Could you push me in the right direction? Would Django be a good tool to
accomplish this with?
On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 3:32:53 PM UTC-4, Nils Bruin wrote:
On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 11:28:35 AM UTC-7, Jole Bradbury wrote:
I can't. I've tried compiling sagecell using the instructions posted
On Monday, July 21, 2014 8:56:14 AM UTC-7, Jole Bradbury wrote:
Could you push me in the right direction? Would Django be a good tool to
accomplish this with?
Your top-post makes it a little difficult to determine what with is. Do
you mean communicating with a notebook server? In that case,
I agree that using the notebook is probably a bad idea. Have you tried
using sage's -c flag? according to the command line help -c cmd --
Evaluates cmd as sage code. In addition if you are using python you could
use the subprocess module. I'm thinking something like:
I can't. I've tried compiling sagecell using the instructions posted online
and have gotten countless errors. It appears that it is because I am
running 10.9 not 10.6, but I cannot revert back to 10.6.
On Monday, July 14, 2014 5:54:54 PM UTC-4, P Purkayastha wrote:
You should look at sagecell
On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 11:28:35 AM UTC-7, Jole Bradbury wrote:
I can't. I've tried compiling sagecell using the instructions posted
online and have gotten countless errors. It appears that it is because I am
running 10.9 not 10.6, but I cannot revert back to 10.6.
OSX 10.9 I presume?
I take it this is impossible?
On Saturday, July 12, 2014 5:10:09 PM UTC-4, Jole Bradbury wrote:
Ran
sage: import sagenb.notebook.notebook_object as nb
sage: nb.notebook(directory=mynotebook)
And got the server running, I can log in on localhost.
My problem is that for the past few
You should look at sagecell instead for this kind of thing:
https://sagecell.sagemath.org/
https://github.com/sagemath/sagecell
On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 4:12:14 AM UTC+8, Jole Bradbury wrote:
I take it this is impossible?
On Saturday, July 12, 2014 5:10:09 PM UTC-4, Jole Bradbury wrote: