I infer that you are using a Juno/Julia bundle. For this purpose, you may 
prefer downloading it from here 
<https://junolab.s3.amazonaws.com/release/1.1.0/juno-windows-x64.zip>.

Or you can also install Julia and Juno separately like Arch by following 
this manual <http://junolab.org/docs/install-manual.html>. 

Juno isn't very mature yet. We should be patient before it becomes a 
full-fledged IDE.



On Tuesday, February 2, 2016 at 6:23:08 AM UTC+1, David Blake wrote:
>
> Hi guys, some help please.
>
> A while back I downloaded and installed Julia Studio and wrote 10-20 
> little programs in it.  I found it quite good but now it's been 
> discontinued of course.
>
> So I'm looking at Juno, but man I find it hard to use.  I've read a bit on 
> here about it, but I still feel like I have no idea what I'm doing.  I'd 
> very much appreciate some help with this:
>
> These are pretty basic questions, so please don't flame me.  I'm on 
> Windows 10, 64 bit.
>
> 1) Every time I start Juno, it tells me a new binary version of LightTable 
> (LT) is available and do I want to download it.  It doesn't sort of update 
> automatically, just opens a link to the download site for LT.  So then I'm 
> unclear as to what to do, I can download the LT binary but then what?  I 
> have Juno, which is on top of LT, how to upgrade the underlying LT 
> version?  Or should I just not worry about it?
>
> 2) Also, how would I upgrade the underlying Julia language to the latest 
> version please?  In another site, I saw how to use versioninfo, it shows 
> 3.10.
>
> 3) There seem to be very few commands available via the menu, but lots and 
> lots via Ctrl-space.  I find this quite different to most IDEs.  Is this 
> just the way LT works? And just a matter of getting used to it?  If so, I'm 
> OK with that.
>
> 4) The workflow pattern I normally like to use with other languages like 
> Python is to write my code in scripts and then run from a console, 
> preferably all within an IDE.  So I use Spyder for Python and find it very 
> good.  I'd like to use Juno the same way.  As opposed to say having a text 
> editor open to code in, and a separate console window to run files from 
> etc.  Do people use Juno like this? i.e. like a standalone thing?
>
> Any help appreciated.
>
>

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