Provided by: octave_7.2.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       octave - A high-level interactive language for numerical computations.

SYNOPSIS

       octave [options]... [file]

DESCRIPTION

       Octave  is  a  high-level  language,  primarily  intended  for numerical computations.  It
       provides a convenient command line interface for solving  linear  and  nonlinear  problems
       numerically.

OPTIONS

       The  complete set of command-line options for octave is available by running the following
       command from the shell.

           octave --help

DOCUMENTATION

       The primary documentation for Octave is  written  using  Texinfo,  the  GNU  documentation
       system,  which  allows  the  same  source  files  to be used to produce online and printed
       versions of the manual.

       You can read the online copy of the Octave documentation by issuing the following  command
       from within octave.

           octave:1> doc

       The  Info  files may also be read with a stand-alone program such as info or xinfo.  HTML,
       Postscript, or PDF versions of the documentation are installed on many systems as well.

BUGS

       The Octave project maintains a bug tracker at https://bugs.octave.org.  Before  submitting
       a  new  item  please  read  the instructions at https://www.octave.org/bugs.html on how to
       submit a useful report.

FILES

       Upon startup Octave looks for four initialization files.  Each file may contain any number
       of valid Octave commands.

       octave-home/share/octave/site/m/startup/octaverc
              Site-wide  initialization file which changes options for all users.  octave-home is
              the directory where Octave was installed such as /usr/local.

       octave-home/share/octave/version/m/startup/octaverc
              Site-wide initialization file for Octave version version.

       ~/.octaverc
              User's personal initialization file.

       .octaverc
              Project-specific initialization file located in the current directory.

AUTHOR

       John W. Eaton <jwe@octave.org>