饕餮:A curated collection of resources for astrophysical research
“The taotie is a motif commonly found on Chinese ritual bronze vessels from the Shang and Zhou dynasty…In ancient Chinese mythology like “Classic of Mountains and Seas”, the “taotie” (饕餮) is one of the “four evil creatures of the world”…a greedy and gluttonous son of the Jinyun clan, who lived during the time of the legendary Yellow Emperor.” - Wikipedia
“缙云氏有不才子,贪于饮食,冒于货贿,天下谓之饕餮” - 《吕氏春秋·先识》
taotie
(饕餮) refers to a greedy and gluttonous monster in ancient Chinese myth. It is indeed very greedy and over-ambitious to collect all useful resources for astrophysics and cosmology.taotie
is to become a curated list of resources for astronomy and astrophysics maintained by the community. Just like many other awesome
lists available on GitHub
. We hope taotie
can become the first stop for new student or researcher in astronomy to seek for practical guidance and experience. And taotie
can also be a handy and organized “bookmark” for researchers in different fields.taotie
, especially for research fields outside my personal comfort zone. Any help will be highly appreciated!taotie
(饕餮)taotie
on this websitetaotie
is available on both GitHub
and GitLab
. And you can also find taotie
using this addressGithub
link below is not available, please replace github
with gitlab
and try again. Please let me know if you have trouble accessing both sites.The main language for taotie
is English. Some of the important documents will be slowly translated into Chinese.
Python
, which is the most popular programming language in astrophysics (for now).
Julia
programming languageContribution from the community is highly welcomed! Please feel free to fork the repo and make you own change. If you want your modifications be included in this repo, please submit a pull request (and make sure to describe the changes you made).
And if you notice anything wrong with the current content (wrong or unavailable link for example), please raise an issue.
Also, if your repo or project is included here and you are not comfortable with that, just let me know.
Copyright 2019 Song Huang and contributors.
taotie
is under the MIT License. For details see the LICENSE file.