Thank you guys, the unicode works in isympy! But now, Is there a way of load the .py file
I tried in the terminal $ isympy Relativity.py > Retativity.txt and didn't work. Thx again, Dox. On Feb 10, 5:21 pm, "Aaron S. Meurer" <[email protected]> wrote: > You need to have a terminal that supports unicode. Try this: run isympy > from ./bin/isympy and see what > > Symbol('nu') > > gives you. If it's the greek letter, then your terminal supports unicode. > Otherwise, it doesn't (or at least sympy can't figure out that it does). > > Aaron Meurer > > On Feb 10, 2011, at 6:36 AM, Dox wrote: > > > > > > > > > Hi everyone! > > > I'm new around here, so excuse if my questions are not that clever :-P > > > I was checking the relativity sheet designed by Ondrej > >https://github.com/sympy/sympy/blob/master/examples/advanced/relativi... > > and when I run it the output doesn't show the Greek letters as it's > > supposed, but I get a lot of (whole strings) `nu` and `lambda` in the > > final text file. > > > Do I need a special package for that? > > > * I've the last version of sympy installed and I'm also a SAGE user. > > * Running Ubuntu 10.10, 32-bits > > * Python 2.6.6. > > > Thx. > > > Dox -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sympy" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sympy?hl=en.
