Summary
By now you've seen how you can create environments with the command line with conda, as well as employing a more visual approach with Navigator. You have an understanding of what dependency management looks like and why it's important to take into account different transitive dependencies and their versions.
You've seen how easy and simple it can be to upload and enable the sharing of your environments so that others can benefit from them.
In addition, we've wrapped up the three pillars of conda by looking at channels and how conda makes use of many different sources for the packages it needs. We've touched on conda-forge
as one of those locations.
Much of what you have learned in this chapter will prove to be invaluable in your everyday work and I encourage you to reference the conda cheat sheet here until you no longer need it. You'll be using some commands so often that it won't take long.
Now that we know the Anaconda tools...