On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 2:17 PM, David Joyner wrote:
>
> Finally!!
> The process is over and the new tutorial should be on sale at amazon within
> 15 days. BTW, I think Sage earns a little more of a royalty if the book is
> ordered directly from createspace.com, but not much.
>
> I had to create
> What is the easiest way to move a large number of worksheets (~100) to
> another machine?
>
> Or to ask the question another way, how do you guys make backup copies
> of your work?
I have a subdirectory called "Backups" in my home directory and run
the
following bash shell command (actually, it
I just tried increasing my virtual memory (swap) from 3.048 GB to
6.096 GB and than did not help. I also tried increasing my vmplayer
memory from 512 MB to 788 MB and 1776 MB and this did not fix the
problem. Again, I have a 1.4 GHz with 1 GB of ram on windows XP. I
still have not been able to
Finally!!
The process is over and the new tutorial should be on sale at amazon within
15 days. BTW, I think Sage earns a little more of a royalty if the book is
ordered directly from createspace.com, but not much.
I had to create a cover using the "easy" option, so it is a different looking
book.
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Robert Bradshaw
wrote:
>
sage: G = AlternatingGroup(5)
sage: g = G.random_element()
sage: CCg = Set([x*g*x^(-1) for x in G])
>>>
>>> Thanks for your answer,
>>>
>>> I was thinking more about getting all the conjugacy classes in a list
>>> (or
On Apr 15, 3:34 am, Diravan wrote:
> I need to solve a very simple equation x^2 + 1 = 0 and I don't want
> any complex solutions.
> I tried this
> x = var('x')
> assume(x,'real')
> solve(x^2 + 1 == 0)
> but the output is [x == -1*I, x == I]
> Does exist any solution in order to avoid this ?
T
On Apr 15, 2009, at 8:07 AM, David Joyner wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:54 AM, javier wrote:
>>
>> On Apr 15, 3:26 pm, David Joyner wrote:
>>> I'm not sure what you mean by better way. Is this what you want?
>>>
>>> sage: G = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> sage: g = G.random_element()
>>> sage:
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 11:09 AM, davidloeffler wrote:
>
>> > Well, B[3] is f(q^4) where f is the form that Steve Finch is after.
>> > His form is some linear combination of B[0], B[1] and B[3]. But we
>> > don't have any nice way of identifying the level 4 things as a
>> > subspace of the level
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 11:34 AM, Steve Finch wrote:
>
> Hi William & David,
>
> Thank you for your help! From:
>
> http://magma.maths.usyd.edu.au/magma/htmlhelp/text1447.htm#14693
>
> I see that Magma (to which I do not have access)
> can answer my first question with something like:
>
> Basis(
> > Well, B[3] is f(q^4) where f is the form that Steve Finch is after.
> > His form is some linear combination of B[0], B[1] and B[3]. But we
> > don't have any nice way of identifying the level 4 things as a
> > subspace of the level 16 things; it's more or less just luck that the
> > fourth ech
Hi William & David,
Thank you for your help! From:
http://magma.maths.usyd.edu.au/magma/htmlhelp/text1447.htm#14693
I see that Magma (to which I do not have access)
can answer my first question with something like:
Basis(CuspidalSubspace(HalfIntegralWeightForms(4,9/2)));
and can answer my se
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 11:09 AM, giovanni.marche...@ds.unifi.it
wrote:
>
> Dynamic Sage notebooks are really amazing.
>
> I'm also an R user and I would like very much
> to use sage to create notebooks with statistical examples
> in R . Is this possible?
>
> By the way , I thought it was allowe
Dynamic Sage notebooks are really amazing.
I'm also an R user and I would like very much
to use sage to create notebooks with statistical examples
in R . Is this possible?
By the way , I thought it was allowed to execute
R code within an R notebook.
However I tried to change the interpreter to
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:56 AM, William Stein wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:37 AM, Jose Guzman wrote:
>>
>> William Stein wrote:
>>> 2009/4/15 William Stein :
>>>
2009/4/15 Jose Guzman :
> Hi there
>
> I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartmen
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:37 AM, Jose Guzman wrote:
>
> William Stein wrote:
>> 2009/4/15 William Stein :
>>
>>> 2009/4/15 Jose Guzman :
>>>
Hi there
I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartment models
with sage and I plotted a couple of exponential equat
William Stein wrote:
> 2009/4/15 William Stein :
>
>> 2009/4/15 Jose Guzman :
>>
>>> Hi there
>>>
>>> I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartment models
>>> with sage and I plotted a couple of exponential equations in my notebook.
