You can create GAP scripts, the convention being to call such a script myprogram.g for example and be sure to include the command
quit; as the last line, and with this you can do something like gap < myprogram.g which will allow you to see the script run ( and to see if it got stuck at an error ) or if your sure of the correctness just do gap < myprogram.g > myprogram.out where the .out file has the output. -Tim K. Sent from my iPhone > On Oct 8, 2014, at 7:02 PM, Douglas Wilson <douglaspardoewil...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > I've been using Python, and therefore have > access to Sage, which includes an interface > to GAP. So I can write a Python program > that, via Sage, will let me evaluate an > expression using GAP. > > That seems a very round-about way of > using GAP, and is limited to single > expressions. What I'd really like to do is > run a GAP language program from the > command line. I can pass a saved workspace > to GAP on the command line, which will > be used in the subsequent interactive session, > but that is not the same thing. > > I realize that the GAP is oriented towards > interactive sessions in a workspace, but surely > there are ways around that. For example, > Smalltalk used to be the same way, but > GNU Smalltalk will allow you to specify > a program from the command line, which > it will then run and exit. > > One motive for asking this is straightforward. > For me, hi-tech means making the best use > of the underlying science. Modern computer > hardware uses a lot of technology based on > physics, and is therefore hi-tech. Almost > all modern computer software makes little > use at all of mathematics, and therefore is > actually quite lo-tech, however sophisticated > it may seem to the user. > > The future of software, in my opinion will > inevitably involve more and more use of > mathematics. For that purpose, there should > be a highly mathematical computer > programming language. And behold, > there is: the GAP language. Except > for the ability to create Graphical User > Interfaces, it is functionally complete > and can do anything more ordinary > languages can. That single deficiency > could be remedied easily be interfacing > with a simple windowing system, like Tk, > as Python does. I'm not much interested > in writing GUI programs myself, just > ones to work from the command line. > > My own work is actually quite mathematical, > and I would like to be able to do things > like specifying a group by a presentation, > identifying it, and working with it in the > usual way. But I don't want to do it > interactively, nor do I want to be loading > up saved workspaces all the time. I just > want to use the GAP language like any > other one. > > Perhaps this capability already exists. > If so, I can fine no documentation of it > in the reference manual. Perhaps you > could point me to some. If it doesn't > exist yet, could it be provided somehow? > > dpw > > http://DouglasPardoeWilson.SocialTechnology.ca/ > _______________________________________________ > Forum mailing list > Forum@mail.gap-system.org > http://mail.gap-system.org/mailman/listinfo/forum _______________________________________________ Forum mailing list Forum@mail.gap-system.org http://mail.gap-system.org/mailman/listinfo/forum