Hello all, > Noted. However the old tutorial that is still being referenced is out of > date in that it works on the assumption that installation requires a > different/special config for debian/fedora, etc. It doesn't note that Isn't that still the case for the release version (it seems that some stuff in generic.cfg was backported but that still leaves the issue of packages required)? The tutorial explicitly and intentionally targets the release version of the ET so it can only use method present in the release code.
> you probably want mpicc in your path, etc. My belief is that we should > probably stop referencing it and focus on improving the Jupyter based one. I agree with with the improve the jupyter one, disagree with the no longer referencing it (until the jupyter one is a full replacement). > Note that the notebook in the repo has been updated to address many of > the above issues. I will ask Craig to update it on the tutorial machine. Who can currently edit the jupyter notebook in the repo? Also it may be good to have a README or so (ideally a filter on the server side) with instructions in how to commit to the jupyter ipynb notebook. At minimum this seems to require (to make conflict resolution possible): * clear all output cells before comitting * preserve whichever jupyter version the notebook is for (there's at least 2 incompatible ones that I have encountered) using Option stuff: * clear timestamps * https://nbconvert.readthedocs.io/en/latest/usage.html#convert-notebook * probably more More on this topic: * https://gist.github.com/pbugnion/ea2797393033b54674af * http://timstaley.co.uk/posts/making-git-and-jupyter-notebooks-play-nice Yours, Roland -- My email is as private as my paper mail. I therefore support encrypting and signing email messages. Get my PGP key from http://pgp.mit.edu .
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