The error message says it can't find GCC. I know it is installed because I have
also installed pari library from source. What can be the reason? The error
message says somewhere that GCC is a directory and it prints the GCC directory
*within* the sage directory tree. Could this be the reason? I
Dears,
Is there any fucntion to calculate the Degree of Regularity of Quadratic
Semi-Regular Determined Polynomial Systems in SAGE. (Looking for that, I
found only for overdetermined systems the
method degree_of_semi_regularity())
thanks by your attention
--
Distro
lsb_release -a
LSB Version:core-5.0-amd64:core-5.0-noarch
Distributor ID:SUSE LINUX
Description:openSUSE Leap 42.1 (x86_64)
Release:42.1
Codename:n/a
Kernel
uname -rsm
Linux 4.1.20-11-default x86_64
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3610QM CPU @ 2.30GHz
Sage version
sage:
unfortunately the only easy way out would be to build Sage from source
(which is not hard, and would be done overnight even on rather old
machines...)
On Friday, May 13, 2016 at 9:42:22 AM UTC+1, Venkataraman S wrote:
>
> I have installed *binary version* *of sage-7.1* on my machine running
Hello,
The very same problem occurs with the Ubuntu ppa
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sage-devel/gcc/sage-devel/D9bnqyrmF40/9qYqeqY7BAAJ
But sadly, there is no answer to my report...
Vincent
On 13/05/16 00:25, Venkataraman S wrote:
I have installed *binary version* *of
I have installed *binary version* *of sage-7.1* on my machine running *32
bit version of Debian Wheezy*.
I tried to install the sage-mode for emacs with the command
sage -i sage_mode
The command failed with the following output:
@@beginning of sage output@@
gcc: error: