Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Nick Dokos writes:
>
>> András Major wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Eric,
>>>
>>> > Can you post an example? Here is a working example.
>>>
>>> In your example, simply write "asymptote" in place of "sh" and replace the
>>> code by "size(100);" just to make sure it's va
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
> András Major wrote:
>
>> Hi Eric,
>>
>> > Can you post an example? Here is a working example.
>>
>> In your example, simply write "asymptote" in place of "sh" and replace the
>> code by "size(100);" just to make sure it's valid asymptote (though the
>> error occur
András Major wrote:
> Hi Eric,
>
> > Can you post an example? Here is a working example.
>
> In your example, simply write "asymptote" in place of "sh" and replace the
> code by "size(100);" just to make sure it's valid asymptote (though the
> error occurs even if you don't). In fact, I'm qui
Hi Eric,
> Can you post an example? Here is a working example.
In your example, simply write "asymptote" in place of "sh" and replace the
code by "size(100);" just to make sure it's valid asymptote (though the
error occurs even if you don't). In fact, I'm quite sure that asy never
gets executed
András Major writes:
> Hi Eric,
>
>> >> This is already possible, see "Indexable variable values" [1].
>
> Just tried, without success. Using the example from my original post,
> I appended "[,0]" as per the manual to use the first column only, and
> when I execute the code block, org throws an
Hi Eric,
> >> This is already possible, see "Indexable variable values" [1].
Just tried, without success. Using the example from my original post,
I appended "[,0]" as per the manual to use the first column only, and
when I execute the code block, org throws an error
"Wrong type argument: lis
András Major writes:
> Hi Eric,
>
>> > I've been away since my last post and now you've already applied a patch
>> > -- wow! Here's another thought though: change the behaviour of the :var
>> > header argument such that you can specify a range of rows, columns, or
>> > a rectangle just like in t
Hi Eric,
> > I've been away since my last post and now you've already applied a patch
> > -- wow! Here's another thought though: change the behaviour of the :var
> > header argument such that you can specify a range of rows, columns, or
> > a rectangle just like in table references.
>
> This is
Eric Schulte wrote:
> András Major writes:
>
> > Hi Eric,
> >
> >> Given that asymptote can not make use of heterogeneous tables, it seems
> >> that it would be easiest to simply silently converted any table
> >> containing a single string element to a table of all strings. I've just
> >> appl
András Major writes:
> Hi Eric,
>
>> Given that asymptote can not make use of heterogeneous tables, it seems
>> that it would be easiest to simply silently converted any table
>> containing a single string element to a table of all strings. I've just
>> applied your previous patch (thanks for th
Hi Eric,
> Given that asymptote can not make use of heterogeneous tables, it seems
> that it would be easiest to simply silently converted any table
> containing a single string element to a table of all strings. I've just
> applied your previous patch (thanks for the patch!). If this proves
> c
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Eric Schulte writes:
>
>> I don't know asymptote well enough to know if you would /always/ want a
>> heterogeneous table to be converted to all strings, or if there would
>> ever be a case where you would want mixed types in a table.
>
> There are no mixed ty
Hello,
Eric Schulte writes:
> I don't know asymptote well enough to know if you would /always/ want a
> heterogeneous table to be converted to all strings, or if there would
> ever be a case where you would want mixed types in a table.
There are no mixed types arrays in Asymptote, hence the pro
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Completing myself.
>
>> Though, you insist on being able to enter it as a number anyway,
>> hoping ob-asymptote will do the magic behind. How could it, since the
>> language can't itself?
>
> Actually, the attached patch does that magic: if there's any string in
> the ta
Completing myself.
> Though, you insist on being able to enter it as a number anyway,
> hoping ob-asymptote will do the magic behind. How could it, since the
> language can't itself?
Actually, the attached patch does that magic: if there's any string in
the table, every cell will be turned into a
András Major writes:
>> Why? You can always write an intermediary step to "stringify" every
>> cell. Choose your language. Nick Dokos showed you one way.
>
> Apparently, only if you set a global/per-user option in .emacs or suchlike,
> which I think is a bad way of doing it.
-
#+tblname: mixe
> Why? You can always write an intermediary step to "stringify" every
> cell. Choose your language. Nick Dokos showed you one way.
Apparently, only if you set a global/per-user option in .emacs or suchlike,
which I think is a bad way of doing it.
> > Why isn't it possible to force ob-asymptote to
András Major writes:
> This isn't what I need. What I want is to make a graph of certain
> columns of a table which contains both ints and strings. Ideally,
> there should be no constraint about which columns contain ints and
> which contain strings.
Again, this is a limitation of Asymptote. A
Hi Nick,
> I don't know anything about asymptote and I am not sure whether this
> will help: it does produce a temp file with everything quoted and
> running asy on the temp file produces an .eps file that contains the
> diagonal line, but it produces a png file which seems somewhat peculiar
> to
Hi Nicolas,
> > I'd like to use asymptote to plot the values in an Org table. The table
> > has cells with numbers but also cells with strings in them. This table
> > gets converted to an array of strings in the resulting asymptote file,
> > with the strings escaped with double-quotes but not th
Major A wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to use asymptote to plot the values in an Org table. The table
> has cells with numbers but also cells with strings in them. This table
> gets converted to an array of strings in the resulting asymptote file,
> with the strings escaped with double-quotes bu
Hello,
Major A writes:
> I'd like to use asymptote to plot the values in an Org table. The table
> has cells with numbers but also cells with strings in them. This table
> gets converted to an array of strings in the resulting asymptote file,
> with the strings escaped with double-quotes but n
Hi,
I'd like to use asymptote to plot the values in an Org table. The table
has cells with numbers but also cells with strings in them. This table
gets converted to an array of strings in the resulting asymptote file,
with the strings escaped with double-quotes but not the numbers. In
asymptot
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