Thanks, I saw this, but it didn't work in my installed sage 7.2. Currently upgrading to 7.3. I couldn't find out which version of sage #19877 was merged into.
On Friday, August 26, 2016 at 1:25:55 PM UTC+2, Dima Pasechnik wrote: > > > > On Friday, August 26, 2016 at 12:19:58 PM UTC+1, HG wrote: >> >> Yes... But I have read somewhere there is a convert tool ? As I need to >> practice I did it by hand. >> I know that smc can convert them in smc file and maybe you can download >> it in ipynb because SMC is well develop in this domain. >> > > on a standalone sage installation one can run > > sage --notebook=export > > see https://trac.sagemath.org/ticket/19877 > and links therein for details. > > Cheers >> Henri >> >> Le vendredi 26 août 2016 10:55:17 UTC+2, Stan Schymanski a écrit : >>> >>> Dear all, >>> >>> I have been using sagemath for research for many years now, and I am >>> extremely happy with it. For my latest papers, I would like to make the >>> sage code available to the public, so that people can follow through what I >>> did and re-use the code for their own data. The journal's guidelines also >>> ask to make any relevant data and code available. Of course, I could just >>> upload it to some generic data server, but it would be so great to also >>> make it available on a sage server, which would render the worksheets >>> correctly and where people could start working with it straight away. I >>> believe that this would make a lot more scientists aware of the benefits of >>> sagemath. >>> >>> There used to be several open sagemath servers around, but the ones I >>> used previously have disappeared, probably at the same time as sagemath >>> cloud (SMC) made its appearance. I gather that SMC is commercial, meant to >>> generate funds for the further development of sagemath. I hope it takes >>> off. However, this also means that SMC is likely not the right place to >>> permanently publish worksheets, as they would be taken down once I stop >>> paying the fees for some reason. Can anyone suggest a suitable place for >>> that? The minimum requirement is that the worksheet can be viewed and >>> downloaded. Being able to execute and modify cells would be a bonus, and >>> long-term availability (permalink?) would be another bonus. I haven't seen >>> any "public" worksheets on SMC, in the way the old sage servers worked. >>> Would there be scope to create such a space in SMC, so to say as an >>> advertisement? >>> >>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-support" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sage-support+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sage-support. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.