Running file with some extension












3












$begingroup$


I want to run the Mathematica file with some extension, like '.m'. But, I don't know, how can I run the code. Please, guide me.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Have a look at Get.
    $endgroup$
    – Henrik Schumacher
    Mar 17 at 12:25










  • $begingroup$
    To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
    $endgroup$
    – Szabolcs
    Mar 18 at 12:12










  • $begingroup$
    what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 13:26












  • $begingroup$
    Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 18:17
















3












$begingroup$


I want to run the Mathematica file with some extension, like '.m'. But, I don't know, how can I run the code. Please, guide me.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Have a look at Get.
    $endgroup$
    – Henrik Schumacher
    Mar 17 at 12:25










  • $begingroup$
    To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
    $endgroup$
    – Szabolcs
    Mar 18 at 12:12










  • $begingroup$
    what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 13:26












  • $begingroup$
    Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 18:17














3












3








3





$begingroup$


I want to run the Mathematica file with some extension, like '.m'. But, I don't know, how can I run the code. Please, guide me.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




I want to run the Mathematica file with some extension, like '.m'. But, I don't know, how can I run the code. Please, guide me.







packages






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 17 at 14:23









J. M. is slightly pensive

98.5k10309466




98.5k10309466










asked Mar 17 at 12:20









Misbah ShahzadiMisbah Shahzadi

162




162








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Have a look at Get.
    $endgroup$
    – Henrik Schumacher
    Mar 17 at 12:25










  • $begingroup$
    To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
    $endgroup$
    – Szabolcs
    Mar 18 at 12:12










  • $begingroup$
    what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 13:26












  • $begingroup$
    Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 18:17














  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Have a look at Get.
    $endgroup$
    – Henrik Schumacher
    Mar 17 at 12:25










  • $begingroup$
    To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
    $endgroup$
    – Szabolcs
    Mar 18 at 12:12










  • $begingroup$
    what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 13:26












  • $begingroup$
    Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 18 at 18:17








2




2




$begingroup$
Have a look at Get.
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
Mar 17 at 12:25




$begingroup$
Have a look at Get.
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
Mar 17 at 12:25












$begingroup$
To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
$endgroup$
– Szabolcs
Mar 18 at 12:12




$begingroup$
To keep it simple, pass the full path to the file to the Get function. That's all.
$endgroup$
– Szabolcs
Mar 18 at 12:12












$begingroup$
what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 18 at 13:26






$begingroup$
what is ''Get''? There is no link. I can't open this. How can I pass the full path to the file? Can you help me Please? I have Mathematica 11.3 in my system. But, not able to run the code in file with extension ''.m''.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 18 at 13:26














$begingroup$
Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 18 at 18:17




$begingroup$
Please help me. Actually I don't know about packages. So, I am facing difficulties.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 18 at 18:17










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$

If a file has the extension .m, then I assume you are trying to load a package into your notebook. This can be achieved by calling the package (say called PackageName.m) into your own notebook by doing the following:




  1. You can type into your opening like <<PackageName`, which uses the backtick symbol `. It is probably at the left hand side of your keyboard.


  2. Alternatively, this is a shortcut for the MMA function Get, given in the documentation here. The first example has the above notation I was talking about. Then Get["PackageName.m"] would work.



Here is a screenshot so you can see the backtick in action.



Click on this to take you to my image.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 14:13










  • $begingroup$
    I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
    $endgroup$
    – J. M. is slightly pensive
    Mar 17 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 15:27











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2












$begingroup$

If a file has the extension .m, then I assume you are trying to load a package into your notebook. This can be achieved by calling the package (say called PackageName.m) into your own notebook by doing the following:




  1. You can type into your opening like <<PackageName`, which uses the backtick symbol `. It is probably at the left hand side of your keyboard.


  2. Alternatively, this is a shortcut for the MMA function Get, given in the documentation here. The first example has the above notation I was talking about. Then Get["PackageName.m"] would work.



Here is a screenshot so you can see the backtick in action.



