Ok, but than how do I quiet the tons of deprecation messages that show up?
segunda-feira, 29 de Agosto de 2016 às 15:57:34 UTC+1, Tony Kelman escreveu: > > You generally only need to call the @compat macro when you're trying to > use some new syntax that didn't parse correctly on older versions of Julia. > If it parses correctly, Compat usually implements it with normal functions > and methods, no need for a syntax-rewriting macro. > > > On Monday, August 29, 2016 at 6:11:19 AM UTC-7, J Luis wrote: >> >> >>> >>> No, it is: >>> >>> t = unsafe_wrap(Array, Gb.data, h.size) >>> >>> as in the deprecation warning. >>> >> >> Thanks (I'd figured it out too meanwhile) >> >> >>> (You don't need @compat just for function calls. You only need @compat >>> for things where the syntax changes in a more complicated way.) >>> >> >> Hmm, what do you mean by this? If I don't use @compat (which I tried) I >> get tons of deprecation messages. >> >
