

I'm hoping the 64-bit Raspberry Pi OS is soon out of beta test. In my opinion Wolfram's Mathematica was one of the most important applications bundled with the NeXT Computer and today fulfills a similar role for the Raspberry Pi.

I look forward to using a naive 64 bit mathematica, but realistically I doubt that wolfram would even begin to work on it before 64 bit Raspberry is out of beta. But Wolfram Mathematica, which is available on Raspbian on the Pi itself, doesnt seem to be included in the PC version. This splits the input into a numerator and denominator (indicated by empty boxes). Sat 9:08 am I have installed Raspberry Pi Desktop on an oldish laptop and it seems to work very well.

I did not try to follow the gentoo instruction to first install the 32 bit "donor" libraries. Using Wolfram Mathematica on Raspberry Pi In Mathematica you can enter fractions by pressing CTRL+/. After some research, I decided on a Debian Bullseye armhf chroot as the easiest method to run Mathematica. But when I tried to install that I got lots of error messages about missing 64bit (java/fortran) libraries - as expected. The problem lies in the fact that Mathematica is only available as an armhf binary this no problem on Raspberry Pi OS, since it includes the necessary multilib libraries, but it is obviously a show stopper on arm64 Arch/Manjaro. I could not sudo apt search mathematica I did find wolfram-engine. Here is the best link I have for getting started: Does anyone know whether it is possible to install the current 32-bit version of Mathematica on the beta test 64-bit Raspberry Pi OS? Also, is there any news about whether and when Mathematica will be available for the 64-bit OS?
