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How to save my work locally

asked 2017-02-17 11:00:26 +0100

python_15 gravatar image

Hey!

I'm new with SageMath, but after some days reading and working I'm quite familiar with the main concepts, so working in the terminal an the notebook isn't a problem for me now. The problem I have is: How can I save the code I wrote locally, in a .sage-file on my drive or something like that? How can I organize my work well?

I haven't fount anything in tutorials, maybe someone could give me an explanation or a useful link! (:

Thanks a lot, python_15

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answered 2017-02-17 15:09:13 +0100

tmonteil gravatar image

updated 2017-02-17 15:11:02 +0100

From the command line, you can define your classes/functions/variables within a my_file.sage and attach it to your session by typing:

sage: %attach /path/to/my_file.sage

and then, the file is executed. It is re-executed each time you save the file, so that you do not have to re-load it again.

If you do not want the sage preparser to take effect so that your file is understood as a python file, you should name your file my_file.py.

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answered 2017-03-09 10:09:54 +0100

I prefer to use the jupyer notebook for exactly this purpose. If you invoke sage -n jupyter in a local directory, say ~/Documents/Analysis_Problems/, you can generate notebooks and they automatically correspond to files in your local directory. This works great in combination with version control systems like git. You can also call sage -n jupyter <filename> to open a specific notebook file from the command line. The best thing is that jupyter files are text files and that they are not limited to sage, but you can also have them with kernels for various other languages.

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Asked: 2017-02-17 11:00:26 +0100

Seen: 883 times

Last updated: Mar 09 '17