Thank you so much for your reply. I am still not very clear about what to 
do. Could you explain to me again? 
On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 2:48:40 PM UTC-5, Christopher Alexander 
wrote:
>
> No, you can call files using "include", but you are only going to 
> import essentially the functions, types, and global variables defined in 
> those files (you should not include a file inside of a function).  You do 
> see though how your variable "c" in "test" would not be accessible anywhere 
> else, right?
>
> Chris
>
> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 3:39:10 PM UTC-4, new to Julia wrote:
>>
>> Thanks for your reply. Does it mean that calling files in Julia is 
>> impossible? 
>>
>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 1:57:16 PM UTC-5, Christopher Alexander 
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> How is test2 supposed to know what "c" is?  It is only defined inside 
>>> the scope of the function "test", so it won't be accessible anywhere else.
>>>
>>> Chris
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 2:41:29 PM UTC-4, new to Julia wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I have a question for calling files in Julia:
>>>>
>>>> I have two jl files. And I can call one file from the other file. 
>>>> However, the variable or constant defined in that file cannot be used in 
>>>> the other file. I am wondering that how to fix this? The following is a 
>>>> simple example. 
>>>>
>>>> function test(x)
>>>>   c=2;
>>>>   y1=6*x;
>>>>   y2=x/5;
>>>>   y1,y2
>>>> end
>>>> pwd()
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ## test and test2 are used for calling functions in Julia
>>>> function test2(x)
>>>>   include("test.jl")
>>>>   yold,ynew=test(x/c);
>>>>   y3=yold+10;
>>>>   y4=ynew-10;
>>>>   yold2,ynew2=test(x)
>>>>   y5=yold2+20;
>>>>   y6=ynew2-20;
>>>>   y3,y4,y5,y6
>>>> end
>>>> y3,y4,y5,y6=test2(100)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> However, when I run this test2, there is a error comes out: saying that 
>>>> c is not defined.
>>>>
>>>> Thank you very much.
>>>>
>>>>

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