Skip to content
View adtzlr's full-sized avatar
πŸ“
You'll never know when the idea kicks in.
πŸ“
You'll never know when the idea kicks in.

Highlights

  • Pro

Block or report adtzlr

Block user

Prevent this user from interacting with your repositories and sending you notifications. Learn more about blocking users.

You must be logged in to block users.

Please don't include any personal information such as legal names or email addresses. Maximum 100 characters, markdown supported. This note will be visible to only you.
Report abuse

Contact GitHub support about this user’s behavior. Learn more about reporting abuse.

Report abuse
adtzlr/README.md

Hi there πŸ–οΈ,

this is Andreas, a mechanical engineer graduated from Graz University of Technology, based in πŸ°β›°οΈ Graz, Austria πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ή. In my free time, I like running πŸƒβ€, skiing ⛷️ and snowboarding πŸ‚ while I also enjoy family times at home πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦.

GitHub stats

Currently, I'm an engineer in industry (during the day) and a PhD student at Graz University of Technology at the Institute of Structural Durability and Railway Technology (well, at night... πŸ“š πŸ•―οΈ). All the tools related to my scientific work are available here on my GitHub profile.

sparsity-pattern

I'm the author of πŸ” FElupe, an open-source finite element analysis package focussing on the formulation and numerical solution of nonlinear problems in continuum mechanics of solid bodies. Most of the open source finite element packages I found are either super-difficult to install, needs to be compiled or are great but slow (or at least too slow for my needs).

With FElupe, I try to fill a gap in between.

I'm convinced that static input files πŸ–¨οΈ which are passed to a standalone fea solver πŸ–© are a thing of the last decades πŸ’Ύ. Instead, scripts are input files: easy to adopt scripts with access to third-party libraries πŸ›’, written in common scripting languages are the way to go. With common languages I mean something easy-to-learn for engineers, like Python, Matlab/Octave or Julia, not another proprietary simulation file format. FElupe is just another one of many open-source finite element analysis packages using this approach. Well defined and public available scripting interfaces hopefully accelerate the introduction of flexible natural language-processing for simulations.

Projects

Python Fortran Julia PyPI Markdown Jupyter GitHub Pages PyTorch Codecov LaTeX

Star History Chart

Code Snippets

Pinned Loading

  1. matadi matadi Public

    Material Definition with Automatic Differentiation

    Python 22 2

  2. felupe felupe Public

    πŸ” finite element analysis for continuum mechanics of solid bodies

    Python 82 11

  3. tensortrax tensortrax Public

    Differentiable Tensors based on NumPy Arrays

    Python 8

  4. contique contique Public

    Numeric continuation of equilibrium equations

    Python 5 2

  5. ttb ttb Public

    Tensor Toolbox for Modern Fortran

    Fortran 99 31

  6. trusspy trusspy Public

    Nonlinear Truss Solver for Python

    Python 53 11