Sadly, I get the following response from 
include("C:\\Users\\JHerron\\My_Documents\\My_Documents/Personal\\DFS/NHL\\Julia/code_for_Github.jl")

*ERROR: could not copen file 
C:\Users\JHerron\My_Documents\My_Documents\Personal\DFS\NHL\Julia\code_for_github.jl*
*in include at boot.jl:261*
*in include_from_node1 at loading.jl:320*

On Friday, August 19, 2016 at 4:49:16 PM UTC-4, Jeffrey Sarnoff wrote:
>
> the "i" in include should be lower case
>
> On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 3:17 PM, Pigskin Ablanket <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> I tried Include("C:Users\\JHerron\\My_Documents\\My_Documents/
>> Personal\\DFS/NHL\\Julia/code_for_Github.jl")
>> (I hope that was what you meant to do).
>>
>> I got: *ERROR: UndefVarError: Include not defined*
>>
>> On Friday, August 19, 2016 at 1:58:30 PM UTC-4, Steven G. Johnson wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Friday, August 19, 2016 at 1:47:59 PM UTC-4, Pigskin Ablanket wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Sorry if Im not following - I tried:
>>>>
>>>> Include("C:\Users\JHerron\My_Documents\My_Documents/
>>>> Personal\DFS/NHL\Julia/code_for_Github.jl") aas shown below and got 
>>>> *ERROR: 
>>>> syntax: invalid escape sequence*
>>>>
>>>
>>> Backslashes have to be escsped in strings, like in many computer 
>>> languages: change \ to \\ in the string.
>>>
>>> However, usually it is better to just run Julia from within the path 
>>> that you want rather than having to type absolute paths all of the time in 
>>> the REPL.
>>>
>>> (In the long run, you usually do large-scale code development in a 
>>> module in the standard module search path, so you can just type "using 
>>> Foo".)
>>>
>>> (If you call include("foo.jl") from another file bar.jl, the path of 
>>> foo.jl is automatically relative to the path of bar.jl, so again you 
>>> neither need nor want absolute paths.)
>>>
>>> For interactive code development where I need more than a few lines of 
>>> code, I usually use a Jupyter notebook (google "IJulia").
>>>
>>
>

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