I would highly recommend Sublime Text <http://www.sublimetext.com/> – it's a powerful editor, but unlike vim or emacs, if you just want to use it in a completely naïve fashion, you can.
On Mon, May 26, 2014 at 9:58 AM, Ivar Nesje <[email protected]> wrote: > You should probably install a decent text editor, that actually stores > your files as you type them. There are lots of options. > > kl. 15:49:12 UTC+2 mandag 26. mai 2014 skrev Alexander Dubbs følgende: > >> Scratch that, the Julia code works if I copy-paste it into the command >> line, so there must be something about the file types that's messing me up. >> Darned Mac operating system. >> >> On Monday, May 26, 2014 9:21:38 AM UTC-4, Alexander Dubbs wrote: >>> >>> I changed the file type to .txt and it didn't help. If I change the file >>> type to .jl, my text editor changes it back to .rtf whenever I open it. >>> >>> On Thursday, May 22, 2014 3:04:39 PM UTC-4, John Myles White wrote: >>>> >>>> This is probably a problem because you're using an RTF file, which >>>> likely contains mostly garbage rather than the actual code you want to run. >>>> >>>> -- John >>>> >>>> On May 22, 2014, at 12:02 PM, Alexander Dubbs <[email protected]> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>> The following code gives the following error, and I have no idea why. >>>> There are no comprehensions. I write require("loaddataju.ju.rtf"), >>>> which is below, and get the error: >>>> >>>> ERROR: syntax: invalid comprehension syntax >>>> in include at boot.jl:238 >>>> in include_from_node1 at loading.jl:114 >>>> in reload_path at loading.jl:140 >>>> in _require at loading.jl:58 >>>> in require at loading.jl:46 >>>> at /Users/alexdubbs/Dropbox/Kaggle/model6/loaddataju.ju.rtf:12 >>>> >>>> loaddataju.ju.rtf is as follows: >>>> >>>> Xin = cell(23) >>>> n = cell(23) >>>> y = cell(16) >>>> >>>> for i = 1:16 >>>> Xin[i] = readcsv(@sprintf("X%d.txt",i)) >>>> n[i] = int(readcsv(@sprintf("n%d.txt",i))) >>>> y[i] = readcsv(@sprintf("y%d.txt",i)) >>>> @printf("%d ",i) >>>> end >>>> >>>> for i = 17:23 >>>> Xin[i] = readcsv(@sprintf("X%d.txt",i)) >>>> n[i] = int(readcsv(@sprintf("n%d.txt",i))) >>>> @printf("%d ",i) >>>> end >>>> >>>> X = cell(23) >>>> for i = 1:23 >>>> X[i] = reshape(Xin[i],n[i][1],n[i][2],n[i][3]) >>>> end >>>> >>>> >>>> Thanks all. >>>> >>>> AJD >>>> >>>> >>>>
