====== Citing ====== If you are using Capytaine, please cite both following references: Ancellin and Dias (2019), **Capytaine: a Python-based linear potential flow solver**, Journal of Open Source Software, 4(36), 1341, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.01341 Babarit and Delhommeau (2015), **Theoretical and numerical aspects of the open source BEM solver NEMOH**, Proceedings of the 11th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC2015), or in bibtex form: .. code-block:: bib @article{ancellin_capytaine_2019, author = {Matthieu Ancellin and Fr{\'{e}}d{\'{e}}ric Dias}, title = {Capytaine: a {Python-based} linear potential flow solver}, journal = {Journal of Open Source Software}, year = 2019, month = {apr}, volume = {4}, number = {36}, pages = {1341}, doi = {10.21105/joss.01341}, url = {https://doi.org/10.21105%2Fjoss.01341}, } @inproceedings{babarit_theoretical_2015, author = {Babarit, Aur{\'e}lien and Delhommeau, G{\'e}rard}, title = {Theoretical and numerical aspects of the open source {BEM} solver {NEMOH}}, year = {2015}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 11th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC2015)}}, address = {Nantes, France} } To cite the source code itself, you can use the DOI :code:`10.5281/zenodo.1426306`. It represents all versions of Capytaine and always points to the most recent version. If you want to cite a specific version, you can find its own DOI on `Zenodo `_.