Click on this to take you to my image.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 14:13










  • $begingroup$
    I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
    $endgroup$
    – J. M. is slightly pensive
    Mar 17 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 15:27
















2












$begingroup$

If a file has the extension .m, then I assume you are trying to load a package into your notebook. This can be achieved by calling the package (say called PackageName.m) into your own notebook by doing the following:




  1. You can type into your opening like <<PackageName`, which uses the backtick symbol `. It is probably at the left hand side of your keyboard.


  2. Alternatively, this is a shortcut for the MMA function Get, given in the documentation here. The first example has the above notation I was talking about. Then Get["PackageName.m"] would work.



Here is a screenshot so you can see the backtick in action.



Click on this to take you to my image.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 14:13










  • $begingroup$
    I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
    $endgroup$
    – J. M. is slightly pensive
    Mar 17 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 15:27














2












2








2





$begingroup$

If a file has the extension .m, then I assume you are trying to load a package into your notebook. This can be achieved by calling the package (say called PackageName.m) into your own notebook by doing the following:




  1. You can type into your opening like <<PackageName`, which uses the backtick symbol `. It is probably at the left hand side of your keyboard.


  2. Alternatively, this is a shortcut for the MMA function Get, given in the documentation here. The first example has the above notation I was talking about. Then Get["PackageName.m"] would work.



Here is a screenshot so you can see the backtick in action.



Click on this to take you to my image.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



If a file has the extension .m, then I assume you are trying to load a package into your notebook. This can be achieved by calling the package (say called PackageName.m) into your own notebook by doing the following:




  1. You can type into your opening like <<PackageName`, which uses the backtick symbol `. It is probably at the left hand side of your keyboard.


  2. Alternatively, this is a shortcut for the MMA function Get, given in the documentation here. The first example has the above notation I was talking about. Then Get["PackageName.m"] would work.



Here is a screenshot so you can see the backtick in action.



Click on this to take you to my image.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 17 at 14:22









J. M. is slightly pensive

98.5k10309466




98.5k10309466










answered Mar 17 at 12:44









BradBrad

3312




3312












  • $begingroup$
    Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 14:13










  • $begingroup$
    I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
    $endgroup$
    – J. M. is slightly pensive
    Mar 17 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 15:27


















  • $begingroup$
    Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 14:13










  • $begingroup$
    I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
    $endgroup$
    – J. M. is slightly pensive
    Mar 17 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
    $endgroup$
    – Brad
    Mar 17 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
    $endgroup$
    – Misbah Shahzadi
    Mar 17 at 15:27
















$begingroup$
Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 17 at 14:13




$begingroup$
Thank you so much for your kind response. Are you talking about this symbol '' ~ ''. I just type "<<PackageName(~)" in the notebook, but it does not work. I also type ''<<~'', it also does not work. Sorry to say, I am facing difficulty to learn from the example.
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 17 at 14:13












$begingroup$
I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
$endgroup$
– Brad
Mar 17 at 14:17




$begingroup$
I have added a screenshot. You are on the right key I think, but instead you have held-down shift instead. It's a tricky key to type, but my screenshot should help you.
$endgroup$
– Brad
Mar 17 at 14:17




1




1




$begingroup$
It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
$endgroup$
– J. M. is slightly pensive
Mar 17 at 14:23




$begingroup$
It's tricky but: enclose any code that has backticks in double backticks. I did this for your answer.
$endgroup$
– J. M. is slightly pensive
Mar 17 at 14:23












$begingroup$
@J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
$endgroup$
– Brad
Mar 17 at 14:24




$begingroup$
@J.M.isslightlypensive that's one of the worst things that to look at - 5 backticks is far too many. Thanks for your help JM.
$endgroup$
– Brad
Mar 17 at 14:24












$begingroup$
Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 17 at 15:27




$begingroup$
Now, I followed your suggestions and type. But, I found the error. I am pasting here both input and output which I got. In[8]:= <<PackageName` Get["PackageName.m"] During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName`. Out[8]= $Failed During evaluation of In[8]:= Get::noopen: Cannot open PackageName.m. Out[9]= $Failed
$endgroup$
– Misbah Shahzadi
Mar 17 at 15:27


















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