On Mar 11, 2009, at 8:57 AM, nsauer wrote:
Thanks for replying;
I start sage by double clicking on the name sage in the finder.
It is in /Applications/sage/
This file sage, in /Applications/sage/ is a Unix Executible File.
Even so, if in the terminal I change the directory to
Thanks again for your help.
The textbook I am teaching linear algebra from prints matrices
with brackets as delimeters. [ ]. Hence when I set a test and
write solutions with LateX I wish to use the same notation for
matrices as used in the text.
But just using the standard way to include
nsauer wrote:
Thanks again for your help.
The textbook I am teaching linear algebra from prints matrices
with brackets as delimeters. [ ]. Hence when I set a test and
write solutions with LateX I wish to use the same notation for
matrices as used in the text.
But just using the standard
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 11:57 AM, Jason Grout
jason-s...@creativetrax.com wrote:
nsauer wrote:
Thanks again for your help.
The textbook I am teaching linear algebra from prints matrices
with brackets as delimeters. [ ]. Hence when I set a test and
write solutions with LateX I wish to use
Thanks for your reply;
As I am completely new to sage I do not know how to
perform the indicated change. I looked at the file
sage/devel/sage/sage/matrix0.pyx
but could not figure out how and where to add
the function sage.matrix.matrix0.set_latex_delimiters('[',']')
Norbert
On Mar 10, 1:34
On Mar 10, 1:00 pm, nsauer nsa...@math.ucalgary.ca wrote:
Thanks for your reply;
As I am completely new to sage I do not know how to
perform the indicated change. I looked at the file
sage/devel/sage/sage/matrix0.pyx
but could not figure out how and where to add
the function
On Mar 10, 12:34 pm, William Stein wst...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 11:57 AM, Jason Grout
[snip]
I agree that this should be an option. Also, the delimiters for vectors
should be an option.
+1.
How about adding a function to matrix0.pyx that sets a global variable
in
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 2:27 PM, John H Palmieri jhpalmier...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 10, 12:34 pm, William Stein wst...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 11:57 AM, Jason Grout
[snip]
I agree that this should be an option. Also, the delimiters for vectors
should be an option.
Thanks for the help. I made the changes
but failed to recompile. Here is what I did:
(test is my home name) where is this sage binary?
Laptop-3:~ test$ sage -b
-bash: sage: command not found
Laptop-3:/ test$ sage -b
-bash: sage: command not found
Laptop-3:sage test$ sage -b
-bash: sage:
How are you starting up Sage? If you're starting up sage via
/path/into/folder/sage
then you'll have to do
/path/into/folder/sage -b
On Mar 10, 2009, at 8:52 PM, nsauer wrote:
Thanks for the help. I made the changes
but failed to recompile. Here is what I did:
(test is my home name)
The terminal opened as follows:
Last login: Sun Mar 8 16:23:08 on console
/Applications/sage/sage ; exit;
You have mail.
Laptop-3:~ test$ /Applications/sage/sage ; exit;
--
| Sage Version 3.2.3, Release Date: 2009-01-05
Thanks for your help, everything works great now.
How do I write matrices inside [ ] instead of ( ) ?
On Mar 9, 7:38 am, kcrisman kcris...@gmail.com wrote:
The terminal opened as follows:
Last login: Sun Mar 8 16:23:08 on console
/Applications/sage/sage ; exit;
You have mail.
On Mar 9, 1:03 pm, nsauer nsa...@math.ucalgary.ca wrote:
Thanks for your help, everything works great now.
Great!
How do I write matrices inside [ ] instead of ( ) ?
I'm not sure - can you be more specific about what command you are
trying, what output you are getting, and what output you
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