/sage-main/file/667bc05730be/sage/functions/special.py
I wonder if it is misbehaving somehow. I'm happy to report it to trac
but don't know how to classify the problem.
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, send email to sage-support
I'm not sure what 3d plot you want. However, if I read the documentation
at the link you provided correctly then
sage: E = pari(['1', 'I'])
sage: E.ellwp(1+I)
-1/2*I
says p(1+i)=-i/2 for the elliptic curve associated to Z+iZ.
Maybe you want to plot the real and imaginary parts of
sage: f =
[value.ivalue]
1059 # iterate:
1060 # increase the exponent vector by 1,
type 'exceptions.IndexError': list index out of range
Should I report this to trac?
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, send email
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 5:08 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 1:55 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
I wonder if this behavior is a bug?
sage: G = DirichletGroup(21)
sage: chi = G.0; chi
[-1, 1]
sage: chi.values
This does not answer your question but might help your friend.
The command matrix_plot (eg, sage: matrix_plot(random_matrix(GF(389),
10), cmap='Oranges'))
might be a simpler function to use if he just wants to test how good
the linear code works on an image.
BTW, since you are the author of the
The module piecewise.py has fairly extensive functionality for the
computation of Fourier series of piecewise defined periodic functions.
It even allows filters. There are examples at
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/const/node12.html
On Tue, Apr 15, 2008 at 4:02 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The module piecewise.py has fairly extensive functionality for the
computation of Fourier series of piecewise defined periodic functions.
It even allows filters. There are examples at
http://www.sagemath.org/doc
Perhaps this has been fixed already?
sage: version()
'SAGE Version 3.0.alpha2, Release Date: 2008-04-06'
sage: import sage.graphs
sage: import sage.graphs.graph_isom
sage:
sage: G=Graph([EMAIL PROTECTED]@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@[EMAIL
PROTECTED]@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@KN~_^}?~{)
On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 4:30 AM, Nicoo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
thx for theses examples, but now i don't found how to scale my plot, i
used list_plot
I'm not sure that you mean by scale but in any case, list_plot, and its
options, is described here
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM, Ondrej Certik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 3:41 PM, Mike Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 6:25 AM, Ondrej Certik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I did. This is the code developed by people at Simula. It works
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 2:35 PM, Anders Logg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 7 Apr, 16:47, Ondrej Certik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 4:15 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM, Ondrej Certik [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote
. Is there any chance they could be added?
- David Joyner
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I don't use windows but the way you are trying is definitely wrong.
In linux you just type sage -i gap_packages-4.4.10_4 and it downloads
it (assuming you have internet) and installs it for you. It also loads the GAP
packages into the saved GAP workspace. Therefore, once it is installed,
all of
It might work if you try coercing f = B[0] first into
R2.x,y = PolynomialRing(CC, 2, 'xy')
then applying factor or whatever to R2(f). I haven't tried it with your
problem but that general idea has worked for me in similar situations.
On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 5:18 AM, continuum121 [EMAIL
One way is, for example,
sage: J = range(3)
sage: A = [ZZ(i^2)+1 for i in J]
sage: s = IndexedSequence(A,J)
sage: s.plot_histogram()
using http://www.sagemath.org/hg/sage-main/file/211b127eab5d/sage/gsl/dft.py
I think there is another way but I don't remember the details. I think
this question
On Sat, Mar 8, 2008 at 4:23 PM, Simon King [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Team,
now i can reproduce a very similar thing even on sage.math!
-
sage: R.x = QQ[]
sage: f = x^3 + x + 1; g = x^3 - x - 1
sage: r = f.resultant(g)
sage:
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 10:57 AM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 7:35 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
Is there a reason why Set only applies to hashable elements?
Set is implemented using the Python language's builtin set type, which
Just an observation - both Scientific Linux and OpenSUSE are rpm-based.
I wonder if this can be duplicated on a redhat machine.
