Le 30/01/2016 22:49, Paul van Gorsel a écrit :
First I ran a 64 bits Linux Mint Debian Edition, unfortunately the
installation of Sage failed. Than I installed a 32 bit version (Linux
Mint 17.3), the same thing happened.
This is my laptop: HP-ProBook-4520s
Linux pgo-HP-ProBook-4520s 3.19.0-32-g
I created an issue for this:
https://github.com/sagemathinc/smc/issues/401
On Sat, Jan 30, 2016 at 6:23 PM, kcrisman wrote:
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>> Can I translate file sagews to sws? Wich way?
>> I need sometimes to work with workheet without internet connection.
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> I think that only sws -> sagews is pos
Can I translate file sagews to sws? Wich way?
> I need sometimes to work with workheet without internet connection.
>
I think that only sws -> sagews is possible. Yes, it is unfortunate that
there isn't a "local" SageMath Cloud yet, though it may be coming (and some
people have been succes
First I ran a 64 bits Linux Mint Debian Edition, unfortunately the
installation of Sage failed. Than I installed a 32 bit version (Linux Mint
17.3), the same thing happened.
This is my laptop: HP-ProBook-4520s
Linux pgo-HP-ProBook-4520s 3.19.0-32-generic #37~14.04.1-Ubuntu SMP Thu Oct
22 09:37
Thank you for that! I didn't know you could bring up the mail list that
way. But that's very promising I think!
On Thursday, January 28, 2016 at 8:06:16 AM UTC-6, slelievre wrote:
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> Le mercredi 27 janvier 2016 05:23:45 UTC+1, saad khalid a écrit :
>>
>> I asked the list and here was the res
Can I translate file sagews to sws? Wich way?
I need sometimes to work with workheet without internet connection.
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Dear Andrzej,
First of all I feel really sorry that some simple examples from your
book are not supported anymore. To prevent such annoying thing in the
future, you could write all the doctests in a file and include them in
the dedicated repository "/tests/" of the Sage source code. Any change
Hello,
in earlier versions of sage this worked:
Omega = Combinations([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], 4)
A1 = Combinations([1], 1)
A2 = Combinations([2, 3, 4, 5, 6], 3)
A = CartesianProduct(A1, A2)
A.cardinality() / Omega.cardinality()
which we used in book for high school students to illustrate basic
pro