Can ipython notebook be used when not connected to the internet?
My installation doesn't open a web browser tab if not online.
Thanks!
Yes, it should work without needing an internet connection. If a browser tab doesn't open automatically, open a browser and go to the URL it gives you in the terminal where you started the notebook (by default, this is http://127.0.0.1:8888/ ). It uses the 'loopback' network interface, which stays within your own computer.
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I am used to using VS Code to work on projects locally on my (Windows) laptop. However, for a new project I'm working on, I need an Ubuntu VM, which I installed with VM Box. The issue is that developing directly in the VM is not as seamless as I would like it to be, which is why I want to connect to the VM remotely from my laptop.
I was able to connect to the VM, but all my VS Code User settings were seemingly reset or absent for the remote session. All my configurations in the settings but also the extensions were gone. If I open a local window, the settings are still there, but not in the remote session.
I get that it might be useful for virtual environments and things like that, but I don't want to have to copy all my user settings and reinstall manually all my extensions that I will use regardless of the project.
Is there any way to use my user settings for remote sessions as well?
Like Theia, code-server, those tools allow user editor files in a remote instance from browser.
I wondering if vscode native (without extension) support this, so user could open a workspace on a remote instance.
In VS Code when i try to run the below command for sign in
I get below error message and it is not able to login
I had the same issue due to working behind a company proxy. I could solve it by writing the http proxy in the settings (instead of leaving it empty and inheriting from environment variables).
I had the same issue - the problem was that my VS code was still remotely connected to my office server via SSH. I killed that connection ("close remote connection") and it allowed me to sign in.
Same exact issue for me, caused (most likely) by my company's proxy blocking the sign-in request. What fixed it was:
closing Visual Studio Code (previously opened through code . in WSL in my case);
opening Visual Studio Code again directly in Windows;
Login to Azure (then finally the browser opened with the login page and I could get in)
Of course your log-in will be saved also when you close VSCode in windows and reopen in WSL.
On GitHub Desktop (I use it on Windows), I have had this error over the last few days:
My Internet connection seems to work fine though. What could cause the issue?
Is your internet connection goes through firewall/proxy server. I found that GitHub Windows client is only reliably works when no proxy enabled. Being windows (.NET to be precise) application it takes proxy settings as they defined in Internet Explorer connection settings. Meanwhile, Git itself, which GitHub Windows client desktop application simply uses via command prompt, is governed by http and https proxy settings in .gitconfig file or environment variables. This discrepancy makes it quite sophisticated to setup.
What's interesting, is that desktop app was working the first time I installed it fresh (never had it on this Windows), but it wasn't able to connect to GitHub. Then I started to fiddle with --global http/https settings and I broke the app. Now, even uninstalling and installing it back again, I still have connectivity issues, as it seems to remember settings somewhere, as it doesn't prompt me with welcome screen and does remember my name.
Worth to mention, that even if the app complains about connection, I can clone the repo with it.
This worked for me:
In Internet Explorer: Tools/Internet Options/Connections/LAN Settings
Uncheck "Use a Proxy server..."
Restart GitHub.
You might also be able to disable the Proxy Server via Edge. In my case, I found that after turning it off in IE, it was off in Edge also.
Edit: I also had to update the GitHub application in order to be able to clone to my local repository.
i am only start learning GWT by following their tutorial on https://developers.google.com/web-toolkit/doc/2.1/tutorial/create
On that page, when i reach the heading Running the development mode code server (from Eclipse), i copied the generated url http://127.0.0.1:8888/StockWatcher.html?gwt.codesvr=127.0.0.1:9997 to my browser.
It eventually times out, says page not loading...the plugin page did not show up initially, so i manually installed the plugin...but it still times out...
On the screen, it says...
===============================================================================
The connection was reset
The site could be temporarily unavailable or too busy. Try again in a few moments.
If you are unable to load any pages, check your computer's network connection.
If your computer or network is protected by a firewall or proxy, make sure that Firefox is permitted to access the Web
==============================================================================
Am i missing any configurations etc?
Thanks very much in advance
It still looks like your browser is missing the GWT developer plugin. Try a different browser (preferably Chrome). You can also check the instalation of GWT in Eclipse. Look into Windows/Preferences and under Google/WebToolkit you should see checked GWT SDK. Also you can check if a jetty server runs on port 8888, when you type "netstat -na" on the command line.