nbterm
jupytext.vim
nbterm | jupytext.vim | |
---|---|---|
7 | 4 | |
738 | 294 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 4.4 | |
9 months ago | 7 months ago | |
Python | Vim Script | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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nbterm
- Code completion in nbterm?
- Pryrite: Interactively execute shell code blocks in a Markdown file
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4 ways to run Jupyter notebooks
Last but not least, you may be a command line nerd wondering if you have to use a browser or fancy IDE. It turns out you also have an option. The nbterm project allows you to interactively run Jupyter notebooks from the command line.
- Show HN: Euporie, a Tui for Jupyter Notebooks
- Jupyter Notebook in the Terminal
- Nbterm: Jupyter Notebooks in the Terminal
jupytext.vim
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Edit notebooks in Google cloud
I tried plugins like jupytext.vim but it was not enough mature in these old times :-)
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Jupyter Notebooks in NeoVim. Any good way?
You can also use jupytext.vim to easily open and edit notebooks. Then you can use a REPL program to evaluate the different cells individually. The only downside to me is that you can’t save the output back to the notebook (images etc.).
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jupyter and vim
Editing *.ipynb files can also be edited with jupytext.vim, which automatically converts *.ipynb files using jupytext which you open them in Vim. I haven't tried this yet (it's on my todo list), but it looks pretty solid.
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Nbterm: Jupyter Notebooks in the Terminal
For editing notebooks in vim, I've created https://github.com/goerz/jupytext.vim. Note that this does not allow to run any cells, it just edits the inputs.
The motivation behind this was to have some basic interaction with existing ipynb files on a remote server without having to run the jupyter server (and set up port forwarding etc.) It's worth noting that the `jupytext.vim plugin is most useful if you're actually not running `jupytext` within jupyter; If you are, you could just directly open the .py or .md files linked to any .ipynb in your editor.
I've used `jupytext.vim` to edit existing notebooks and then run them through `jupyter nbconvert --to notebook --execute`. It's also great for refactoring: moving code from a notebook files into a module, between notebooks, or to create a new notebook as a variation of an existing one.
What are some alternatives?
vim-ipython-cell - Seamlessly run Python code in IPython from Vim
uniplot - Lightweight plotting to the terminal. 4x resolution via Unicode.
jupyter-vim - Make Vim talk to Jupyter kernels
jupyter - An interface to communicate with Jupyter kernels.
jupytext - Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts
UnicodePlots.jl - Unicode-based scientific plotting for working in the terminal
nvim-ipy - IPython/Jupyter plugin for Neovim
jupyter_contrib_nbextensions - A collection of various notebook extensions for Jupyter
gnuplotlib - gnuplot for numpy