On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 4:12 PM, Hemanth G wrote:
> In view of your question,you can run any python program using ipcluster.
Yes, exactly. The point I wanted to make is, that from such a Python
program, you can call SageMath as a library, i.e. "sage.all_cmdline
import *". The tricky part might be
Dear Dr.Schilly,
I am not an expert programmer in Python so as to develop my own libraries.
In view of your question,you can run any python program using
ipcluster.This
is nothing but parallel computing toolbox of IPython.For Eg: You have a
program
to run for 100 values, you can split them in four
Hello,
Sorry, I am not able to follow your question. I don't have that much
experience with an ipython cluster, but at least your comment "that
the sage doesn't recognize the engines invoked" leads me to believe,
that you try to run this from within SageMath. What I meant is, that
you write a pyth
Dear Dr.Schilly,
Thank you for the E mail message.The major problem faced here in view multi
engine is where to key in the ipcluster command,
whether on separate terminal / on the same sage terminal with '!' prefix or
on separate sage terminal with '!' prefix?
Further insight to the problem faced
On Thursday, April 28, 2016 at 8:12:16 PM UTC+2, HEMS wrote:
>
> ...like the way we invoke parallel process/engine on IPython.
>
I haven't tried myself, but have you tried using ipython's engine for
sagemath? Ipython is in sagemath and you can install additional packages
via "sage -pip ...".