libprima / prima

PRIMA is a package for solving general nonlinear optimization problems without using derivatives. It provides the reference implementation for Powell's derivative-free optimization methods, i.e., COBYLA, UOBYQA, NEWUOA, BOBYQA, and LINCOA. PRIMA means Reference Implementation for Powell's methods with Modernization and Amelioration, P for Powell.
http://libprima.net
BSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" License
292 stars 36 forks source link

Intel/Windows: Try /Z7 to fix parallel build #75

Closed jschueller closed 10 months ago

github-actions[bot] commented 10 months ago

@check-spelling-bot Report

:red_circle: Please review

See the :open_file_folder: files view, the :scroll:action log or :angel: SARIF report for details.

Unrecognized words (1)

libclang

To accept :heavy_check_mark: these unrecognized words as correct, run the following commands ... in a clone of the [git@github.com:jschueller/prima.git](https://github.com/jschueller/prima.git) repository on the `pdb` branch ([:information_source: how do I use this?]( https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Accepting-Suggestions)): ``` sh curl -s -S -L 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/main/apply.pl' | perl - 'https://github.com/libprima/prima/actions/runs/6206194823/attempts/1' ```
If the flagged items are :exploding_head: false positives If items relate to a ... * binary file (or some other file you wouldn't want to check at all). Please add a file path to the `excludes.txt` file matching the containing file. File paths are Perl 5 Regular Expressions - you can [test]( https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it will match your files. `^` refers to the file's path from the root of the repository, so `^README\.md$` would exclude [README.md]( ../tree/HEAD/README.md) (on whichever branch you're using). * well-formed pattern. If you can write a [pattern](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-patterns) that would match it, try adding it to the `patterns.txt` file. Patterns are Perl 5 Regular Expressions - you can [test]( https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it will match your lines. Note that patterns can't match multiline strings.