Claudio Grondi wrote: > I decided to use numarray, so maybe you can report what your problem/bug > is before I run into it myself? The reason why I decided to use numarray > was, that the whole scpy_core story seems to get more or less commercial > and its free version comes because of this with no documentation of > newest features.
No, numpy (which used to be scipy_core) is completely free. It will never turn into a proprietary package. The complete documentation, however, is currently available only as a PDF for purchase, but only until a certain number of copies have been sold, or enough time passes. Believe me, the old manuals for Numeric and numarray were never as complete. No one could ever commit the time to thoroughly document them for free. Charging for the documentation (for a limited time) was the only way Travis Oliphant could afford to spend the time to write the full documentation and write the code. I think the quality of the book speaks well for that choice. Of course, the docstring coverage is quite good, and we have explicitly welcomed efforts to produce free documentation. So far, those who have volunteered haven't produced anything. And as incomplete as the old Numeric manual was *for Numeric*, it and the free documentation that is actually distributed with numpy and describes the differences between the two goes a long way. -- Robert Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED] "In the fields of hell where the grass grows high Are the graves of dreams allowed to die." -- Richard Harter -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list