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 1:35 PM, parombouts [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Simon King wrote:
Dear William,
On Mar 5, 11:51 pm, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED]
over Rational Field
^
type 'exceptions.SyntaxError': invalid syntax
If this is indeed an error, should I make a new trac ticket or has it
already been
reported?
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post
A forwarded email question about SAGE. Can anyone help?
I have been led to believe that what I need to do is the following class
field calculations. For
Crespo's (1997) tetrahedral example f(x) = x^4-2x^3+2x^2-2x+3 the associated
modular form of
weight one is F=q-iq^3-q^5-iq^11
I can verify this on an intel mac *and* that
sage: contour_plot(y-1,(-10,10),(-10,10),fill=False,contours=2,plot_points=100)
sage: contour_plot(y-1,(-10,10),(-10,10),fill=False,contours=1,plot_points=100)
yield the same plot.
On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 4:47 PM, Kate [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I believe Sage simply calls Maxima for the solution. Since you
obviously know the
most about the problem, perhaps the easiest thing to do would be to determine
that it is Sage and not Maxima that is at fault. Perhaps you could see if
the solution is obtained in Maxima? (On the command line of
On Feb 18, 2008 8:29 PM, Ben Goodrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 18, 3:58 pm, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I believe Sage simply calls Maxima for the solution. Since you
obviously know the
most about the problem, perhaps the easiest thing to do would be to
determine
On Feb 18, 2008 9:09 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 18, 2008 6:04 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 18, 2008 8:29 PM, Ben Goodrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 18, 3:58 pm, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I believe Sage simply calls
I don't know how to fix it so that parametric_plot works. However, the
following workaround at least gives you a plot:
sage: a = RR(1729^(1/3))
sage: f1 = lambda x: RR(real((1729 - x^3)^(1/3)))
sage: f2 = lambda x: RR(real(-(-1729 + x^3)^(1/3)))
sage: L1 = [(x,f1(x)) for x in
Sorry, I don't use the notebook (command-line only), but if you could paste
the code you are trying to run I can look at it and see if I can spot something.
On Feb 16, 2008 5:07 AM, bill.p [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just a brief note to re-raise this problem. No-one seems interested...
a pity
On Feb 16, 2008 5:34 PM, dean moore [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, there seems an interest in us relatively new folk contributing code for
SAGE.
Admirable. More than I get from M*cr*s*ft. Or Apple. Thanks. I mean it.
Surfing Wikipedia, I came upon the animated graph at
On Feb 16, 2008 5:46 PM, mabshoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 16, 11:38 pm, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi David,
Micheal suggested replacing all #random's by ... and
William seconded this. Then William suggested adding the scip option to
the functions implemented
On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 5:37 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 15, 2008 2:31 PM, Marshall Hampton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I agree that two lists are better than four - sage-support and sage-
devel should be enough.
I strongly agree. I would like us to have only
On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 6:08 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 15, 2008 2:58 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 5:37 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 15, 2008 2:31 PM, Marshall Hampton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 6:26 PM, mabshoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
SNIP
How exactly do you close a google group?
I just changed the list settings so that only managers can post, which
is just
you and me. That should be good enough.
We should also edit the welcome
On Thu, Feb 14, 2008 at 3:34 PM, dino [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I posted this to the sage-newbie list, but it never generated a
response. I understand this list has
more people in the know.
We have the following snippet:
arm= animate([arrow((0,0),(cos(i), sin(i)),
I think it is pretty easy to make one using piecewise.
On Feb 4, 2008 9:19 AM, vgermrk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think it would be nice to have a signum-function (i.e.
sign(x)=abs(x)/x or sign(x)=cmp(x,0) ) in sage.
There is none, right?
Of course it should work on integers, floats,
I assume you did sage -i gap_packages-4.4.10_3
I tested this on an intell macbook and a linux box running
ubuntu fiesty fawn and it worked fine on both.
