0.8.0

Released 7 of January 2017.

Contributors

A total of 1 people contributed to this release. People with a “+” by their names contributed a patch for the first time.

  • Nick Papior

Pull requests merged

A total of 0 pull requests were merged for this release.

This release introduces many API changes and a much more stream-lined interface for interacting with sisl.

You are heavily encouraged to update your distribution.

Here is a compressed list of changes:

  • sdata is now an input AND output dependent command. It first reads the input and output files, in a first run, then it determines the options for the given set of files. Secondly, the sdata command uses “position dependent” options. This means that changing the order of options may change the output.

  • tbtncSile

    • Correct vector currents (for xsf files)

    • bug-fix for Gamma-only calculations

    • returned DOS is now correctly in 1/eV (older versions returned 1/Ry)

    • fixed sdata atomic[orbital] ranges such that, e.g. –atom [1-2][3-5] (for atom 1 and 2 and only orbitals 3, 4 and 5 on those atoms.)

    • DOS queries now has an extra argument (E) which returns only for the given energy.

    • When storing tables in sdata this now adds information regarding each column at the top (instead of at the bottom). Furthermore, the information is more descriptive

  • Changed all square named arguments to orthogonal

  • Added nsc field to xyz files (to retain number of supercells)

  • Added move function for geometry (same as translate)

  • Added prepend function, equivalent to append, but adding the atoms in the beginning instead of the end

  • Fixed many bugs related to the use of Python-ranges (as opposed to numpy ranges)

  • SparseCSR now enables operations:

    a = SparseCSR(…) a = a * 2 + 2

    is now viable. This enables easy scaling, translation etc. using the sparse matrix format (very handy for magnetic fields).

  • Enabled del for SparseCSR, i.e. del SparseCSR(..)[0, 1] will remove the element, completely.

  • Enabled reading of the TSHS file from SIESTA 4.1, now we may easily interact with SIESTA.

  • Moved version.py to info.py

  • Moved scripts to entry_points, this makes scripts intrinsic in the module and one may import and use the commands as their command-line equivalents.

  • Hamiltonian.construct now takes a single argument which is the function for the inner loop. The old behaviour may be achieved by doing either:

    >>> func = Hamiltonian.create_construct(R, param)
    >>> Hamiltonian.construct(func)
    

    or

    >>> Hamiltonian.construct((R, param))
    
  • The atoms contained in the Geometry are now not duplicated in case of many similar Atom objects. This should reduce overhead and increase throughput. However, the efficiency is not optimal yet.

  • Added many more tests, thus further stabilizing sisl

    I would really like help with creating more tests! Please help if you can!