Is there a way to separate open Mathematica notebooks so that they don't share any variables? How about making it so some variables are shared but not all?
|
|
closed as off topic by Will♦ Mar 25 '12 at 17:09
Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to relate to programming or software development within the scope defined in the FAQ. Consider editing the question or leaving comments for improvement if you believe the question can be reworded to fit within the scope. Read more about closed questions here.
|
Yes, there is. I recommend reading documentation related to Mathematica contexts. In a nutshell, all variables belong to some context (namespace), and all variables can be accessed via their fully-qualified names of the form "ContextName`varName". If you just use "varName", Mathematica will search contexts in By default, for all notebooks the context is "Global`". Also by default, $ContextPath for all notebooks includes the "Global`" context (as well as "System`" and some others). The net result is that variables are shared across notebooks, and this can rather quickly become annoying. However, there's an easy solution. To create a "private" context for a notebook, evaluate the following:
This notebook will be assigned a unique context (evaluate the variable [Update: As pointed out by rcollyer on the new Mathematica stack exchange, to set this option as the default for new notebooks, do the following: open the Options Inspector (Ctrl+Shift+O), change the scope (in the dropdown on the top) from "Selection" to "Global Preferences"; on the left expand the nodes Cell Options -> Evaluation Options, and change the CellContext setting to "Notebook."] Now, here's how to create a shared context:
Alternatively, you could've just typed
Now you can either use the fully qualified names ("SharedContext`varShared1" will work in any notebook), or you can add the context to $ContextPath:
If you do this in all notebooks, varShared1 will become visible without a fully-qualified name. To summarize, context work a lot like many other search paths. However, there are many subtleties (for example, if a symbol has already been defined in some other context, the Begin["SharedContext`"]/End[] block might not work as you expect -- the existing context of the symbol will be used instead of SharedContext`), so I recommend a healthy dose of experimentation and perusing the docs. |
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
I'm not really sure if this is a wise thing to do, but anyway. Here is a schematic solution for two Notebooks. It may be generalized, but it's not straightforward.
.
Where the Now when you want to share a symbol enter
That's it. You may share the value bidirectionally, or just in one direction, entering f[x] only in the Notebook you want as source value for x. The other Notebook will get the updated value, but it'll not update it back. HTH! Edit Towards automation: You may get all other open Notebook Contexts to update your shared symbols as:
So your f will become something like this (not tested)
|
||||
|
|
|
To give all notebooks unique contexts open Options Inspector and set
Cell Options → Evaluation Options → Cell Context to |
||||
|
|