: Jean-Philippe Chancelier, François Delebecque, Claude Gomez, Maurice Goursat, Ramine Nikoukhah, and Serge Steer.
The "Scilab Group" refers to the original six researchers who transformed the earlier software, , into Scilab in the early 1990s:
: Descriptions of data types including hypermatrices , boolean variables, and rational numbers. Modern Access and Documentation SCILAB REFERENCE MANUAL Scilab Group
: Detailed documentation on functions like coeff for matrix polynomials, ceil for rounding, and clear for variable management.
While the original group’s manual remains a historical touchstone, modern users primarily utilize the system, which evolved from these early documents: While the original group’s manual remains a historical
: Guidance on solving linear algebra problems, differential equations, and signal processing.
: In 1994, the group released Scilab 1.1 as free software, a pivotal moment that established it as a viable open-source alternative to proprietary software like MATLAB. Core Manual Content modern users primarily utilize the system
: Developed primarily at the French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control ( INRIA ) and the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées ( ENPC ).