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Mike Meredith
“For this is the will of my Father, that everyone who looks on the Son and
believes in him should have eter
you would like to contribute some material
it would be appreciated.
Good luck with it!
Mike
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rated with
the translated versions.
If you want to communicate directly with me:
mosulli...@mail.sdsu.edu
Cheers
Mike
On Friday, October 26, 2012 1:14:34 PM UTC-7, Raniere Gaia Silva wrote:
>
> Hi Mike,
> I like very much of your tutorial.
>
> IMHO, will be great replace '
Hi Vladimir
We now have a version that, although incomplete, is ready for
further development. Please let me know if you are still interested
in translating it, and whether you need anything from our end.
Mike
On Monday, August 8, 2011 8:25:02 AM UTC-7, v_...@ukr.net wrote:
>
>
technical savvy.
We would welcome any suggestions.
Could someone update the previous version on the Sage website?
Thanks to those who commented previously.
Please dive in if you'd like to improve it.
Mike
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in another language such as Ruby or Python.
Mike Gage
https://webwork.maa.org/wiki
On May 21, 1:23 am, MišoLietavec wrote:
> Hi, Raniere,
>
> 2012/5/20 Raniere Gaia Silva :
>
> > Hi,
>
> > I was searching for a easily and quickly way to make math tests/exercises
I would certainly like sage to follow Magma's style.
As you say it is really well thought at out, and clear.
Thanks for doing the little fix.
My problem with addition table seems to have evaporated.
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I am using sage in a graduate algebra class, and would like to expand
to
other courses. I've found a few things that are incomplete,
inconsistent or
that would be confusing to students and realized it might be good to
organize and
catalogue them for sage developers, to give a user/teacher's
perspe
't already, you might like to look at STACK to see if it
meets your needs.
Take care,
Mike
On Feb 24, 4:26 pm, ataylor wrote:
> Hi Mike,
>
> I have a WeBWork account at the MAA, am part of the wiki and get
> announcements/etc, and used WeBWork in one of my courses this past
>
Duh.
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~mosulliv/Courses/sdsu-sage-tutorial/about.html
I'll find a better home for it later.
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this month. We'd love to have comments, contributions etc. License
is Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
Mike
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ry
> text between calculations that now using the html command appears
> twice.
Have you tried using text cells? Try shift-clicking the blue line in
the worksheet, and you'll get a input box where you can add
explanatory text without using an input cell.
--Mike
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Hi Minh,
Thanks for all the great suggestions. We will keep adding content
and
set up the version control etc.
Mike
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To u
It's very much a work in progress. Those "missing links" are just
placeholders
waiting for us to add content. We couldnt figure out how to do some
of the things
we wanted to include (e.g. Products of Rings, Homomorphisms of Rings)
so we are leaving them till later.
Mike
On O
question: if others would like to contribute, how best to manage
the growth?
Mike O'Sullivan
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that is zero but not Sage cannot prove that it is zero.
--Mike
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sagenb.org/home/pub/2346/
is titled "Adding Pictures and Screenshots" and is a tutorial for
people
wanting to add images to their worksheets.
Mike May, S.J.
Saint Louis University
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To
;ve done em all, and there's a lot to be said in favor of each such
experience!
I plan to test and get comments from them, their friends and teachers.
Mike
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bcde'), 3).list()
[['a', 'b', 'c'], ['a', 'b', 'd'], ['a', 'b', 'e'], ['a', 'c', 'd'],
['a', 'c', 'e'], ['a', 'd', 'e']
On Mar 9, 5:44 am, Harald Schilly wrote:
> On Mar 9, 12:57 am, Mike OS wrote:
>
> > -Reduce the number of functions that appear on tab completion.
> > For a permutation
> > group there are 122 completions. Perhaps 20-40 are within the
> > vocabulary of an
I have some funding from my university to develop
materials in SAGE for use in my classes. I've hired
two sharp students, one with a good deal of programming experience,
to work on the project. I have two inter-related goals
1. Help to make SAGE more accessible to students:
Develop tutorials, m
It did work, thanks for the extra explanation. When Dave said "range"
I thought it was just because my example numbers were sequential. I
wasn't thinking that the i was referring to the position in the list.
Thanks again, it's always nice to have a couple different ways to do
the same thing.
--~--
Thanks guys, the zip solution worked perfectly. I never thought about
trying that. I'm sure the range solution would of worked too for my
example, but in my real problem the "x" list was the result of an
arctan function, so no real simple pattern the range function could
handle. Thanks again
--~--
Hi, I have a quick question. I'm fairly new to python and sage, and am
attempting to learn it to use in my engineering classes. My problem is
that I have 2 lists
x = [1, 2, 3]
y = [4, 5, 6]
and I would like to use them both in the same function to give me a
third list. Something to the effect of:
want to run on all
these machines? At the moment, unless you have something specific in
mind where it makes sense to use a distributed solution, it is
probably faster to do it on a single machine.
--Mike
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esktop machine. It has 2GB of RAM allocated, 10GB of swap, and 4
2.6GHZ Xeon cores.
--Mike
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4) Was the chess scene in Yi Qiang's demo of dSage (http://
> www.msri.org/communications/vmath/VMathVideos/VideoInfo/2988/show_video)
> made using tachyon or povray?
It was made using POVray using the DistributedPOVRay class in Sage.
Sage can make use of povray if it is installed, bu
not have to use the IP address.
--Mike
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gt; connect to a single server.
>
> Wow, thanx Mike for all that info! You've got the ball rolling for sure.
> So, what you have detailed is for running on a single multicore PC? I have
> 25 dualcores, how do I set up a cluster using all 50 cores if I needed them?
You just need
)
2
Finally, you'll see something like
sage: test.done
True
Once test.done is True, then you can get the result which we have
stored in test.result:
sage: test.result
15
If one were doing this on a cluster, you'd start workers on each of
the machines in the cluster and then h
omeone
access to a notebook server is basically the same as giving them shell
account access.
--Mike
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elopers are mathematicians interested in exactly
those areas that I mentioned above including William Stein (who I'm
guessing is the one you saw give a lecture).
--Mike
On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 4:26 PM, miner_tom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Last night I became aware of
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