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Thanks for the responses - I've used ResolverOne quite a bit and am fond of its capabilities. My primary needs are to have a "spreadsheet interface" that allows me to call functions using "=myfunc(A1, A2)" which are defined in python code. Most of my work makes use of standard python libraries, so using ResolverOne had me rewriting a lot of the same code that I don't want to rewrite (math/science manipulation stuff). Also, I'd like to use it as a viewer of intermediate states of data. eg - seeing what the data looks like at each step in the overall analytic system. I've checked out a lot of those tools - picalo looks very cool, though not quite what im looking for at the moment. OpenOffice looked so promising, until I began inspecting the PyUNO bridge - that stuff looks very heavy when compared ti Resolver, which would be exactly right if I could use C Python libs.... I've also thought about embedding Python into MS Excel through XLW - this currently seems like a great option, though i'm trying to avoid windows code altogether. Hoping someone has some options ....plz! - Luis On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 5:59 PM, Paul Kienzle <pkienzle@nist.gov> wrote:
On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 09:40:09PM +0100, Sebastian Haase wrote:
Since the GUI part is practically given with some simple wxPython code, one could instead ask for a "spreadsheed engine" !! This would be a (small) set of functions which can analysis the dependencies a given spreadsheet and evaluate the cells in a (non-circular) sequence taking the found dependencies into account. Might already exist ...
Indeed. See attached. Not the highest performance code, but it should be enough to get one started. All you need is to parse the expressions to identify cell references for building the dependency graph.
- Paul
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