Thanks for the help Simon,
I was able to build scikit-learn following your instructions however
when I tried to import the module it reported a Scipy error during the
import.
I then reinstalled SciPy thinking there was an error and after
installing SciPy Sage returned the "make" error while importing
sklearn.
I built the original sklearn from my Python 2.6 (32 bit) and it runs
fine outside of Sage. Ifigured that since it was compiled under a 32
bit system if I ran a 32 bit version of Sage i could import the module
directly. Well that didn't work either. So I guess its a problem with
the sklearn package and I'll just have to use it with a different IDE.
At the least I now know how to install a package using the Sage shell
method.
Thanks Again
David


On Jan 2, 12:56 pm, Simon King <simon.k...@uni-jena.de> wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> On 2 Jan., 19:00, DavidG <davidgrudo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I used my default python2.6 which is running in 32 bit architecture to
> > compile  the sklearn module
> > I'm running a 64 bit version of SAGE, hence the incompatability.
>
> No. Sage has its own installation of Python, Maxima, Gap,
> Singular, ... (also known as "Sage comes with batteries included").
> Your default python2.6 is totally irrelevant to Sage.
>
> > Given the error  and instruction to run "Make" first. How can I run
> > make from within sage.
> > Also using the command "sage -sh" from my terminal gives the error:
>
> > $ sage -sh
> > -bash: sage: command not found
>
> Then how do you start a Sage session from the command line?
>
> > opening a sage session and using the sage terminal:
> > cd to the source directory and typing setup results in:
>
> > NameError: name 'setup' is not defined
> > sage:
>
> That is a Sage session, but not a Sage shell.
>
> Let us assume that you installed Sage in the folder ~/SAGE/sage-4.7.2.
> You will find an executable "sage" there.
> If it is not in your path, then just doing "sage" or "sage -sh" will,
> of course, not work and result in a "command not found" error.
>
> But being in that folder, you can start a sage session by ./sage.
> You can start a session of Sage's python by ./sage -python, of Sage's
> Singular by ./sage -singular, and so on.
>
> And if you want to install a package into Sage's python, then you can
> open a Sage shell (by ./sage -sh if you are in the afore-mentioned
> folder, by /path/to/that/folder/sage -sh if you aren't, and by sage -
> sh if sage is in your path), and then you can do all the necessary
> steps to install your package.
>
> Best regards,
> Simon

-- 
To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
sage-support+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sage-support
URL: http://www.sagemath.org

Reply via email to