Although this is a laudable goal, I think it is important to realize that for many educational situations there is an alternative that is probably adequate: SymPy.
SymPy does not have all the capabilities of Sagemath, but is one of the packages within Sagemath that provides most of the capabilities that are needed in a symbolic math/CAS system for educational purposes in most fields. I think the key is to make the connection between Sagemath and SymPy capabilities obvious. Think of SymPy as a lightweight/introductory version of Sagemath. SymPy can easily be installed on a Raspberry Pi using pip. I have it running on multiple Pi 3B+ and 4Bs. Regards, Jonathan On Friday, July 10, 2020 at 6:01:17 AM UTC-5 jaap... wrote: > > We will never get that space in the official distro, but I plea to make > Sagemath > more available and known on the Raspberry Pi platform. > > There are a lot of computer labs in schools and colleges all running > rasbian. > And users easily link Math and Mathematics to Mathematica. > Try Google Search: math Raspberry Pi of raspberry math > and you will be overwhelmed by Wolfram's Mathematica > > Do a Google Search: raspberry pi sagemath > and you see some pages from the year 2013 and a page of my website. > > The only thing we can do is to try getting Sagemath more visible. > In documentation, on the website and make a binary available. > (William are you here?) > > Jaap Spies > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-devel" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sage-devel+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sage-devel/6ac2f0af-10b3-455c-8d10-65bf964bdc62n%40googlegroups.com.