This worked perfectly. Thanks again.
Thomas
On Jun 1, 3:05 pm, "Mike Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Thomas,
>
> The issue comes from Pylab not knowing how to deal with instances of
> Sage's RealNumber class. When you do "4.0" from the command line, it
> gets changed into "RealNumber('4
Hi Thomas,
The issue comes from Pylab not knowing how to deal with instances of
Sage's RealNumber class. When you do "4.0" from the command line, it
gets changed into "RealNumber('4.0')". You can see this with the
following commands:
sage: preparse('4.0')
"RealNumber('4.0')"
In order to get P
Hi folks,
Sorry to bombard the mailing list with questions, I'm starting to use
sage for more and more things lately. I'm trying to get a figure
together for a paper and thought I'd try using the bar() command in
pylab. However, the following code (modeled after an example in
matplotlib) gives an
William Stein wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 8:56 AM, John P. Burkett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> A document at
>> http://modular.math.washington.edu/home/goreckc/sage/logic/bu/%3Cpropcalc.py%3E
>> describes how to use a module for propositional calculus. This involves
>> importing propcalc, b
On Jun 1, 7:03 pm, Mozork <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Mozork,
> Ok, I've downloaded the latest version (3.0.2) and compiled it
> elsewhere than my home directory and it seems to work.
Ok, that is good to know.
> Thanks for the help.
Sure, please let us know if you run into any more trouble.
Ok, I've downloaded the latest version (3.0.2) and compiled it
elsewhere than my home directory and it seems to work.
Thanks for the help.
Mozork
On Jun 1, 5:29 pm, mabshoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
dortmund.de> wrote:
> On Jun 1, 2:32 pm, "John Cremona" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > 2008/6/1 Davi
On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 8:56 AM, John P. Burkett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> A document at
> http://modular.math.washington.edu/home/goreckc/sage/logic/bu/%3Cpropcalc.py%3E
> describes how to use a module for propositional calculus. This involves
> importing propcalc, boolformula, and logicparse
A document at
http://modular.math.washington.edu/home/goreckc/sage/logic/bu/%3Cpropcalc.py%3E
describes how to use a module for propositional calculus. This involves
importing propcalc, boolformula, and logicparser.
In SAGE 3.0.2, when I try importing any of these three, the response is
of the
On Jun 1, 2:32 pm, "John Cremona" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2008/6/1 David Joyner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
>
> > I think John was referring to /home/mozork/.sage/ (which is where some
> > SAGE stuff is
> > saved). I think he suggested deleting it and then starting SAGE.
>
> Yes, that is what
2008/6/1 David Joyner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> I think John was referring to /home/mozork/.sage/ (which is where some
> SAGE stuff is
> saved). I think he suggested deleting it and then starting SAGE.
>
Yes, that is what I meant. The 'dot' must have been invisible,
clearer to give the full path
Alright, I will do that then, might take me a couple of hours
though. ;)
As for the log: I have some webspace, so I'll upload it as soon as
it's compiled again. (I just deleted the sage directory and forgot,
that the install log was located there as well. ;) )
On Jun 1, 2:19 pm, "David Joyner" <[
I think John was referring to /home/mozork/.sage/ (which is where some
SAGE stuff is
saved). I think he suggested deleting it and then starting SAGE.
Just in case there was a corrupted download, can you download sage-3.0.2, and
recompile? I just want to be sure that this is not a 32 bit ubuntu is
I0m not shore this was what you meant, but I've now moved sage to /usr/
bin/sage and I still get the same error.
On Jun 1, 1:44 pm, "John Cremona" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maybe there is some junk in your .sage directory. Try deleting (or
> moving) it before running Sage.
>
> John
>
> 2008/6
Maybe there is some junk in your .sage directory. Try deleting (or
moving) it before running Sage.
John
2008/6/1 David Joyner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 7:23 AM, Mozork <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> I'm jusing ubuntu 8.04 hardy heron, 32bit.
>> What I forgot to mention:
Yes, I mean compile from source.
Both these instructions are, in the respect that I used them,
completely the same.
All I practically did, was installing all the dependencies recommended
in the (apparently outdated) guide, downloading the tarball from
http://modular.math.washington.edu/SAGE/dist/s
On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 7:23 AM, Mozork <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm jusing ubuntu 8.04 hardy heron, 32bit.
> What I forgot to mention: I followed the instructions here to build
> sage: http://www.msri.org/about/computing/docs/sage/inst/node3.html
Those appear to date from 2006! Could you t
I'm jusing ubuntu 8.04 hardy heron, 32bit.
What I forgot to mention: I followed the instructions here to build
sage: http://www.msri.org/about/computing/docs/sage/inst/node3.html
As for GAP, both commands seem to work fine:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/.sage$ ./sage -gp
GP/PARI CALCULAT
Besides Georg's suggestion there is a file in
SAGEHOME/examples/calculus called field_plot2d.sage
which does some very crude DF plotting of 1st order ODEs.
(Designed specifically for teaching purposes.) You need to read it
into SAGE using the attach command, edg
sage: attach "SAGEHOME/examples/ca
I guess you mean hardy heron, ubuntu 8.04, 64bit?
Others are much better than I at deciphering the problem, but it vaguely
looks like you have a problem with the GAP install. Could you please
try
./sage -gp
and then quit SAGE, then try
./sage -gap
please?
On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 5:25 AM, Mo
Hi,
I've built sage (3.0.1) on my ubuntu 8.4 and the build worked just
fine. But whenever I want to use sage, I get an error for every
command I've tried so far.
e.g.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/.sage$ ./sage
--
| SAGE Version 3.0.1, R
Dropped it, as I was having trouble with Virtual PC + XUbuntu. I
switched to VirtualBox. I have documented the problem I encountered
here:
http://dreamlusion.wordpress.com/2008/06/01/ubuntu-804-and-virtual-pc-problems/
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, s
You can use the plot_vector_field command:
# Declare your variables:
var('x t')
# Define you function, for instance:
def f(t,x):
return t*x
# Plot the associated vector field:
plot_vector_field((lambda t, x: 1, f(t,x)), (-1, 1), (-2, 2))
There seems to be something awry, however, compare
p
how can I plot the directional field of ordinary differential
equations?
x'=f(t,x)
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this g
23 matches
Mail list logo