First, it looks like the GAP packages were installed fine but nauty wasn't
compiled (which is distributed with grape, a graph theory package).
On Jan 26, 2008 4:01 AM, Ted Kosan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A while ago we discussed where Sage would be a few years in the future
and one idea that was discussed was Sage running inside of a
calculator-sized device. These two articles indicate that this will
be feasible in a relatively
Doesn't tuples
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/ref/module-sage.combinat.combinat.html#l2h-3041
or Tuples
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/ref/module-sage.combinat.tuple.html#l2h-4417
do what you want?
On Jan 24, 2008 5:13 AM, Simon King [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Sage team,
how can i
Hi:
Just curious if there a way to update the SAGE link at
http://www.msri.org/about/computing/mathdocs
- David Joyner
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This question was just asked by someone else on sage-newbie.
In gsl/dft.py there is a plot_histrogram function. Other people
suggested other options in the htread though.
On Jan 21, 2008 10:43 AM, David Kohel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Apologies if this is double-sent; I thought I sent it
On Jan 15, 2008 2:51 AM, esdc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I was trying to run a GAP session inside sage, with gap_console() and
when the Smallgroups library is needed, I obtain an error:
Error, the Small Groups library is required but not installed called
from
function( arguments )
-testall on both of these to see if something pops up.
- David Joyner
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http
At the moment,
(a) piecewise is only set up for piecewise polynomials,
(b) the integrate command is integral.
So, for your function (which is piecewise polynomial), this should
work:
sage: f1a = lambda x: -x+1; f1b = lambda x: x+1
sage: f2a = lambda x : -(x - 2) - 1; f2b = lambda x : (x - 2) - 1
On Jan 14, 2008 9:31 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does SAGE currently include any functionality for manipulating Lie
algebras? (I only need reductive Lie algebras, because I'm using them
to study compact Lie groups.) For instance, I'd like to be able to
manipulate
last)
type 'exceptions.AttributeError': 'Pi' object has no attribute
'number_of_arguments'
Is this a bug? If so, should I create a trac ticket?
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com
Done:
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/1718
On Jan 7, 2008 5:07 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 7, 2008 1:08 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
sage: parametric_plot([t, t + RR(pi)], -2, 2, rgbcolor=(1,0,0))
works but not this:
sage
' Traceback (most recent call last)
...
On Jan 2, 2008 3:09 AM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 28, 2007 8:08 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just pasted that in exactly in Sage at the command line and it worked
fine. Above you say it doesn't work. What
On Jan 2, 2008 1:57 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 2, 2008 9:47 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(1) I get the same failure after hg_sage.pull().
(2) I ssh'd into sage.math and tried the commands and got much worst errors:
sage: from pylab import
The decode bug has been submitted as
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/1651
I'm not sure that you mean by ...and the function documentation
On Dec 30, 2007 4:15 PM, harald schilly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 30, 9:13 pm, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This is a bug
.'
---
type 'exceptions.IndexError'Traceback (most recent call last)
...
returns an error.
Seems like a bug. Should I create a track ticket for this?
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post
This is a bug in decode. Thanks for reporting it. I'll add it to
trac and fix it as soon as I can.
On Dec 30, 2007 1:34 PM, harald schilly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a fundamental difference between a matrix and a vector? If
so, there has to be some documentation about it. (or it's
On Dec 28, 2007 4:38 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 27, 2007 8:35 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 27, 2007 12:45 AM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 26, 2007 10:19 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm thinking of adding
On Dec 28, 2007 3:36 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 27, 2007 6:54 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
Suppose you follow the instructions in the programming
manual to edit one of the latex doc files, such as prog,tex,
const.tex, tut.tex, etc.
http
I am working today and tomorrow on fixing all your typos and
possibly adding a few more examples to the tutorial.
Thanks very much for your reports.
