I've seen that happen before based on the target link... you will need to make sure it points directly to the "jupyter-lab.exe" file. One way to check is to find the "jupyter-lab.exe" file on your computer and double-click to see if it opens jupyter-lab correctly first. If it doesn't, I would need to know more to offer advice.
@@kaletaversity No, it doesn't. I experimentally found a better way. Since both Jupyter notebook and lab works by executing python scripts in terminal; when you created a copy of Jupyter notebook's shortcut in programs menu, rather than erasing all content of target, you just need to delete the notebook part, i.e., replace: 'jupyter-notebook-script.py' to 'jupyter-lab-script.py' and leave everything as it is in target.
Thanks for this. As a beginner, got it working
wow crazy that Seth Rogen is so knowledgeable about Anaconda!
shhh.... don't tell anyone ;-)
It's not working. It just opens a prompt like window and after few seconds, closes down.
I've seen that happen before based on the target link... you will need to make sure it points directly to the "jupyter-lab.exe" file. One way to check is to find the "jupyter-lab.exe" file on your computer and double-click to see if it opens jupyter-lab correctly first. If it doesn't, I would need to know more to offer advice.
@@kaletaversity No, it doesn't. I experimentally found a better way. Since both Jupyter notebook and lab works by executing python scripts in terminal; when you created a copy of Jupyter notebook's shortcut in programs menu, rather than erasing all content of target, you just need to delete the notebook part, i.e., replace: 'jupyter-notebook-script.py' to 'jupyter-lab-script.py' and leave everything as it is in target.