I prefer The Flow App for the Mac/iOS, for its the simplicity (yet just enough features) and lite on resources. https://flowapp.info Great customer support as well.
Regarding running the engine on iOS: Technically they do that now with their Wolfram Player App on the iOS. The calculations are done on the iPad and not sent to a server like the Wolfram Cloud app.
I recommend the outlines package in LaTeX. I find it much easier to write: \begin{outline} \1 hello \1 world \2 the two indicates a second level. \end{outline}
I found Anki the only software that can easily make flash cards using LaTeX. I typically have a lot of equations and I prefer to write my cards using the outlines package in LaTeX. It makes it very easy to write…
what are some practical uses for this if living in a pure R world? Is this like BigMemory but for data frames? https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/bigmemory/index.html Thanks.
I prefer The Flow App for the Mac/iOS, for its the simplicity (yet just enough features) and lite on resources. https://flowapp.info Great customer support as well.
Regarding running the engine on iOS: Technically they do that now with their Wolfram Player App on the iOS. The calculations are done on the iPad and not sent to a server like the Wolfram Cloud app.
I recommend the outlines package in LaTeX. I find it much easier to write: \begin{outline} \1 hello \1 world \2 the two indicates a second level. \end{outline}
I found Anki the only software that can easily make flash cards using LaTeX. I typically have a lot of equations and I prefer to write my cards using the outlines package in LaTeX. It makes it very easy to write…
what are some practical uses for this if living in a pure R world? Is this like BigMemory but for data frames? https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/bigmemory/index.html Thanks.