- did not account for cases when username not set (namely when remote is localhost)
- did not account for cases when remote directory was not set (namely when remote is localhost)
- added unnecessary `filesep` to `pname` when `pname` was empty
- ignore unused output arguments (it is necessary to explicitly ignore them to prevent unwanted output from the `system` call)
- globbing did not work as it was expanded on the calling machine not the remote; pass call to `bash -c` to handle this
The Emacs lisp source file was failing byte-compilation, because the
“dynare-blocks” variable was used within an “eval-when-compile” block, while
its definition was not in such a block.
The copy of MathJax that we were embedding was not source code, because it
contained minified Javascript. In particular, this is a problem for the
official Debian package.
We now strip the copy. Users compiling the HTML manual from the source tarball
will therefore get MathJax from a CDN (this is the default behaviour of
Sphinx).
- macro processor: allow for the definition of a variable without a value
- dragonfly: add new field to `options_.parallel_info`
- fix lookbehind to handle `-` sign in substitution of dates in native statements
- remove support for weekly dates
- dragonfly: support ProgramConfig config file option
- dragonfly: support ProgramPath config file option
- add undocumented `gui` option to preprocessor
- occbin: support occbin tags in equation tags, add occbin_likelihood and occbin_smoother as options to estimation
- make loop variables const
- Combine `DynareMain.cc` and `DynareMain2.cc`
In Octave, when some values given to the sparse() function are numerically
zero, then the nzmax of the generated sparse matrix is shrinked accordingly;
while under MATLAB, the nzmax is the length of the vector of values, zeros
included.
The check at the top of
DynamicModelMFile::unpackSparseMatrixAndCopyIntoTwoDMatData() would then fail
under Octave if some higher-derivatives had an element which is symbolically
non-zero but numerically zero.
We therefore relax the check, and accordingly adapt the code that handles
numerical zeros.
This bug was uncovered by tests/pruning/AnSchorfheide_pruned_state_space.mod,
which was failing under Octave.
This is a partial revert of 8fa4c483f9.
Actually, the official name is “GNU Octave”, and it is easier to find it under
that name in search engines. So use the full name at a few prominent places,
and use the shorter “Octave” everywhere else.
The workaround consists in appending the names of those macro-directives with a
regular space followed by a zero-width space (U+200B).
An extra LaTeX declaration was also added in order to make this hack work with
the PDF.
Ref. #1707