Here are some results running Mathematica 12.3.1 natively on the M1 MacBook Air ( -with-mathematica-v-12-for-up-to-date-comparison-across-different-ma/250736#250736) and M1 MacBook Pro ( -for-new-m1-macbooks/250779#250779).
Wolfram Mathematica 8 For Mac
Many question on mathematica.stackexchange.com are from Windows user. That is no wonder since the Mac OSx version is 64bit only just since very few versions of Masc OsX and Mathematica version 12.0 and before only a 32bit version was available for buying.
Surely this is a bug (please report it to support@wolfram.com), but you can work around the problem by selecting the graphic and choosing File > Save Selection As... from the menu (or Save Graphic As... from the contextual menu). This produces a slightly different file that doesn't appear to exhibit the undesirable behavior we observe from Export[].
The main problem can be summarized in one word: speed. I just looked at one of the featured (May 2011) interactive demonstrations at demonstrations.wolfram.com: "TreeBender." It's a nice interactive fractal tree. But it appears to be only a minor adaptation of another online demo that has, since 2010, been one of the all-time favorites at openprocessing.org: "Advanced Tree Generator," created by my son James Nöckel in Processing, a Java-based language. Compare for yourself which of these demos runs more smoothly and feels more responsive (James implemented a delay for more physical, smooth response, and you can crank up the number of branchings much higher). There are more dramatic examples, but the message is: Java, Flash and (lately) even Javascript can often beat Mathematica when interactivity is required.
In this article you are talking about programming using the free form linguistic input. This is of interest to me. I have done some programming in mathematica and a lot in fortran. Using the free form format I can get a simple If statement to work but not an iterative statement such as a Do command. If someone has accomplished this could you E-mail the results. I would like to follow the continuing work Wolfram/Alpha. Thank you for your time and patience.
Mathematica is also integrated with Wolfram Alpha, an online answer engine that provides additional data, some of which is kept updated in real time, for users who use Mathematica with an internet connection. Some of the data sets include astronomical, chemical, geopolitical, language, biomedical, airplane, and weather data, in addition to mathematical data (such as knots and polyhedra).[49] 2ff7e9595c
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