reduce-algebra
emacs-ipython-notebook
reduce-algebra | emacs-ipython-notebook | |
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3 | 18 | |
30 | 1,453 | |
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9.3 | 6.5 | |
5 days ago | 9 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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reduce-algebra
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An Apologia of Lazy Evaluation
Usually the arguments are a) it provides runtime access to the source (which for example is useful in R), b) runtime introspection is easier to understand (for the proponents) and c) macros are too static (they want more flexibility at runtime). For example authors of the REDUCE computer algebra system disliked Common Lisp for the lack of FEXPRs and that's why they stayed away from it: https://reduce-algebra.sourceforge.io/ .
> The languages you mention probably
No, see above.
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Maxima: A computer algebra system written in Common Lisp
Reduce is another lisp based computer algebra system from the prehistoric times, now open sourced.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduce_(computer_algebra_syste...
https://reduce-algebra.sourceforge.io/
I paid money for a Reduce release for RISCOS back in the last ice age. I recollect having to register my licence with the Rand Corporation for some reason.
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A Modern Fortran Scientific Programming Ecosystem
I idly wonder how these compare to the arbitrary-precision implementations in REDUCE (https://github.com/reduce-algebra/reduce-algebra/blob/master...) - written mostly by me, 30 years ago in the unusual, Lisp-based but largely procedural, language of REDUCE. Can't remember much about the subject now.
The citations in the Julia source file are certainly newer - Abramowitz and Stegun was basically all I had.
I think the REDUCE functions were considered quite fast (for higher precision) at the time, but it was certainly true that they weren't tested as thoroughly as would be the norm now.
emacs-ipython-notebook
- emacs-ipython-notebook: Jupyter notebook client in Emacs
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Ask HN: Why don't other languages have Jupyter style notebooks?
the github source : https://github.com/millejoh/emacs-ipython-notebook
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Mastering Emacs
I used https://github.com/millejoh/emacs-ipython-notebook at one employer and it works quite well for Jupyter. Of course Org is great but if your coworkers are unfamiliar it's probably a non-starter.
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Bounty on ein package startup times
Looking at https://github.com/millejoh/emacs-ipython-notebook/issues this person seems to be using the github issues tracker as a combination of their personal tech support line + ranting board.
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Replace Jupyter Notebook With Emacs Org Mode
Maybe Emacs should have went down the road to have good Jupyter notebooks support instead, even EIN's maintainer was advising against using notebooks.
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Help with EIN
So that project was forked and this is the better location https://millejoh.github.io/emacs-ipython-notebook/
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Maxima: A computer algebra system written in Common Lisp
Except when it doesn't work. I tried using it a few months ago on both Windows and WSL, but I had to give up. Surprisingly, EIN¹ running a Maxima kernel worked.
I was going to try again before commenting, but I broke my WSL setup last week and didn't have time to fix it yet, but I sure will try it again next month.
¹ http://millejoh.github.io/emacs-ipython-notebook/
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Switched to VSCode... I miss Atom :(
EIN also looks good but I haven't used it.
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I have reached Vim nirvana
From my perspective when I had to turn ML models from a "real scientist" to something I could use in production, emacs-ipython-notebooks[1] was immensely helpful for me, since it allowed to connect to the jupyter server and edit and copy things from emacs to other code places as if I'm looking at an org mode file.
I see the appeal of Jupyter notebooks for someone testing out things or experimenting, but it's a bit like a brain dump that isn't that trivial to navigate around when a second or third person is involved.
[1] https://github.com/millejoh/emacs-ipython-notebook
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IPython Notebook layer
Hey all! I'm quite attracted by the Emacs IPython Notebook (ein) package and would love to incorporate it into my workflow. However last time I tried (about a year and a half ago) it was officially unsupported in spacemacs and my experiments led to constant headaches like undotree failing, notebooks not saving, native compilation crashing, and a reliance on elpy for IDE features (afaik the only elpy layer available can be found here, uses ESS bindings, and seems to be orphaned.)
What are some alternatives?
maxima-client - Maxima client
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
symengine - SymEngine is a fast symbolic manipulation library, written in C++
spacemacs-jupyter - Spacemacs layer for https://github.com/dzop/emacs-jupyter
SIunits - A Scheme function to format physical quantities according to SI conventions in TeXmacs
jupyter - An interface to communicate with Jupyter kernels.
Bessels.jl - Bessel functions for real arguments and orders
markdown-preview-mode - Minor mode to preview markdown output as you save
stdlib - Fortran Standard Library
emacs-jupyter - emacs plug-in to run python code inside tex or markdown buffer
projects
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.