[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-10 Thread Rob Beezer
A usable version, with source, is posted at the wiki: http://wiki.sagemath.org/quickref Thanks for all the help, its much improved for the suggestions and extra eyes looking it over. If you ever wanted to become more knowledgeable about one corner of Sage, consider writing a QuickRef. ;-) I p

[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-10 Thread Rob Beezer
When I put a final copy up on the wiki (tonight?) it will include the source. On May 10, 8:05 am, Marshall Hampton wrote: > Fantastic, thanks for distributing this!  Is the latex file available > too? > > -Marshall Hampton > > On May 9, 12:00 am, Rob Beezer wrote: > > > I've put together a quic

[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-10 Thread Marshall Hampton
Fantastic, thanks for distributing this! Is the latex file available too? -Marshall Hampton On May 9, 12:00 am, Rob Beezer wrote: > I've put together a quick reference sheet (two pages) for linear > algebra commands in Sage. I'll do a bit more clean-up on this before > posting a final copy on

[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-09 Thread Rob Beezer
Thanks for the suggestions! Rado - yes, indicating what right/left means would be very helpful. I think in most Sage commands it is where the vector lies, but adding this in will answer that question. Golam - from my PDF viewer, on a laser printer, the blue functions print slightly bolded and i

[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-09 Thread Golam Mortuza Hossain
Hi Rob, On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 2:00 AM, Rob Beezer wrote: > I'd really like to hear about any glaring omissions, or gross > misunderstandings of categories, vector spaces, modules, rings and/or > fields.  Draft copy at > > http://buzzard.ups.edu/sage/quickref-linalg.pdf It looks pretty good! Sp

[sage-devel] Re: Linear Algebra QuickRef

2009-05-08 Thread Rado
This is very useful, I will definately use it. An extended version can have a list of the similar commands in Mathematica,Maple,Matlab (to decrease the anxiety for the new converts). Something like http://www.scipy.org/NumPy_for_Matlab_Users a page I find more useful than the whole numpy manual.