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From: | Moritz Borgmann |
Subject: | Re: Octave workshop for Octave 3.0.0 on windows Xp |
Date: | Fri, 28 Mar 2008 20:11:52 +0100 |
It seems that many people are disappointed in some way because Octave doesn't have a GUI. But I just don't see that Matlab's GUI interface is all that useful, so it would be helpful to understand what it provides that is so essential.
looking at what engineers and scientists around me use in terms of Matlab GUI, in approximately decreasing order of importance:
- the "visual debugger" (i.e., with a little arrow next to the current source line, go/stop/step buttons and all that stuff)
- the workspace pane, which gives quick & easy overview over the current variables, their dimensions, etc. (especially useful in combination with debugger)
- command history pane- the profiler, which is really nice in recent Matlabs (even though Octave doesn't have one, so it's not relevant for the GUI discussion)
- the editor, although there's really no need to since there's so many other good editors around.
I personally tend to use the command-line version whenever possible, but I do understand people who find above features useful and hence stick with the GUI.
At 13:37 Uhr -0400 2008-03-28, John W. Eaton wrote:
Please don't take these comments the wrong way. I'm seriously trying to understand what it is that makes the Matlab GUI so essential to so many users. Perhaps it is only a few small features that would not be so hard to add to Octave.
I don't think Octave should do much in the way of GUI, simply provide good hooks for 3rd-party IDE apps to support the features that people are used to in the Matlab GUI.
-M
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