I have recently modified SciTe (scintilla GTK editor) to handle simple error
in octave using the same strategy for Lua language.
If anybody is interested I could write more on this subject ..
I have a similar behavior for python language
http://scintilla.sourceforge.net/SciTEDoc.html
Respectfully
Riccardo
Kamaraju Kusumanchi <address@hidden> ha scritto: >
If you really want to see something happen, why not ask your
organization you work for to pay and support the development of a
Octave-GUI ?
Wow! Hold on there a minute. Thinking from a manager's point of view,
what competitive advantage does it give to the company to develop a
octave GUI when a perfectly useful command line alternative is available?
Another thing that comes to my mind is this. There is a package called
texmacs which provides a GUI for octave 2.1. However it does not work
with octave 2.9. Upon searching further, I found out http://
www.texmacs.org/tmweb/plugins/numerics.en.html#octave where it says
A first experimental interface between TeXmacs and GNU Octave
has been written by Michael Graffam. Unfortunately, we get little
help from the main Octave developers for the improvement of the
interface and the integration of patches into the mainline of Octave.
So, if you like the idea of using Octave from inside TeXmacs, then
please help advertising it.
Based on this, If I am the manager I wouldn't put money into making a GUI
unless the project is approved by the lead developers of octave. AFAIK,
money is not the issue here. It is how much the lead developers of octave
want to have a GUI...
You can say it is GPL, you can write your own code etc., I understand all
that. If I desperately want a GUI, I probably will do that. But I have a
feeling that money is not the stumbling block here.
hth
raju (with his flame suite on)