UnicodePlots.jl
jupyter
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UnicodePlots.jl | jupyter | |
---|---|---|
13 | 31 | |
1,392 | 895 | |
1.6% | 2.1% | |
6.7 | 7.6 | |
9 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Julia | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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UnicodePlots.jl
- UnicodePlots
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Julia Simple Unicode Plotting
I hope someone can benefit from it. I know about UnicodePlots.jl but I needed too much customisation. Also I needed the vertical histogram. Sadly I don have time to integrate it to the main UnicodePlots.jl repo, but maybe by time someone will take the effort.
- tplot: a library to create text-based plots in the terminal
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Plots package apparently not working, maybe?
This is normal. You can also try SimplePlots.jl or UnicodePlots.jl it you want to plot some simple stuff fast.
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Show HN: Dotmatrix – A dot matrix rendered using Braille characters
Nice!, in Julia there is a library to do plots with a similar technique, https://github.com/Evizero/UnicodePlots.jl
- Creep – a pretty sweet 4px wide pixel font
- Plotext – Python Plotting on the Terminal
jupyter
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IPython and :results output is too verbose
For ipython, you'd better use some more specialized package like https://github.com/emacs-jupyter/jupyter, not the generic python support.
- Ask HN: Why don't other languages have Jupyter style notebooks?
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Does anyone have a solution for displaying plotly plots in org mode?
I have seen this thread, but I don't want to have to put an extra source block to set the renderers in every org file where I use plotly. Does anyone have a good solution for the moment? Any help is appreciated.
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Bounty on ein package startup times
Should no one take you up on the bounty, I suggest trying emacs-jupyter instead. I've had better luck with it in the past.
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Replace Jupyter with Emacs Org Mode: Unleash the Power of Literate Programming
For anybody following along with the examples, a few points/tips that might help newcomers:
1. (By default) before you can use Python source blocks, you need to have the Org Babel Python functionality loaded which is most easily done by evaluating the elisp (require 'ob-babel), but there are other ways also [1].
2. The first example, which uses the print function, will not output anything because the Python blocks by default are evaluated inside a function body and the return value is returned to Org [2]. To return the printed output instead, you need the header argument ":results output". There is an example of this syntax later in TFA.
3. If you are serious about replacing (or complementing) other Jupyter tools with Org mode, you might want to eventually look at emacs-jupyter [3], which provides a more advanced handling of outputs and also supports other (i.e. non-Python) kernels.
Also, I don't think I've ever seen anything like the debugging example and when I tried to replicate it out of curiosity, the block simply failed with a bdb.BdbQuit exception. Am I missing something? What is supposed to happen?
[1] https://orgmode.org/manual/Languages.html
[2] https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/languages/ob-doc-...
[3] https://github.com/nnicandro/emacs-jupyter
- Replace Jupyter Notebook With Emacs Org Mode
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For Julia is there some thing like VSCode's python interactive window?
Emacs, Sublime Text 3 and Atom Pulsar can all do this with arbitrary Jupyter kernels with the emacs-jupyter/code-cells, helium and hydrogen packages, respectively.
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Is org-mode an adequate replacement for Jupyter Notebook/rmarkdown for literate programming?
You can use emacs as a jupyter client if that would help in your case https://github.com/nnicandro/emacs-jupyter
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Switched to VSCode... I miss Atom :(
I've been using code-cells together with emacs-jupyter, the combination of the two lets you work pretty much identically as you would in Atom with Hydrogen, Sublime with Helium, or VSCode with the Jupyter Python extension; you just delimit code cells with #%% and execute in a separate Jupyter REPL buffer. It does require some getting used to the key bindings though (or some tweaking to make it more similar to what you're used to).
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Using emacs as a study environment
For writing source blocks: https://github.com/nnicandro/emacs-jupyter
What are some alternatives?
nbterm - Jupyter Notebooks in the terminal.
jupytext - Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts
python-termgraphics - Library to draw Unicode braille art in a terminal
lsp-mode - Emacs client/library for the Language Server Protocol
plotext - plotting on terminal
vim-ipython-cell - Seamlessly run Python code in IPython from Vim
Cozette - A bitmap programming font optimized for coziness 💜
emacs-ipython-notebook - Jupyter notebook client in Emacs
PyPlot.jl - Plotting for Julia based on matplotlib.pyplot
lsp-julia