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<!-- tutorial-jupyter-index.md and examples/quickstart/juptyer-notebooks/README.md share a lot of the same content. If you make a change in one place, update the other too. -->
You can try out the Druid APIs using the Jupyter Notebook-based tutorials. These tutorials provide snippets of Python code that you can use to run calls against the Druid API to complete the tutorial.
## Prerequisites
Make sure you meet the following requirements before starting the Jupyter-based tutorials:
- Python 3
- The `requests` package for Python. For example, you can install it with the following command:
```bash
pip3 install requests
```
- JupyterLab (recommended) or Jupyter Notebook running on a non-default port. By default, Druid and Jupyter both try to use port `8888,` so start Jupyter on a different port.
- An available Druid instance. You can use the [Quickstart (local)](./index.md) instance. The tutorials assume that you are using the quickstart, so no authentication or authorization is expected unless explicitly mentioned.
The notebooks are located in the [apache/druid repo](https://github.com/apache/druid/tree/master/examples/quickstart/jupyter-notebooks/). You can either clone the repo or download the notebooks you want individually.
The links that follow are the raw GitHub URLs, so you can use them to download the notebook directly, such as with `wget`, or manually through your web browser. Note that if you save the file from your web browser, make sure to remove the `.txt` extension.
- [Introduction to the Druid API](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/druid/master/examples/quickstart/jupyter-notebooks/api-tutorial.ipynb) walks you through some of the basics related to the Druid API and several endpoints.