Announcing the recent release of MathBench:
http://mathbench.sourceforge.net
Though MathBench is basically "yet another wxPython based IDE", I've
developped it because I wanted to test some ideas about what a minimal
Python shell/editor should look like.
The uses cases I had in mind was then to provided a friendly editor for
scientist that want to try small algorithms or quickly visualise their
data by plotting a few graphs (all of this using Python libraries of
course).
The resulting software offers all the powerfull (yet pretty "classical")
editing features you get with PyCrust for instance (it is by the way
heavily based on it) while offering an easy and quick access to any
documentation available.
MathBench is also customisable/extensible thanks to a plugin system
based on Yapsy
http://yapsy.sourceforge.net
Comments and contributions are, of course, much welcome, should it be of
any interest to anybody :)
Thibauld
--
Web: http://tibonihoo.free.fr
_____________________________________________________________________________
Envoyez avec Yahoo! Mail. Une boite mail plus intelligente http://mail.yahoo.fr<html><head><style type="text/css"><!-- DIV {margin:0px;} --></style></head><body><div style="font-family:times new roman, new york, times, serif;font-size:12pt"><div><pre>Announcing the recent release of MathBench:<br><a href="http://mathbench.sourceforge.net/">http://mathbench.sourceforge.net</a><br><br>Though MathBench is basically "yet another wxPython based IDE", I've<br>developped it because I wanted to test some ideas about what a minimal<br>Python shell/editor should look like.<br><br>The uses cases I had in mind was then to provided a friendly editor for<br>scientist that want to try small algorithms or quickly visualise their<br>data by plotting a few graphs (all of this using Python libraries of<br>course).<br><br>The resulting software offers all the powerfull (yet pretty "classical")<br>editing features you get with PyCrust for instance (it is by the way<br>heavily based on it) while offering an easy and quick access to any<br>documentation
available.<br><br>MathBench is also customisable/extensible thanks to a plugin system<br>based on Yapsy <a href="http://yapsy.sourceforge.net/">http://yapsy.sourceforge.net</a><br><br>Comments and contributions are, of course, much welcome, should it be of<br>any interest to anybody :)<br><br>Thibauld<br><br><br>-- <br>Web: <a href="http://tibonihoo.free.fr/">http://tibonihoo.free.fr</a>
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Announcing the recent release of MathBench:
http://mathbench.sourceforge.net
Though MathBench is basically "yet another wxPython based IDE", I've
developped it because I wanted to test some ideas about what a minimal
Python shell/editor should look like.
The uses cases I had in mind was then to provided a friendly editor for
scientist that want to try small algorithms or quickly visualise their
data by plotting a few graphs (all of this using Python libraries of
course).
The resulting software offers all the powerfull (yet pretty "classical")
editing features you get with PyCrust for instance (it is by the way
heavily based on it) while offering an easy and quick access to any
documentation
available.
MathBench is also customisable/extensible thanks to a plugin system
based on Yapsy
http://yapsy.sourceforge.net
Comments and contributions are, of course, much welcome, should it be of
any interest to anybody :)
Thibauld
PS: sorry for the first unfruitful try !
--
Web: http://tibonihoo.free.fr
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wxpython-dev mailing list
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