you have time / interest to write a short article for iminuit?

I think it would be very valuable to have, both for users and for us, to have a 1-2 page summary description with references that can be cited.

@HDembinski HDembinski modified the milestones: 1.4, 2.0 Nov 13, 2020
@HDembinski HDembinski modified the milestones: 2.0, 2.1 Nov 24, 2020
@matthewfeickert
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Having just recently finished this for pyhf I would encourage submitting to JOSS (when you are able to carve out the time as it does take a bit). It would be excellent to see more of the Scikit-HEP projects get their own JOSS papers and DOIs and iminuit is such a widely used library across physics it would be super addition IMO. 👍

@eduardo-rodrigues
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Congrats on that, @matthewfeickert! Yes, cannot agree more with you.

How much effort was that in the end, say in terms of work-days? JOSS advertises that you can get things prepared in 1h for submission but guess the real piece of work comes afterwards ... Thanks.

@matthewfeickert
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How much effort was that in the end, say in terms of work-days? JOSS advertises that you can get things prepared in 1h for submission but guess the real piece of work comes afterwards ... Thanks.

I think this is highly variable, but JOSS is taking steps to improve the documentation for both submitters and for reviewers. Right now I think things are taking longer in general because of the pandemic and because the review teams are stretched a bit thin.

In terms of just only running the clock while actively writing the paper, responding to requests for clarification and changes in pre-review, interacting with the review team in review, making changes and responding to the reviewers, and the final back and forth with editor and editor in chief I think you're looking at probably under 10 hours. But I think this depends a lot on the communication between the review team and you, and the review may take a few weeks.

Overall I'd say it is worth it.

@eduardo-rodrigues
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Thanks very much @matthewfeickert, that's super useful to know.

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