++
On Dec 17, 2007 12:23 PM, bill purvis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking at the Sage Tutorial, file
way to start from scratch
(short of starting over again on a completely different
copy of sage)? With src patches, you simply can start
a new clone. That trick does not seem to work for hg_doc.
- David Joyner
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
To post to this group, send email
On Dec 26, 2007 11:10 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 26, 2007 8:51 PM, Mike Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I had made this a ticket a few days ago:
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/1587
Thanks. I've updated the ticket based on the above discussion, and
to 2*\pi,
flipped about the 45^o line. Is this easy to do?
- David Joyner
Can anyone see what I'm doing wrong here?
- David Joyner
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of
contents).
On Dec 25, 2007 11:40 AM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 25, 2007 9:18 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
(a) I'm not sure if this is a bug or something missing, but it seems
to me it should be easy to plot y=arccsc(x) in SAGE, since it
is a basic
apparently could not achieve a secure connection.
I wonder if a SAGE binary can be run from an SD card?
- David Joyner
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On Dec 19, 2007 8:03 PM, David Harvey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 19, 2007, at 7:57 PM, Ted Kosan wrote:
I tried to connect to the online server on sagemath.org
but the laptop apparently could not achieve a secure connection.
I wonder if a SAGE binary can be run from an SD card?
On Dec 16, 2007 11:19 PM, mabshoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I ran sage -testall -long and sage -testall -optional on the 2.9
release on sage.math. While -long passed with flying colors, -optional
had some failures in tut.tex since I didn't install some optional GAP
database. But
On Dec 17, 2007 6:55 AM, bill purvis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Professor Joyner,
I've just discovered sage and am greatly impressed. As an enthusiastic
elderly amateur, I can't claim any great knowledge in the field, but I
have noticed a couple of typos in the tutorial. For example near
On Dec 17, 2007 6:56 AM, mabshoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 17, 12:42 pm, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 16, 2007 11:19 PM, mabshoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I ran sage -testall -long and sage -testall -optional on the 2.9
release on sage.math
()
type 'exceptions.NameError': name 'time' is not defined
sage: time 4-2
CPU times: user 0.00 s, sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00 s
Wall time: 0.00
2
- David Joyner
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To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from
})}
{(1-q)(1-q^2)\cdots (1-q^k)}.
$$
EXAMPLES:
sage: gaussian_binomial(5,1,2)
31
AUTHOR: David Joyner and William Stein
R.x=QQ[]
n = prod([1 - x**i for i in range((n-k+1),n+1)])
d = prod([1 - x**i for i in range(1,k+1
On Dec 10, 2007 8:29 PM, Jonathan Bober [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all. I just opened ticket #1457 (see below)
http://trac.sagemath.org/sage_trac/ticket/1457
The following is hopefully pretty self explanatory:
---
The following took place on an Intel
On Dec 10, 2007 9:25 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 10, 2007 5:44 PM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
It seems like I saw this reported already but can't find it now.
I'm thinking I'm doing something stupid, but can't figure it out
and was wondering
Maybe printing the values makes it clearer?
sage: R = Integers(125)
sage: g = R.multiplicative_generator(); g
2
sage: b = g^3; b
8
sage: a = b^17; a
123
sage: a.log(b)
17
So, 123 = 8^(17) mod 125:
sage: R(123).log(8)
17
sage: R(123) == R(8)^(17)
True
On Dec 4, 2007 5:59 AM, Timothy Clemans
exclusively in SAGE one day.
regards
john perry
On Nov 30, 9:00 am, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not sure what the cause of the error is but, FYI, some Riemann sum
stuff is
already implemented in piecewise.py.
On Nov 30, 2007 9:41 AM, john_perry_usm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
I'm not sure what the cause of the error is but, FYI, some Riemann sum stuff is
already implemented in piecewise.py.
