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@@ -42,8 +42,7 @@ Christopher Howard is a simulator technician in Fairbanks, Alaska, and a GNU Ema
that came to mind when you said that you'd like to annotate
values)? Any thoughts on that? How about rendering gnuplots on org
documents via calc?
- - A: I played around with org-babel a few years ago but haven't
- really had any need or interest in it of late.
+ - A: I played around with babel once like two years ago, trying to see if it would make more sense to use babel or one of those jupiter notepad things. But I guess I haven't really had any need to play around with either one since then. I don't really have any need to produce plots on org documents right now, but it is an interesting idea.
- Q: Who is in charge of calc development anyway? Is there an active maintainer?
- Nice talk.
- Thanks for the cool talk! I've been using Calc quite a lot recently for linear algebra work. I also use it quite often for unit conversion. There's a package called calc-currency which is very useful but unfortunately does not seem to be maintained anymore.
@@ -52,7 +51,7 @@ Christopher Howard is a simulator technician in Fairbanks, Alaska, and a GNU Ema
- calc is suprisingly good at datetime math.
- I mostly use it for that and unit conversion. I don't do any fancy calculus like lispmacs did in his talk.
- Funny, I'm studying computer engineering and just a few weeks ago I'd decided to properly learn how to use calc myself.
-
+- Interesting descriptions of stargazing on Christopher Howard's gemlog
[[!inline pages="internal(2025/info/calc-after)" raw="yes"]]