Removed references to the user guide.

Manually cherry-picked from 85dc468f74.
time-shift
Stéphane Adjemian (Charybdis) 2019-02-17 18:32:06 +01:00
parent 840368cbee
commit f2137c5d2e
Signed by untrusted user who does not match committer: stepan
GPG Key ID: A6D44CB9C64CE77B
2 changed files with 9 additions and 11 deletions

View File

@ -51,7 +51,6 @@ Bibliography
* Laffargue, Jean-Pierre (1990): “Résolution dun modèle macroéconomique avec anticipations rationnelles”, *Annales dÉconomie et Statistique*, 17, 97119.
* Liu, Jane and Mike West (2001): “Combined parameter and state estimation in simulation-based filtering”, in *Sequential Monte Carlo Methods in Practice*, Eds. Doucet, Freitas and Gordon, Springer Verlag.
* Lubik, Thomas and Frank Schorfheide (2007): “Do Central Banks Respond to Exchange Rate Movements? A Structural Investigation,” *Journal of Monetary Economics*, 54(4), 10691087.
* Mancini-Griffoli, Tommaso (2007): “Dynare User Guide: An introduction to the solution and estimation of DSGE models”.
* Murray, Lawrence M., Emlyn M. Jones and John Parslow (2013): “On Disturbance State-Space Models and the Particle Marginal Metropolis-Hastings Sampler”, *SIAM/ASA Journal on Uncertainty Quantification*, 1, 494521.
* Pearlman, Joseph, David Currie, and Paul Levine (1986): “Rational expectations models with partial information,” *Economic Modelling*, 3(2), 90105.
* Planas, Christophe, Marco Ratto and Alessandro Rossi (2015): “Slice sampling in Bayesian estimation of DSGE models”.

View File

@ -50,16 +50,15 @@ be used for both non-profit and for-profit purposes. Most of the
source files are covered by the GNU General Public Licence (GPL)
version 3 or later (there are some exceptions to this, see the file
license.txt in Dynare distribution). It is available for the Windows,
macOS, and Linux platforms and is fully documented through a user
guide and a reference manual. Part of Dynare is programmed in C++,
while the rest is written using the `MATLAB`_ programming
language. The latter implies that commercially-available MATLAB
software is required in order to run Dynare. However, as an
alternative to MATLAB, Dynare is also able to run on top of `GNU
Octave`_ (basically a free clone of MATLAB): this possibility is
particularly interesting for students or institutions who cannot
afford, or do not want to pay for, MATLAB and are willing to bear the
concomitant performance loss.
macOS, and Linux platforms and is fully documented through a reference
manual. Part of Dynare is programmed in C++, while the rest is written
using the `MATLAB`_ programming language. The latter implies that
commercially-available MATLAB software is required in order to run
Dynare. However, as an alternative to MATLAB, Dynare is also able to
run on top of `GNU Octave`_ (basically a free clone of MATLAB): this
possibility is particularly interesting for students or institutions
who cannot afford, or do not want to pay for, MATLAB and are willing
to bear the concomitant performance loss.
The development of Dynare is mainly done at `CEPREMAP`_ by a core team
of researchers who devote part of their time to software