@olaf: I was missing gfortran and libncurses5-dev. It's working now, sweet. :)
Thanks for your suggestion. I tried that, but it wasn't it. I'm still getting lots of build errors, culminating with this: Saving to: `lapack-3.4.0.tgz' 2012-02-19 01:03:26 (55.3 KB/s) - `lapack-3.4.0.tgz' saved…
Thank heaven for community supported firmware - Amen.
Definitely avoid charging for CM - that will put a total damper on community enthusiasm. The better approach would be to rationalize builds - we don't have to have nightly builds. IMHO even weekly builds would be plenty.
Anyone else having compile issues? I'm on Ubuntu 11.10 (Server x64) and make fails consistently.
This is very exciting - congratulations on the launch of Julia. Now good luck as you move towards building a strong community!
Python does have the strength in all the powerful libraries it makes available to you, and that may be a determining factor in the relative popularity of Python v. Ruby in the future. I've used Python for many years but…
I'm glad to learn the jury made the right decision. Sometimes it seems too much to expect even that much. Something really needs to be done to fix this nature of trolling.
@olaf: I was missing gfortran and libncurses5-dev. It's working now, sweet. :)
Thanks for your suggestion. I tried that, but it wasn't it. I'm still getting lots of build errors, culminating with this: Saving to: `lapack-3.4.0.tgz' 2012-02-19 01:03:26 (55.3 KB/s) - `lapack-3.4.0.tgz' saved…
Thank heaven for community supported firmware - Amen.
Definitely avoid charging for CM - that will put a total damper on community enthusiasm. The better approach would be to rationalize builds - we don't have to have nightly builds. IMHO even weekly builds would be plenty.
Anyone else having compile issues? I'm on Ubuntu 11.10 (Server x64) and make fails consistently.
This is very exciting - congratulations on the launch of Julia. Now good luck as you move towards building a strong community!
Python does have the strength in all the powerful libraries it makes available to you, and that may be a determining factor in the relative popularity of Python v. Ruby in the future. I've used Python for many years but…
I'm glad to learn the jury made the right decision. Sometimes it seems too much to expect even that much. Something really needs to be done to fix this nature of trolling.