ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software
- Association for Computing Machinery (United States)
- (1975–Present)
- 0
1975–Present
Quarterly
Zhaojun Bai; Wolfgang Bangerth
University of California at Davis; Colorado State University
English
0098-3500
No
-
AI2 Semantic Scholar; AMS MathSciNet; Baidu; Clarivate / ISI: JCR; Clarivate / ISI: SCI; Clarivate / ISI: SCIE; CNKI; DBLP; DeepDyve; DTU (Technical University of Denmark); EBSCO: EDS; EBSCO: HOST; El
ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software (TOMS) documents the theoretical underpinnings of numeric, symbolic, algebraic, and geometric computing applications. It focuses on analysis and construction of algorithms and programs, and the interaction of programs and architecture. Algorithms documented in TOMS are available as the Collected Algorithms of the ACM at calgo.acm.org.
Mathematical software
Yes
Collected Algorithms from ACM (CALGO)
http://calgo.acm.org/
Authors should consult the ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software Editorial Charter to determine the scope of papers for the journal. Contributions must be of one of the following types: Research paper A paper that discusses original research into mathematical software. Where appropriate, reference will be made to publicly available software written by the author and/or by others. The paper should not fall into any of the categories below. Survey paper A paper that summarizes and organizes recent mathematical software research results in a novel way that contributes to advancing research in the field. The paper should have a narrow focus. (Very high standards for effective presentation will be applied.) Algorithm paper A paper that describes the implementation of a particular algorithm in computer software. A machine readable implementation of the algorithm, in the form of a complete, and well-engineered software package, must be included. This software is considered part of the submission. It will be evaluated by referees and, if accepted, published in the Collected Algorithms of the ACM (CALGO). Remark, Certification and Translation papers A Remark is a short communication (possibly including software) regarding a numbered algorithm previously published in CALGO. A Certification paper describes a detailed (usually experimental) analysis of a numbered algorithm previously published in CALGO (usually by a different author); it will normally include the software employed in the certification. A Translation paper includes a translation of a numbered algorithm previously published in CALGO into a different programming language. (This must represent be a substantial undertaking that adds significant value to the original). A machine readable implementation of the translation, in the form of a complete and well-engineered software package, must be included. This software is considered part of the submission. It will be evaluated by referees and, if accepted, published in the CALGO.
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