On Nov 30, 2007 9:41 AM, john_perry_usm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
One of my students was writing a procedure to implement a Midpoint
Riemann Sum in SAGE. The procedure
On Nov 25, 2007 4:29 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 25, 2007 3:27 AM, Martin Albrecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
@Martin Albrecht:
- Is there a reasonable way to fix this in the interface?
Hi, the 'trivial' way to fix it, is to implement a Python function for
Done. A patch was linked to on the trac ticket
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/1254
On Oct 28, 2007 1:20 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/28/07, Justin C. Walker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Please: no printed deprecated warnings. Anything would be better
than that.
+2
Hi:
Suppose a finite matrix group G generated by 3x3 matrices
A1, A2, ..., Ar acts on the polynomial ring QQ[x,y,z].
Singular has a command which computes a basis of
invariants. I'm stuck trying to run them in SAGE. The commands at
On Nov 20, 2007 8:12 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As far as i know, length of curve, defined as
f(x)
from a to b (a = x = b) is
L = integral from a to b of sqrt(1 + df(x)^2)dx
where df(x) is diff(f,x)
for f(x) = y = x^2 , a=0, b=2 it should be
df(x)=2x
sqrt(17) + ln|4
with eigenspaces at all ...
Should I create a trac item under linear algebra
or ???
- David Joyner
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Done
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/1219
On Nov 20, 2007 2:22 PM, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 20, 2007 11:14 AM, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
Something funny is going on:
sage: MS = MatrixSpace(CC, 2, 2)
sage: A = MS([[1,5],[3,-1]])
sage
No, but
sage: t = var(t)
sage: a = lambda t: 0.004*(8*exp(-300*t) -
8*exp(-1200*t))*72*exp(-300*t) - 0.1
sage: attach
'/home/wdj/sagestuff/sage-2.8.9.rc1/examples/calculus/newton_raphson.sage'
sage: newton_raphson(a,0.01,0.01,0.1)
0.0205789829857519
works okay. (This newton_raphson
FYI
-- Forwarded message --
From: Steve Linton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Nov 9, 2007 3:49 AM
Subject: Re: Fwd: [sage-support] Issue with interface to Gap in 2.8.12
To: David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Distinction between Print and View is the issue here. Viw truncates, Print
does
Thank you for your report.
Note
sage: x = (1,2)(3,7)(4,6)(5,8)
sage: PermutationGroup([x])
Permutation Group with generators [(1,2)(3,7)(4,6)(5,8)]
works fine. The result of gap.Image is an instance of the
GapElement class, so it looks like it is a syntax issue for
such elements. I can take a
On 11/4/07, Joseph Hufnagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Sir:
Thank you for the instructions to building Sage on Ubuntu Linux. The
compilation took some time, but it was well worth it.
Happy to help.
Thanks again,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2007 23:12:10 -0400
By coincidence, I recently installed sage from source on a fresh
ubuntu install and the instructions on
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/inst/node5.html
worked for me. In other words, if you type
sudo apt-get install gcc-4.2-base # or the latest version available
sudo apt-get install make
On 10/30/07, Jason Grout [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My postdoc mentor is being flown to China to give a presentation on
teaching undergraduate linear algebra in the U.S. She is emphasizing
technology in teaching. She will talk about Mathematica, Maple, Matlab,
and calculators in teaching.
Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
Either a bug in combinat.py's permutations, or an indication that
it needs to be rewritten. (permutations is a GAP wrapper which
I might have written, so should probably fix ...)
- David Joyner
sage: MS = MatrixSpace(QQ,2,2)
sage: A = MS
Hi:
Is the following a feature or a bug?
sage: set([1,2])
set([1, 2])
sage: set([[1],[2]])
---
type 'exceptions.TypeError' Traceback (most recent call last)
/Users/wdj/sagefiles/sage-2.8.2/ipython console in
Hi:
Either a bug in combinat.py's permutations, or an indication that
it needs to be rewritten. (permutations is a GAP wrapper which
I might have written, so should probably fix ...)
