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IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook

You're reading from   IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook Over 100 hands-on recipes to sharpen your skills in high-performance numerical computing and data science in the Jupyter Notebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785888632
Length 548 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Cyrille Rossant Cyrille Rossant
Author Profile Icon Cyrille Rossant
Cyrille Rossant
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Tour of Interactive Computing with Jupyter and IPython FREE CHAPTER 2. Best Practices in Interactive Computing 3. Mastering the Jupyter Notebook 4. Profiling and Optimization 5. High-Performance Computing 6. Data Visualization 7. Statistical Data Analysis 8. Machine Learning 9. Numerical Optimization 10. Signal Processing 11. Image and Audio Processing 12. Deterministic Dynamical Systems 13. Stochastic Dynamical Systems 14. Graphs, Geometry, and Geographic Information Systems 15. Symbolic and Numerical Mathematics Index

Learning the basics of the Unix shell

Learning how to interact with the operating system using a command-line interface (or Terminal) is a required skill in interactive computing and data analysis. We will use a command-line interface in most of the recipes in this book. IPython and the Jupyter Notebook are typically launched from a Terminal. Installing Python packages is typically done from a Terminal.

In this recipe, we will show the very basics of the Unix shell, which is natively available in Linux distributions (such as Debian, Ubuntu, and so on) and macOS. On Windows 10, one can install the Windows Subsystem for Linux, a command-line interface to a Unix subsystem integrated with the Windows operating system (see https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/wsl/about).

Getting ready

Here are the instructions to open a Unix shell on macOS, Linux, and Windows. Bash is the most common Unix shell and this is what we will use in this recipe.

On macOS, bring up the Spotlight Search, type terminal, and...

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