Andrea Crotti writes:
> "Eric Schulte" writes:
>> So, I hope it goes well, and I'd second Tom's point that if you do end
>> up working Org-mode/babel into your talk we'd love to see a video and/or
>> hear how it was received.
>
> Ok finally I did the talk...
That's great
>
> Unfortunately it
"Eric Schulte" writes:
> So, I hope it goes well, and I'd second Tom's point that if you do end
> up working Org-mode/babel into your talk we'd love to see a video and/or
> hear how it was received.
Ok finally I did the talk...
Unfortunately it had to be in italian and I have no video yet, BUT
I'
Andrea Crotti writes:
> My talk has been accepted :)
> So now I really have to prepare something!
>
> I thought that for showing the power of org-mode and babel I could use
> something I already have
>
No news?
Here I'm also putting some slides, they should just contains list of
things.
I'm doin
My talk has been accepted :)
So now I really have to prepare something!
I thought that for showing the power of org-mode and babel I could use
something I already have
http://github.com/AndreaCrotti/my-project-euler/blob/master/euler.org
(click on raw to see the code)
It's a summary of which pr
Andrea Crotti writes:
> Il giorno 25/feb/2010, alle ore 17.55, Eric Schulte ha scritto:
>
>> I see,
>>
>> I think a point could be made for advertising Org-mode + babel as a
>> suite for "Reproducible Research with Python" or "Literate Programming
>> in Python". Framing the talk in that manner
"Eric Schulte" writes:
> Hi Andrea,
>
> That's an excellent question, and I have no idea what the answer should
> be. The first step is certainly introducing Org-mode, maybe with a
> focus on tables, and the export to html and LaTeX. From there Org-babel
> may best be described as the addition