APK (Android Package Kit) files are the raw files of an Android app. Learn how to install juno-python-and-jupyter.apk file on your phone in 4 Simple Steps:
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It’s running python 3.6! This is a 6 year old version of python that was end of supported in Dec 2021. How can you in good faith sell this in Sep 22 for $14.99 without disclosing that! It’s a toy at best a scam at worst. Please refund.
It doesn’t work. You can get your stuff running. Native Mobile OS blocks everything!
This app works, as far as I can tell, exactly as advertised. I really appreciate the work that went into this, and this can be a great starting off point for hashing out different ideas. I was surprised at how well their kernel works - great work on that, developers! The one gripe that I have - that is a big one for me - is that I cannot find any way to make the text bigger or smaller. I’ve got pretty good eyesight, and being able to see *more* code at once is incredibly important to me… which is why I’m disappointed that there doesn’t seem to be any way to change the font size. It seems like this would be a very easy feature to add and, for me, would make the difference between using this app just when my cloud connection is down to using it on a day-to-day basis. Thanks for the great work, developers, and I hope you can consider this suggestion.
Very nice app overall, which I found trying to move off the also great Pythonista, which appears to be abandoned. Obviously these apps have different goals, but most of what I used Pythonista for might always have been better as a notebook. However, one feature that seems to be missing, and makes Juno less convenient, is the ability to deep link to open and run a specific notebook. With Pythonista, I use those links with Shortcuts to make Home Screen icons for scripts I need quick access too, and I can’t find a way to do this with Juno.
This app seems great. I often need to test small pieces of code out as I’m working on bigger projects. It’s really convenient to do this on my Mobile because it’s so portable. I found Juno and immediately bought it. It was a perfect solution for me. I dug in and started working some prototyping with Numpy and SciPy. I quickly discovered that Juno “pins” specific packages which means they cannot be deleted or UPGRADED. Numpy was several minor releases behind as well as pandas. The functions I needed from their APIs is in newer releases. This was a total surprise to me and it really presents some limitations in what I can do. I think Juno is a great concept and the interface/layout/setup seems well done. I’m not sure how useful it will be to me in the long run if it tails behind current releases for common packages by such a margin. It would be great if there was a way to vote or provide some input for needing packages so that the company might be able to prioritize releasing them better. I do see Juno Connect as an offering as well unfortunately it will mean setting up a Jupyter server and then at that point I’m having to maintain that somehow too. Not ideal. Update: the developer is very responsive to feedback and is understanding if technical issues which is greatly appreciated.
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