I have installed anaconda. I added the anaconda path to my system variables but each time I fire up ipython notebook or jupyter notebook, it says terminals unavailable.
Has something gone wrong with my installation? I am someone out of academia and I am hoping for the kind help of a pro. Thank you,
Would you by any chance be under windows ?
If so you are out of luck, the ability to have an in-browser terminal is not available on windows for the moment. There is no active plan of making this work on windows either, unless someone with the technical knowledge and a windows machine, improve the underlying package
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I apologize if it is a trivial question, but I searched and I could not find the answer. My situation is the following:
I have access to a server through ssh tunnelling. The server has Julia installed but not jupyter.
My machine has both, and my code is mostly in jupyter notebooks and I wish to keep it that way.
I wish to be able to run my code on a julia kernel on the server, but editing from a Jupyter interface/ IJulia locally.
I have found several guides on how to launch jupyter from remote, but they do not apply since the server does not have jupyter installed. Similarly, I am aware I could convert my code in a julia script and run it, but I would rather keep the convenience of a notebook for editing.
Is this even possible to do?
Any help is very appreciated!
I used to use VScode in conjunction with anaconda, but later I started to appreciate the light weight stuff. So, I would like to uninstall anaconda. I have tried to do so using all the methods suggested in the forum, including using the designated anaconda-clean. None of them really works. This helped a little bit to the point I could successfully install the cleaner. But as I proceed to actually remove anaconda, nothing really happened.
Please see the thread attached as below.
Conda is surprisingly still there. So I figured an alternative would be to just disassociate anaconda or conda from VScode? How would you do so? Thank you!
Trying to use conda install to get anaconda-clean but environment fails to solve and a very slow analysis of conflicts starts
I butchered the anaconda in my mac. Very unelegant. I manually deleted as much of it as possible. That way VScode is freed from anaconda. I would still appreciate an elegant other than just manually removing which is a pain in the rear.
I know for this issue there are some solutions but they didn't work for me. And I don't understand how I can do. I guess I have to change PATH stuff, but I don't understand to be honest.
My terminal .zsh (I can't change this with .bash, because I have to use it.)
My system Mac OS Catalina
I installed Anaconda. When I try to launch Jupyter Notebook on Anaconda, Jupiter notebook doesn't open on the web browser, it says waiting for localhost.
And when I try to launch Jupyter Notebook in terminal with code 'jupyter notebook'. It says 'zsh: command not found: jupyter'
Please help, this thing drive me crazy.
I solved this problem. The reason for this was the Antivirus program. It blocks to open Jupyter Notebook on the web browser. If you have same problem, remove your antivirus program.
Installing Canopy 2.1.9 for Windows 64-bit on Windows 10, and the installer fails immediately after clicking the Install button, with the message "Enthought Canopy (64-bit) Setup Wizard ended prematurely because of an error." Same result using 2.1.8. Same result using the run-as-administrator command line msiexec instructions, same result running the installer as administrator, same result installing for current user or all users.
Enthought support here. Sounds like there's something unusual about your current system status. Most likely would be interference from a 3rd-party anti-virus program, or similar. If temporarily disabling that doesn't help, then please run msiexec /Lv*x canopy-msi.log ... etc..., then zip and send the resulting log, with a link to this SO question, to support#enthought.com. We'll look at it as time permits, though we do not have the bandwidth to help you debug your system setup.
I was previously running Enthought EPD 7.3.2, but switched over to Canopy (academic license). I completely uninstalled EPD before running the Canopy install.
After installing Canopy, I have a shortcut to IDLE in the Canopy start menu folder, but I can't get it to launch (I click it and nothing happens). Tried uninstalling and reinstalling Canopy, but am having the same issue.
Running the 64-bit version of Canopy on Win7, 64bit.
I had a similar problem and found a very simple solution. Try it out and see if it works in your situation too. There is a directory for the Canopy installation:
C:\Users\\AppData\Local\Enthought\Canopy\App\appdata\canopy-1.7.4.3348.win-x86_64\Lib\idlelib
Find “idle.ico” file there, copy and paste it into “Icons” subdirectory.
This fixed the problem!
Canopy 1.0 and 1.0.1 versions have problems with tcl and TKinter, and IDLE doesn't work. This should be fixed in an update, which is just round the corner.
As an afterthought, is there a specific reason you wish to use IDLE? Canopy's editor comes integrated with an IPython console (along with many other goodies), which gives a much better user experience while programming, IMO. (Disclaimer: I work for Enthought)