*[Testing the Installation](#testing-the-installation)
*[Installing Jupyter](#installing-jupyter)
*[Notes on Third-party libraries](#notes-on-third-party-libraries)
-[Introduction](#introduction)
-[Installation](#installation)
-[Windows](#windows)
-[Linux](#linux)
-[Mac OS X](#mac-os-x)
-[Testing the Installation](#testing-the-installation)
-[Installing Jupyter](#installing-jupyter)
-[Original Jupyter](#original-jupyter)
-[Alternative: Visual Studio Code](#alternative-visual-studio-code)
-[Notes on Third-party libraries](#notes-on-third-party-libraries)
## Introduction
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## Installing Jupyter
To the time of writing, BoSSS
To the time of writing, two alternatives for working with Jupyter notebook are available;
1. Using the original [**Jupyter Notebook **](https://jupyter.org/)(aka. Jupiterlab, Jupyter-Notebkook, etc.),
which runs in a web browser and requires a bunch of installation steps, [see below](#original-jupyter)
2. Using the respective plugins for [**Visual Studio Code**](https://code.visualstudio.com/),
which provides a [respective plugins](#alternative-visual-studio-code); this is maybe a bit easier,
but less mature.
### Original Jupyter
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Really easy, isn't it?
### Alternative 2: Visual Studio Code
### Alternative: Visual Studio Code
todo.
Navigate to the extension pane (left) and install two plugins; this can be done directly in VScode, (look for text field "Seach Extensions in Marketplace"):