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First @ ConnectedGraphComponents @ graph |
I have an answer to your third question. The installation of the Wolfram Engine includes WolframPlayer which lets you do dynamic things like `Manipulate` or interact with 3D graphics. Export your dynamic/3D output as a notebook and open it with... |
* [Geany](https://www.geany.org/) + [wolfram-geany](https://github.com/Ludwiggle/wolfram-geany) to develop scripts that are supposed to run in the background and without REPL. Geany is very lightweight and easily extendible. *... |
Wolfram Language and Jupyter notebooks are going to be well integrated technologies. But neither of them can export jupyter notebooks to a format which is still considered standard in the industrial sector: Word (docx). Single command line... |
Hi Murray, thanks for your feedback. That is MacOS `sed` complaining about the use of ~ . A solution is to install gnu-sed: `brew install gnu-sed` and then replace "sed" with "gsed" at line 164 of `kernel.py` . |
I think the main use case for Jupyter + Wolfram Engine is on a compute cloud instance (AWS, Google Cloud etc) or on a virtual private server. It is not a replacement of Mathematica on a local machine, but on a remote one Jupyter is the natural... |
What you describe is the free Wolfram Engine (V 12). |
Version 12 of CDFPlayer includes wolframscript but, contrary to previous versions of CDFPlayer installations, this time wolframscript does not work out of the box. Instead, it requires ID and passwd. I tried to insert my Wolfram user ID and passwd... |
Perfect logic: NetGraph[{1, 1, 1}, {1 -> 2 -> 3}] But this does not make sense: Graph[{1, 1, 1}, {1 -> 2 -> 3}] How can `Rule` behave differently when called by different functions? |
`hbActForward` ? `hbWForward` ? `binAggression` ? `w0`, `w1` ,`w2` ? |