>>>
>>> Although I got a nice x-axis
2009/4/15 William Stein :
>
>
> 2009/4/15 Jose Guzman :
>>
>> Hi there
>>
>> I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartment models
>> with sage and I plotted a couple of exponential equations in my notebook.
>>
>> Although I got a nice x-axis () and other labels and similar thin
2009/4/15 Jose Guzman :
>
> Hi there
>
> I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartment models
> with sage and I plotted a couple of exponential equations in my notebook.
>
> Although I got a nice x-axis () and other labels and similar things, I
> cannot find a way to plot the y
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 9:01 AM, davidloeffler wrote:
>
> On Apr 15, 4:52 pm, William Stein wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 6:20 AM, Steve Finch wrote:
>>
>> > I suspect that these are simple questions, but need help getting
>> > started. Thank you!
>>
>> > How do I exhibit coefficients of t
On Apr 15, 4:52 pm, William Stein wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 6:20 AM, Steve Finch wrote:
>
> > I suspect that these are simple questions, but need help getting
> > started. Thank you!
>
> > How do I exhibit coefficients of the unique cusp form of weight 9/2,
> > level 4 and trivial charac
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 6:20 AM, Steve Finch wrote:
>
> I suspect that these are simple questions, but need help getting
> started. Thank you!
>
> How do I exhibit coefficients of the unique cusp form of weight 9/2,
> level 4 and trivial character?
> (The coefficients should be 1, -6, 12, -8, 0,
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:54 AM, javier wrote:
>
> On Apr 15, 3:26 pm, David Joyner wrote:
>> I'm not sure what you mean by better way. Is this what you want?
>>
>> sage: G = AlternatingGroup(5)
>> sage: g = G.random_element()
>> sage: CCg = Set([x*g*x^(-1) for x in G])
>
> Thanks for your answ
On Apr 15, 3:26 pm, David Joyner wrote:
> I'm not sure what you mean by better way. Is this what you want?
>
> sage: G = AlternatingGroup(5)
> sage: g = G.random_element()
> sage: CCg = Set([x*g*x^(-1) for x in G])
Thanks for your answer,
I was thinking more about getting all the conjugacy clas
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 10:21 AM, javier wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> just started using SAGE for some research related stuff a couple of
> weeks ago. Is there a way to get the conjugacy classes of a group, in
> the same way as GAP does? I don't quite mean neither
> "conjugacy_classes_subgroups" (whi
Hi there,
just started using SAGE for some research related stuff a couple of
weeks ago. Is there a way to get the conjugacy classes of a group, in
the same way as GAP does? I don't quite mean neither
"conjugacy_classes_subgroups" (which returns conjugacy classes of
subgroups, not of elements) no
I suspect that these are simple questions, but need help getting
started. Thank you!
How do I exhibit coefficients of the unique cusp form of weight 9/2,
level 4 and trivial character?
(The coefficients should be 1, -6, 12, -8, 0, 12, -48, 48, -15, ...)
How do I compute the dimension of the spa
On Apr 15, 2009, at 3:34 AM, Diravan wrote:
>
> I need to solve a very simple equation x^2 + 1 = 0 and I don't want
> any complex solutions.
> I tried this
> x = var('x')
> assume(x,'real')
> solve(x^2 + 1 == 0)
> but the output is [x == -1*I, x == I]
> Does exist any solution in order to avoid t
Hello,
> This would be a great question to ask Guido (inventor of Python)--we
> get it from there.
a similar question is answered in the Python FAQ:
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general/#why-does-python-use-methods-for-some-functionality-e-g-list-index-but-functions-for-other-e-g-len-list
"4.7
I need to solve a very simple equation x^2 + 1 = 0 and I don't want
any complex solutions.
I tried this
x = var('x')
assume(x,'real')
solve(x^2 + 1 == 0)
but the output is [x == -1*I, x == I]
Does exist any solution in order to avoid this ?
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To
On Mar 18, 1:33 pm, William Stein wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 1:22 PM, wrote:
>
> > I am also having a problem running Sage 3.4 on windows XP. Vmware
> > starts up, but when I run the notebook command it flashes the IP
>
> Just out of curiosity, has *anybody* successfully used
> sage-v
Hi there
I am trying to teach some simple principles of single compartment models
with sage and I plotted a couple of exponential equations in my notebook.
Although I got a nice x-axis () and other labels and similar things, I
cannot find a way to plot the y-axis in the vertical axis. Is there
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