Victor,
But I’m still not finishing the cmake.
>
> So there is a ton of
> ...
> What do those mean? Are they fatal or is that only cmake discovering
> what’s available and what not?
>
No, these are not fatal. We just check for the dependencies to enable.
Again, what is the full output when runni
Hi,
I'm attempting to apply a displacement boundary condition on a surface in
my problem. However, I would like the direction of the displacement of
each point on the surface to depend on its direction from some point (for
example the origin). Imagine a balloon inflating where the displacemen
On Sep 30, 2019, at 5:29 PM, Marc Fehling
mailto:m.fehl...@fz-juelich.de>> wrote:
DDEAL_II_HAVE_FLAG_Wimplicit_fallthrough=0
Hm. Turns out I had an explicit c++14 in my compiler specification. At least
now I don’t get that fallthrough message anymore.
But I’m still not finishing the cmake.
Hello,
It depends of the value of the Reynolds number and the gradients of K with
respect to x or t, but generally the last two terms do not generally pose
problems. The first additional term to the right leads to a mass matrix,
which is well conditioned.
The second term itself is trickier. If
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 11:01:45 PM UTC+2, Victor Eijkhout wrote:
>
>
>
> On Sep 30, 2019, at 3:23 PM, Marc Fehling > wrote:
>
> Victor, have you tried disabling C++17 support? Maybe that'll do the
> trick...
>
>
> cmake option please?
>
> (is there a list of all cmake options for your
On Friday, September 27, 2019 at 11:24:12 PM UTC+2, Wolfgang Bangerth wrote:
>
> Didn't we recently merge a patch where ICC reported that it understands
> C++17, but doesn't in fact support this attribute? Does that ring a bell
> for anyone?
>
Intel published a list of all C++17 features tha
Thank you, Denis. I use a pretty stupid (but simple) workaround: I setup
and compile deal.ii myself since all dependencies are compiled and use the
cmake command used by spack. That works. And I do not get the serialization
error.
However, now my code runs on the machine I installed it on. But