Hi,
I have my old laptop, HP ProBook 4410s, it is 32-bit processor with 1GB memory. I installed F30 and now I want to install Anaconda. Unfortunately, I could not find 32-bit version of it. Please help me.
Thanks Hany
On 01/03/2020 05:15 AM, Hany Ferdinando wrote:
I have my old laptop, HP ProBook 4410s, it is 32-bit processor with 1GB memory. I installed F30 and now I want to install Anaconda. Unfortunately, I could not find 32-bit version of it. Please help me.
Anaconda is used to install Fedora and for nothing else. Why do you want to install it?
On 1/3/20 4:15 AM, Hany Ferdinando wrote:
I have my old laptop, HP ProBook 4410s, it is 32-bit processor with 1GB memory. I installed F30 and now I want to install Anaconda. Unfortunately, I could not find 32-bit version of it. Please help me.
If you're running F30 on it, then just do "dnf install anaconda".
El vie., 3 de ene. de 2020 a la(s) 12:17, Hany Ferdinando (hanyf@petra.ac.id) escribió:
Hi,
Hi.
I have my old laptop, HP ProBook 4410s, it is 32-bit processor with 1GB memory. I installed F30 and now I want to install Anaconda. Unfortunately, I could not find 32-bit version of it. Please help me.
I'm guessing you meant Anaconda the free and open-source distribution of the Python and R programming languages for scientific computing, that aims to simplify package management and deployment, right?
https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/
On Fedora the "Anaconda" Python distribution is not packaged as a whole distribution, only its package manager is on the repos:
dnf search conda
dnf info conda
Here is the official documentation: https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/index.html
I have never used it, tho.
Porfirio.
Yes, the main idea is using python via spyder and R. I installed spyder already but I could not install more library in spyder. As far as I knew, installing spyder via anaconda enabling me to add more package and library..
So, do I use "dnf install anaconda" from terminal?
On Sat, Jan 4, 2020 at 12:29 AM Porfirio Andrés Páiz Carrasco < porfiriopaiz@gmail.com> wrote:
El vie., 3 de ene. de 2020 a la(s) 12:17, Hany Ferdinando (hanyf@petra.ac.id) escribió:
Hi,
Hi.
I have my old laptop, HP ProBook 4410s, it is 32-bit processor with 1GB
memory. I installed F30 and now I want to install Anaconda. Unfortunately, I could not find 32-bit version of it. Please help me.
I'm guessing you meant Anaconda the free and open-source distribution of the Python and R programming languages for scientific computing, that aims to simplify package management and deployment, right?
https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/
On Fedora the "Anaconda" Python distribution is not packaged as a whole distribution, only its package manager is on the repos:
dnf search conda
dnf info conda
Here is the official documentation: https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/index.html
I have never used it, tho.
Porfirio. _______________________________________________ users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@lists.fedoraproject.org Fedora Code of Conduct: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/project/code-of-conduct/ List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@lists.fedoraproject.org
On 1/4/20 11:03 PM, Hany Ferdinando wrote:
Yes, the main idea is using python via spyder and R. I installed spyder already but I could not install more library in spyder. As far as I knew, installing spyder via anaconda enabling me to add more package and library..
Sorry for the confusion. I didn't know about that "anaconda".
So, do I use "dnf install anaconda" from terminal?
No, that's the wrong one.
On Sat, Jan 4, 2020 at 12:29 AM Porfirio Andrés Páiz Carrasco <porfiriopaiz@gmail.com mailto:porfiriopaiz@gmail.com> wrote: I'm guessing you meant Anaconda the free and open-source distribution of the Python and R programming languages for scientific computing, that aims to simplify package management and deployment, right?
https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/ On Fedora the "Anaconda" Python distribution is not packaged as a whole distribution, only its package manager is on the repos: dnf search conda dnf info conda Here is the official documentation: https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/index.html
To install it run "dnf install conda". I assume you use the "conda" command after that to install other things.