![]() NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in his annual news conference preceding All-Star Saturday events that he felt the robust amount of player movement – 12 deals involving 24 teams and 49 players on trade-deadline day, Feb. One thing they do agree on: A record-setting trade deadline this season is a good thing. Using evince to open it I got: Error: PDF file is damaged -īut evince managed to work around whatever error CDF Player had put in the file and I could read it just fine.SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association clearly do not agree on everything, as evidenced by the fact that there’s no new Collective Bargaining Agreement yet. The final experiment was to see if I could export the notebooks to pdf to make checking equations quicker. ![]() I was then able to run it and open the notebook files. So I tried $ apt-get install ia32-libs-gtkĪnd success. But if you install ia32-libs-gtk as well it will work. My ia32-libs creates a symlink /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib/libgthread-2.so pointing to libgthread-2.0.so.0 in the same directory, but this file is missing I took a look in /usr/lib/ and I could see both libXmu.so.6 and libgthread-2.0.so.0, but in /usr/lib32 the offending libgthread-2.0.so.0 library was missing.Ī search landed me on this Debian bugs thread, where one user writes: Perhaps that install had something extra? But no, I tried it on top of what I did before and still the libgthread-2.0.so.0: cannot open shared object file problem persisted.īoth threads however mentioned the 32-bit library issue, that CDF Player uses that instead of the 64-bit types. I came across another message on the Official Wolfram Forums suggesting that the solution to the missing libXmu.so.6 library problem was to install libxmu-dev. Libgthread-2.0.so.0: cannot open shared object file: So I did an apt-get install ia32-libs, and retried invoking the Mathematica CDF Player: /usr/local/Wolfram/CDFPlayer/8.0/SystemFiles/FrontEnd/Binaries/Linux/WolframCDFPlayer: It looks like that MathematicaPlayerPro is a pure 32bitĪpplication (according to WRI-support). If you have the stand-alone CDF Player and cannot open and run CDFįiles in it, contact Wolfram Technical Support at on the Ubuntu forums I found this post: I checked out the Official Forums for any Linux related stuff, and the first thread I came across had an Official Forum Moderator advising one student: LibXmu.so.6: cannot open sharedobject file: usr/local/Wolfram/CDFPlayer/8.0/SystemFiles/FrontEnd/Binaries/Linux/WolframCDFPlayer: I downloaded it and installed it $ chmod +x CDFPlayer_8.0.4_LINUX.sh All urls now lead to Wolfram CDF Player, which is available for Linux, but not with browser capability. ![]() It seems that over time Wolfram has released a few different reader and converter programs, like Mathreader and Mathematica Player, which seem to be differently-abled versions of Mathematica. ![]() I’m glad I did keep searching, because after a good deal of time the converter returned “Error uploading file” and that was the end of that. I found an online nb to pdf converter hosted by Wolfram called NBtoPDF, so I uploaded the smallest file (quite a few M) while I kept searching for a solution. I don’t use Mathematica (if I felt the need for that kind of thing I’d go for Sage) and I don’t have access to it, so I started looking around for a way to export the notebook, say to pdf. Recently a colleague sent me some information on his model and a bunch of Mathematica.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |