I installed python 3.8.1(32) at default directory, also installed jupyter notebook through Windows PowerShell.
Every time i launched jupyter notebook through PowerShell, I get this error message not executing notebook.
How can I fix it?
This is a known issue in jupyter notebook with python 3.8.x. This is the current workaround.
Related
I wanted to run jupyter notebook with python: 3.7.10 so I created a virtual env and activated it using anaconda. Then when I run Jupyter notebook, it still uses python 3.8.8. How can I change the python version used by jupyter notebook?
Thank you for your help in advance.
You have probably typed jupyter notebook in the command prompt and it opened.
Actually jupyter and notebook are two modules that you need to install on your virtual environment. So that you can leverage jupyter notebook from that environment.
In your case since you didn't had them it started from the one having.
Now the way I suggest to start jupyter from a particular environment is from the navigator itself as shown in the figure below.
Select your environment and then install and launch jupyter notebook.
If it doesn't work you can try integrating conda with jupyter notebook and run your environment directly from jupyter notebook using the package nb_conda. Check this 4 min video youtu.be/Ro9l0eapoJU for the process.
I tried to use the Jupyter Notebook application as usual but, I could not connect to the Kernel ( python(base) ) when I launched the the jupyter notebook from my CMD line,the notebook launched fine but it was impossible to execute any code since it couldn’t connect to the kernel.
But when I launch the jupyter notebook from the anaconda navigator, it works well and connects to the kernel.
I have looked at documentation and all the threads that I could find but nothing solved my solution of connecting with the kernel. I tried downgrading tornado, re-installing everything but it did not work. I would be very grateful if someone could tell me what i am doing wrong.
The below screenshot shows, the jupyter notebook launched from anaconda navigator and the kernel was connected:
The below screenshots show the jupyter notebook was launched from the cmd, and the connection to the kernel was not established:
try writing conda if it shows you an error then you should check whether conda path variable is added or you will need to run this jupyter notebook in anaconda prompt.
I just bought my very first Mac after using Windows my entire life and have been trying to install things. I am also still kind of a beginner at programming.
I installed Anaconda for Python 2.7 version, and then I installed the 3.7 version right after.
I tried going to terminal and typing jupyter notebook but it says:
zsh: command not found: jupyter
I am able to launch a jupyter notebook (I think) when I search for jupyter notebook in spotlight and executing the top hit.
I've been reading a lot on forums about this issue and see a lot of people talking about PATH which I am not really sure about.
I've seen people also post their which python information and theirs seem very different from mine:
which python3
usr/bin/python3
which python
usr/bin/python
Any help would be appreciated! Still learning how to set up this Mac. Thank you.
You might want to refer to this link https://jupyter-notebook-beginner-guide.readthedocs.io/en/latest/execute.html
3.1.2. Change Jupyter Notebook startup folder (Mac OS)
To launch Jupyter Notebook App:
Click on spotlight, type terminal to open a terminal window.
Enter the startup folder by typing cd /some_folder_name.
Type jupyter notebook to launch the Jupyter Notebook App The notebook interface will appear in a new browser window or tab.
From what I can understand you are not changing to the startup directory of Jupyter.
You need to add jupyter to your path.
In your terminal, type in the following command:
export PATH="/PUT JUPYTER PATH HERE:$PATH"
Then try jupyter notebook
Reasoning: If installing using pip install --user, you must add the user-level bin directory to your PATH environment variable in order to launch jupyter lab
I recently installed the Anaconda Navigator (Anaconda 2) on a Windows 8.1 machine.
If I launch Jupyter Notebook from the Anaconda window, I am met with a 'Page cannot be displayed' error in my browser (Chrome).
I have tried launching Jupyter Notebook from the Anaconda Prompt (no notable error message output). I have also tried opening the Notebook in a different browser (Firefox), and I have tried running the Prompt in Administrator mode. No luck.
I have Jupyter Notebook version 5.6.0 according to the Navigator, but if I type jupyter --version at the prompt it says 4.4.0 (wondering if this is a problem?)
I kind of expected to be able to launch a Notebook right off the bat after installing Anaconda. Is there some set-up I have missed?
(Edit) Tried a few more things, after reading the Jupyter Notebook docs. Tried replacing 'localhost' in the URL with 127.0.0.1, and tried opening the link Chrome with --disable-web-security. Didn't help.
Steps which i will advice:
1) Open your command prompt in the directory which contains your notebook or where you want to create new notebook.
2) Write jupyter notebook in cmd and press enter.
If jupyter notebook is properly installed then it will certainly open, else try reinstalling it.
Note: You can always update your jupyter notebook via conda or pip. At time if you update or install package/IDE via pip, Anaconda terms it as "broken link" and give issue.
I have a Jupyter notebook containing python and R scripts as well as magic commands. What I need is to schedule a task using Windows Task scheduler that somehow triggers run of this notebook. My scripts run at night and I prefer Jupyter to be closed.
So I wonder if there is a way to do this?
Thank you in advance.
It is perfectly possible to do this
Create a bat file that you can reference in the windows task scheduler.
Code as follows:
cd C:\path to your notebook
jupyter nbconvert --to notebook --execute NOTEBOOKTOEXECUTE.ipynb
I needed to include the path, as the console would be run from the system path and thus unable to find the notebook.