Hi everyone,

I created a new issue asking the Julia developers to please restore the
earlier behaviour. I would be immensely grateful if you could write on this
issue and let the Julia developers know that I am not the only person who
would be happier without the sea of warnings.

https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/18725

Cheers,
Daniel.



On 28 September 2016 at 15:15, J Luis <jmfl...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> This a very heavy install.  It's fetching tons of things that I have not
>> used.  Not sure what they are, but seems like trashing my system.
>>
>
> Yes, unfortunately Conda is an unbearably big dependency (over 1.xxx Gb)
> that sneaks in via un-suspicious packages. A dependency this big should
> never install without a strict user consent. Docs explain how to avoid it
> but don't find the explanation clear. I had to declare this
>
> ENV["JUPYTER"]="C:/programs/WinPython-3.5.2.2_64/python-3.
> 5.2.amd64/Scripts/jupyter"
>
> to really prevent a Conda installation
>
>
>>
>> On Wednesday, September 28, 2016 at 4:30:32 AM UTC+8, Cedric St-Jean
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Yeah, it's because of IJulia, sorry about that. I need it to support
>>> autoreloading. I could split the package in two, but it's small enough
>>> already that it doesn't feel like the right call.
>>>
>>> One day we'll get conditional imports...
>>>
>>> On Tue, Sep 27, 2016 at 4:14 PM, Daniel Carrera <dcar...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Thanks! You are a savior!
>>>>
>>>> Here is something odd: when I installed it with Pkg.clone(...) my Julia
>>>> decided that it also had to update Conda and install Jupyter. Is this some
>>>> weird quirk of my setup. I notice that you import IJulia, so I guess that
>>>> has something to do with it. It's not a big deal; I just thought it was
>>>> weird to see the package manager installing stuff like Qt, fontconfig, SSL,
>>>> and libxml just to clobber include().
>>>>
>>>> But other than that, it works fabulously. Thank you so much!
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Daniel.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 27 September 2016 at 21:45, Cedric St-Jean <cedric...@gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I wrote a work-around earlier today:
>>>>>
>>>>> Pkg.clone("git://github.com/cstjean/ClobberingReload.jl.git")
>>>>>
>>>>> using ClobberingReload: sinclude     # silent include
>>>>> sinclude("foo.jl")   # no redefinition warnings
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> It's fresh off the press, so please file an issue if you encounter a
>>>>> problem. It calls `include` under the hood; there's no magic involved. I
>>>>> just intercept STDERR and remove the redefinition warnings.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tuesday, September 27, 2016 at 3:13:00 PM UTC-4, Andrew wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It seems like a lot of people are complaining about this. Is there
>>>>>> some way to suppress method overwritten warnings for an include()
>>>>>> statement? Perhaps a keyword like include("foo.jl", quietly = true)?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Tuesday, September 27, 2016 at 1:56:27 PM UTC-4, Daniel Carrera
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hello,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'm not sure when I upgraded, but I am using Julia 0.5 and now it
>>>>>>> complains every time I redefine a method, which is basically all the 
>>>>>>> time.
>>>>>>> When I'm developing ideas I usually have a file with a script that I 
>>>>>>> modify
>>>>>>> and reload all the time:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> julia> include("foo.jl");
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ... see the results, edit file ...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> julia> include("foo.jl");
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ... see the results, edit file ...
>>>>>>> julia> include("foo.jl");
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ... see the results, edit file ...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> And so on. This is what I do most of the time. But now every time I
>>>>>>> `include("foo.jl")` I get warnings for every method that has been 
>>>>>>> redefined
>>>>>>> (which is all of them):
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> julia> include("foo.jl");
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> WARNING: Method definition (::Type{Main.Line})(Float64, Float64) in
>>>>>>> module Main at /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:4 overwritten
>>>>>>> at /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:4.
>>>>>>> WARNING: Method definition (::Type{Main.Line})(Any, Any) in module
>>>>>>> Main at /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:4 overwritten at
>>>>>>> /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:4.
>>>>>>> WARNING: Method definition new_line(Any, Any, Any) in module Main at
>>>>>>> /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:8 overwritten at
>>>>>>> /home/daniel/Data/Science/Thesis/SI.jl:8.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Is there a way that this can be fixed? How can I recover Julia's
>>>>>>> earlier behaviour? This is very irritating, and I don't think it makes
>>>>>>> sense for a functional language like Julia. If I wrote a method as a
>>>>>>> variable assignment (e.g. "foo = x -> 2*x") Julia wouldn't complain.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Thanks for the help,
>>>>>>> Daniel.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>

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