julia> using IJulia notebook(detached=true) This is also useful if you want to keep using the current Julia session instead of opening a new one. You can use notebook(detached=true) to launch a notebook server in the background that will persist even when you quit Julia. (In a Debian or Ubuntu GNU/Linux system, install the package jupyter-client to install the system jupyter.) On Linux, it defaults to looking for jupyter in your PATH first, and only asks to installs the Conda Jupyter if that fails you can force it to use Conda on Linux by setting ENV="" during installation (see above). Hit enter to have it use the Conda.jl package to install a minimal Python+Jupyter distribution (via Miniconda) that is private to Julia (not in your PATH). The first time you run notebook(), it will prompt you for whether it should install Jupyter. To launch the IJulia notebook in your browser. To simplify installation, however, you can alternatively type the following in Julia, at the julia> prompt: using IJulia If you are comfortable managing your own Python/Jupyter installation, you can just run jupyter notebook yourself in a terminal. Edit on GitHub Running IJulia Running the IJulia Notebook
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