On Tue, 31 Aug 2010 at 10:13AM -0700, kcrisman wrote:
> It is.  I've also been testing this - you should try out the very
> latest version:
> http://boxen.math.washington.edu/home/iandrus/
> There are still a few things to work out, but what we need are
> *TESTERS* to track down dumb bugs (such as one I found when I tried
> out a previous version).  Try this again with the latest one, and I'm
> sure he can fix it if it breaks still.

I downloaded and started the app. The notebook browser started, and I
clicked on a worksheet -- and got an Internal Server Error. In the logs,
I see this:

Please wait while the Sage Notebook server starts...
2010-09-11 14:06:38+0900 [-] Log opened.
2010-09-11 14:06:38+0900 [-] twistd 9.0.0 (/tmp/sage-mac-app/local/bin/python 
2.6.4) starting up.
2010-09-11 14:06:38+0900 [-] reactor class: 
twisted.internet.selectreactor.SelectReactor.
2010-09-11 14:06:38+0900 [-] twisted.web2.channel.http.HTTPFactory starting on 
8000
2010-09-11 14:06:38+0900 [-] Starting factory 
<twisted.web2.channel.http.HTTPFactory instance at 0x9af2e18>
2010-09-11 14:07:05+0900 [HTTPChannel,6,127.0.0.1] 
/tmp/sage-mac-app/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/Twisted-9.0.0-py2.6-macosx-10.5-i386.egg/twisted/internet/defer.py:262:
 exceptions.DeprecationWarning: Don't pass strings (like 'Bad token') to 
failure.Failure (replacing with a DefaultException).
2010-09-11 14:07:05+0900 [HTTPChannel,6,127.0.0.1] Exception rendering:
2010-09-11 14:07:05+0900 [HTTPChannel,6,127.0.0.1] Unhandled Error
    Traceback (most recent call last):
        Failure: twisted.python.failure.DefaultException: Bad token


In the preferences, when I select "iTermApplescript" (why not just
iTerm?) the drop-down won't close and I can't hit Apply to apply the
changes.

In the "About" box, it says SAGE_VERSION instead of giving a version.

When I closed all the windows related to Sage, it still has this weird
blue bar left in the middle of my screen -- like a text entry box that's
one line high and about 20 characters wide. I can't move it or do
anything with it.

Also, what's with the bundled browser? Any Mac will have Safari, which
is a very nice browser, so why not just use that? Using an
already-installed browser might also make it more clear to people that
the Sage notebook is network-transparent. 

I like the idea behind this version of the OS X Sage application; having
all that basic information in menus is nice, although I'm perhaps not
the best person to test this, since 95% of my Sage use involves opening
a terminal and typing "sage".

Dan

--
---  Dan Drake
-----  http://mathsci.kaist.ac.kr/~drake
-------

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