![]() In the mean time, I'm enjoying the freedom of using octave with WYSIWYG editors like those found in the gnu octave signal package. So far so good! In a couple of weeks, I should be able to upload a new website and begin publishing articles. Gnu octave signal package does a good job of converting the file my desktop computer needs into the file my gnu octave implementation requires. I'm using: Windows 10 圆4 (up to date) on a core i5 2500K and 12 GB RAM. I tried the ZIP (portable) version, but the installer too. Then running a few octave scripts, gnu octave signal package did an excellent job of converting my Caffeine measurements into WYSIWYG format that my desktop computer could read. A Windows' command promt opens up, but remains black forever (see attachment 1). In a user-friendly command-oriented environment, IRIS integrates core. Working as expected, I was able to import my existing Caffeine measurement library from my Linux machine to my Windows 10 machine without any problems. We always need more help improving IRIS Toolbox and there are many ways you can. Things missing however: support for multiple CPU cores, mouse integration (excepting the built-in one on my laptop), GUI support (although not nearly as responsive as I would like), and most important of all Sudo file system integration.Ĭurrently I am using octave with WYSIWYG editors like those found in the gnu octave signal package. Figured out quickly it was missing a few key features from the standard Octave software and this is the result. a two-element row vector containing the current size of the terminal window in. I just downloaded and installed Octave LE on my laptop with the intention of learning it. This is the core set of functions that is available without any packages. ![]() ![]() Good luck! I have been looking for a good graphing application that has the same Octave functionality as Octave LE but supports WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) and doesn't make me crazy trying to learn octave. ![]()
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