> Still, do you know if, in order to run a notebook written with kernel 
0.3.10, it is mandatory to keep that kernel?

Yes, I see what you mean, it's a good question. I'll remember to keep 
0.3.10 around...

I don't know the answer, but I bet that you could edit the .ipynb file in a 
text/JSON editor and figure out where the kernel is specified. Good luck.

Cédric

On Sunday, October 18, 2015 at 3:36:30 PM UTC-4, Ferran Mazzanti wrote:
>
> Thank you very much for the reply :)
> Still, do you know if, in order to run a notebook written with kernel 
> 0.3.10, it is mandatory to keep that kernel?
> I ask because if so, one has to store all kernels used, at least to be 
> able to load the notebook the first time after upgrading Julia to a new 
> kernel., so that one can convert it to the new one... I don't know if you 
> understand what I mean, but I ask because IJulia complains it can not 
> understand notebooks
> I wrote with kernels I no longer have.
> Best regards,
> Ferran.
>
> On Sunday, October 18, 2015 at 9:06:13 PM UTC+2, Cedric St-Jean wrote:
>>
>> Hi Ferran,
>>
>> I upgraded to Jupyter notebooks before doing the switch to 0.4, and I 
>> haven't had any issue, except that Shift+Tab no longer works...
>>
>> On Sunday, October 18, 2015 at 8:09:08 AM UTC-4, Ferran Mazzanti wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> a) Are IJulia notebooks keeping track of the kernel version they use? 
>>>
>>
>> All Jupyter notebooks keep track of the kernel it uses, and 0.3/0.4 are 
>> two different kernels
>>  
>>
>>> b) If so, can it be changed editing the notebook on the terminal?
>>>
>>
>> I'd assume it's in the notebook's JSON somewhere. I've been able to 
>> Kernel -> Change Kernel without an issue.
>>  
>>
>>> c) Is there a way to make this transparent, i.e., kernel independent?
>>>
>>
>> Not sure what you mean.
>>  
>>
>>>
>>> Thanks for your kind help,
>>>
>>> Ferran.
>>>
>>

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