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QuantLib: the free/open-source library for quantitative finance

The QuantLib project (http://quantlib.org) is aimed at providing a comprehensive software framework for quantitative finance. QuantLib is a free/open-source library for modeling, trading, and risk management in real-life.

QuantLib is Non-Copylefted Free Software and OSI Certified Open Source Software.

Download and usage

QuantLib can be downloaded from http://quantlib.org/download.shtml; installation instructions are available at http://quantlib.org/install.shtml for most platforms.

Documentation for the usage and the design of the QuantLib library is available from http://quantlib.org/docs.shtml.

A list of changes for each past versions of the library can be browsed at http://quantlib.org/reference/history.html.

Questions and feedback

Bugs can be reported as a GitHub issue at https://github.com/lballabio/QuantLib/issues; if you have a patch available, you can open a pull request instead (see "Contributing" below).

You can also use the quantlib-users and quantlib-dev mailing lists for feedback, questions, etc. More information and instructions for subscribing are at http://quantlib.org/mailinglists.shtml.

Contributing

The easiest way to contribute is through pull requests on GitHub. Get a GitHub account if you don't have it already and clone the repository at https://github.com/lballabio/QuantLib with the "Fork" button in the top right corner of the page. Check out your clone to your machine, code away, push your changes to your clone and submit a pull request; instructions are available at https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo. (In case you need them, more detailed instructions for creating pull requests are at https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests, and a basic guide to GitHub is at https://guides.github.com/activities/hello-world/.

It's likely that we won't merge your code right away, and we'll ask for some changes instead. Don't be discouraged! That's normal; the library is complex, and thus it might take some time to become familiar with it and to use it in an idiomatic way.

We're looking forward to your contributions.