I tried the Octave equivalent, "disp(5+5)" but it does not work. If it did
work, it would still not be ideal because this notebook is introductory
lecture and I prefer to minimize extraneous code.


On 31 October 2015 at 22:14, Cedric St-Jean <[email protected]> wrote:

> Does
>
> display(5+5)
> display(5+6)
> display(5+7)
>
> work for you? I find it useful for displaying multiple plots/images.
>
> On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:57:01 PM UTC-4, Daniel Carrera wrote:
>>
>> I apologize for asking a non-Julia question here, but for the life of me
>> I cannot figure out how to contact the people working on Jupyter so I can
>> ask them a question:
>>
>> http://jupyter.org/index.html
>>
>> I know that some Julia people are involved in Jupyter, so I hope somebody
>> here knows. I am feeling a bit frustrated right now. You would think that
>> they would have a visible link somewhere that told you how you can contact
>> them. You would imagine that they would have a mailing list, or an IRC
>> channel. I'm guessing that they probably do. But I just cannot find that
>> information on their website, and I REALLY tried to find it.
>>
>> Does anyone know how I can ask a question to the Jupyter people? I just
>> want to ask them how I can have multiple lines of output from the same
>> cell. Back when it was called IPython you used to be able to write a single
>> cell with several instructions, like:
>>
>> -----
>> 5+5
>> 5+6
>> 5+7
>> -----
>>
>> All that in the same cell. And then output would be 10, 11, 12 (all in
>> different lines). Now I only get "12" -- the last line of output.
>>
>> So I am trying to find the Jupyter users mailing list, or IRC channel, or
>> whatever they use so I can ask my question. I would be grateful for any
>> pointers.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Daniel.
>>
>

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