* ob-octave.el (org-babel-execute:octave): Use generic
expansion function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:octave): Change name of
function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:matlab): New defalias
(org-babel-prep-session:octave): Change name of function
(org-babel-expand-body:matlab): Delete function
(org-babel-expand-body:octave): Delete function
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-expand-body:octave): Refactor: break variable
assignment part out into a separate function
(org-babel-octave-variable-assignments): New function constructing
list of variable assignment statements
(org-babel-prep-session:octave): Use new function
`org-babel-octave-variable-assignments' instead of previous
(incorrect) variable assignment code.
* ob-scheme.el (org-babel-execute:scheme): Alter temp file name
* ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate): Alter temp file name
* ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate-external-process):
Alter temp file name
* ob-perl.el (org-babel-perl-evaluate): Alter temp file name
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-session):
Alter temp file name
(org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file): Alter temp file name
* ob-ledger.el (org-babel-execute:ledger): Alter temp file name
* ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-gnuplot-process-vars): Alter temp
file name
(org-babel-execute:gnuplot): Alter temp file name
* ob.el (org-babel-process-file-name): New function
(org-babel-maybe-remote-file): Delete function
* ob-sql.el (org-babel-execute:sql):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-scheme.el (org-babel-execute:scheme):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-python-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-plantuml.el (org-babel-execute:plantuml):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-perl.el (org-babel-perl-evaluate):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-octave-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name,
don't use org-babel-maybe-remote-file
* ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ledger.el (org-babel-execute:ledger):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-js.el (org-babel-execute:js):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-haskell.el (org-babel-haskell-export-to-lhs):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-execute:gnuplot):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-eval.el (org-babel-eval-read-file): Don't use
org-babel-maybe-remote-file
* ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-clojure.el (org-babel-clojure-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-R.el (org-babel-R-assign-elisp): Don't use
org-babel-maybe-remote-file, use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-R-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-R-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-C.el (org-babel-C-execute):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
In addition to passing the file path through `expand-file-name',
tramp-style remote file names are converted to conventional (local)
file paths. The reason is that, if a tramp file name was in use in
emacs, then the shell command will be executing on the remote machine
in question. Further, by default the file name is passed through
`shell-quote-argument'.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-temporary-directory): variable to hold the
value of the Babel temporary directory
(org-babel-temp-file): replacement for make-temp-file with cleanup
on exit of Emacs
(org-babel-remove-temporary-directory): cleanup function run on exit
of Emacs
(kill-emacs-hook): now includes babel cleanup function
* lisp/ob-C.el (org-babel-C-execute): using org-babel-temp-file
instead of make-temp-file
* lisp/ob-R.el (org-babel-R-assign-elisp): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-R-evaluate-external-process): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-R-evaluate-session): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-clojure.el (org-babel-clojure-evaluate-external-process):
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-gnuplot-process-vars): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-execute:gnuplot): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-load-session:haskell): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-haskell-export-to-lhs): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead
of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-execute:latex): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ledger.el (org-babel-execute:ledger): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-octave-evaluate-session): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-perl.el (org-babel-perl-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-evaluate): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sql.el (org-babel-execute:sql): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sqlite.el (org-babel-execute:sqlite): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-sqlite-expand-vars): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
2010-08-03 Dan Davison <davison@stats.ox.ac.uk>
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-wrapper-method): use dlmwrite
to write delimited text instead of save -ascii
(org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file): specify that data
written to file is tab-delimited
Hi,
I'm starting to work with ob-octave and found several problems:
The first, for which I have a fix (see patch below) is that octave's
output was passed on as a string instead of being interpreted as a table:
[diff removed]
Now this works:
8<------------------------------------------------------------
#+source: test_output
#+begin_src octave :results value vector
[[1 2 3];[4 5 6]]
#+end_src
#+results: test_output
| 1.00000000e+00 | 2.00000000e+00 | 3.00000000e+00 |
| 4.00000000e+00 | 5.00000000e+00 | 6.00000000e+00 |
8<------------------------------------------------------------
(before the patch you'd get a single table element with something like
"1 2 3\n 4 5 6\n" inside).
The second problem is that if I use octave table output as input to
another block, it gets interpreted as a string instead of a vector:
8<------------------------------------------------------------
#+results: test_output
| 1.25000000e+00 |
#+source: check_input
#+begin_src octave :var input=test_output() :results output
ischar( input )
size( input )
#+end_src
#+results: check_input
: input = 1.25000000e+00
: ans = 1
: ans =
: 1 14
8<------------------------------------------------------------
This has to do with the EXP notation. The 'e+00' suffix makes the
whole table into a string. The problem is with "%S" in the formatting
inside org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
The following patch seems to fix it (and makes it possible to work with
complex numbers inside the tables)::
[diff removed]
A third problem is with org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
For example:
: (org-babel-octave-var-to-octave '( ( 1 2 3 ) ( 4 5 6 ) ))
: -> "[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]"
This is not a 2x3 matrix, but a 1x6 vector:
: octave-3.2.3:1> [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]
: ans =
: 1 2 3 4 5 6
a semicolon ';' or '\n' is needed between rows instead of a comma.
To sum up:
- 2 patches for prepare-session and importing the results back as
org-tables (I don't know if these patches break anything).
- 1 problem with matrix notation in org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
I'll try to provide a patch for this today.
2010-08-01 Juan Pechiar <Pechiar@computer.org>
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
use `org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file' instead of
`org-babel-eval-read-file'.
(org-babel-octave-var-to-octave): separate matrix rows with
';', and use '%s' as format specifier instead of '%S'
For some reason ob-R refuses to compile when it requires ob-comint.
When (require 'ob-comint) is not included in ob-R.el everything
compiles without error, but warnings are thrown because the
arguments to a macro defined in ob-comint are mis-interpreted as
functions.
When (require 'ob-comint) is added to ob-R.el then it throws errors
complaining that the last argument to a function is nil and should
be a string. I don't understand this error at all and can't fix it.