- David Joyner
sage: MS = MatrixSpace(QQ,2,2)
sage: A = MS([1,2,3,4])
sage: permutations(A.rows())
[[(3, 4), (1
, it seems that eigenspaces uses (b). I wonder if there is any
support for adding an option to eigenspaces to use (a).
- David Joyner
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classes this semester.
Some students can't install the SAGE software due to
inexperience with computers, so I wanted to give them
the option of using sage.math instead.
- David Joyner
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On 10/17/07, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/17/07, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The commands
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/sagefiles/sage-2.8.2 ./sage
--
| SAGE Version 2.8.5, Release Date: 2007-09-21
On 10/9/07, mabshoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David Joyner wrote:
Hi:
Hello David,
I installed sage 2.8.6 from source on a new install of 64 bit ubuntu 7.10.
The installation manual says
On a newly installed Ubuntu system, you can install the above
commands as follows
file, I'd like to add it to
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/prog/node72.html
Any suggestions?
- David Joyner
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On 10/14/07, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/14/07, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi:
I wrote a patch last November which apparently fixed some
bugs in the maxima interface:
http://sage.math.washington.edu/home/wdj/patches/maxima-patch-latest-really.hg
I really
On 10/4/07, Simon King [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear sage-support team,
i'm trying to convince my boss about using modern linear algebra
software (as part of a project on group cohomology rings). However, i
need better arguments. Perhaps you have some?
This is separate from your question,
More details might help.
What is your operating system?
Did you compile the program or are you running a binary?
Is this a fresh install or did you do some hacking with the source code?
+
On 10/1/07, chris wuthrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi out there, can
On 9/28/07, David Stahl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a system of polynomial equations with rational coefficients and
I have one rational solution. I am trying to find a recurrence
relation that will allow me to generate additional rational
solutions. The equations are:
Hi:
I'm not sure if this is a bug or not but just in case,
here is the way diff is behaving for me.
- David Joyner
sage: version()
'SAGE Version 2.8.5, Release Date: 2007-09-21'
sage: R1.a = PolynomialRing(QQ)
sage: R2.x = PowerSeriesRing(R1)
sage: y = a*x
sage: y.derivative()
a
sage: diff(y,x
to make the vector space aspect of my finite
field works for its polynomial ring as well and give me something
like:
(0, x, 0, 0, 0)
Thank you in advance!
Bests,
Ahmad
On Sep 4, 5:53 pm, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/4/07, David Joyner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Thanks for reporting this.
This is
http://sagetrac.org/sage_trac/ticket/596
Can you try Ctl-C, Ctl-C (twice in rapid succession)
and see if that works?
++
On 9/5/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm experimenting with the wiki. When I
On 9/3/07, William Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/3/07, Ahmad [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm new to sage and I don't know even if I'm supposed to post such
questions to this group or not. If it is a correct place:
Could you please tell me how can I change the basis in finite field
This is a great question for the email list sage-newbie
http://www.sagemath.org/lists.html
It turns out there is a draft of a document which does
what you want. You can ask there for the url of the latest
draft.
++
On 9/4/07, gary [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I see
This is the right place but I don't think what you want is implemented.
The commands and examples are here:
http://www.sagemath.org/doc/html/ref/module-sage.rings.finite-field.html
It would be some work but possibly you could do what you could in SAGE,
then use GAP's NormalBase command?
On 8/25/07, Ted Kosan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
William wrote:
So maybe the docstring for a function might have something like.
SUBJECTS:
Algebra.Combinatorics, Analysis.ComplexFunctions
Something like this seems like a really good idea.
My thought with the hierarchical tags is that
I'm told it will be in 2.8.3, whose release is planned
on Thursday or Friday.
+++
On 8/22/07, Ted Kosan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David wrote:
You can try this:
sage: t = var('t')
sage: y = function('y', t)
sage: de = lambda y: diff(y,t) -
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