Thank you Steven, problem solved. Found the kernels directory and deleted
the old versions.

-Júlio

2015-10-05 16:13 GMT-07:00 Steven G. Johnson <[email protected]>:

>
>
> On Monday, October 5, 2015 at 5:19:51 PM UTC-4, Júlio Hoffimann wrote:
>>
>> Whenever I update Julia I see a new profile in my Jupyter session. How to
>> delete all these old versions in the attached screenshot?
>>
>
>  First, I have to say that your screenshot is odd.  New profiles should
> only be installed if the minor version changes (e.g. 0.4 to 0.5); any other
> change (e.g. 0.4-dev to 0.4-rc3) should overwrite the existing profile.
> I've updated Julia many times and only have three profiles (0.3, 0.4, and
> 0.5).   The next time you see a new profile appearing for the same minor
> version number, please file a bug report with IJulia and we'll try to find
> out what happened.
>
> Second, the kernels for Jupyter are in directories in one of the jupyter
> data directories -- run "jupyter --paths" to list all the directories where
> Jupyter stores its stuff.  I think in the first path listed under "data:"
> is where you'll find a directory called "kernels" that contains
> subdirectories for all the kernels that are installed.  Delete the ones you
> don't want.
>

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