sidenotes
jupytext
sidenotes | jupytext | |
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27 | 20 | |
44 | 6,425 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.8 | |
over 1 year ago | about 20 hours ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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sidenotes
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Do I need to learn LaTeX? Are there better options?
try out curvenote.com it's not latest but has a lot of powerful features -- including latex support for equations
- Is there a CodePen/OverLeaf equivalent for sharing and viewing Jupyter Notebooks/Labs
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Is there a way to share a Latex file to Word users
try using curvenote.com instead - write in something like a sciencey good docs interface, output to Tex, PDF or word whenever you want. Has full support for math, cross referencing, citations, bibtex etc.,, and output to latex templates for specific journals etc...
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Interactive journal articles/Latex documents
probably curvenote.com ?
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Im a new 1st year PhD candidate starting Monday… I would really appreciate any tips or things you wish you had known at the beginning of your PhD. I have worked with my supervisor before so have a pretty good relationship although I am not naive to the fact this will change over time.
citation manager, keep a regular schedule, stay fit and use tools that help you - paperpile.com curvenote.com
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What are some "work smart, not hard" ways of writing a Thesis?
take a look at curvenote.com
- Finished my PhD… :)
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Tools that allow college students to collaborate on math problems - non-LaTeX based
Try curvenote.com it's a visual editor like google docs but block-based (a little like notion) and has maths support via latex.
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Should I have to edit my PhD students dissertation for basic grammar?
Grammarly doesn't work in overleaf does it? nor in MS Word locally? it does on other online tools like curvenote.com or google docs though, and maybe MS Office but I haven't tried. I'm totally comfortable using grammarly
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do you know a program that will help me write math homework more quickly?
have a look at mathpix.com and curvenote.com both interesting, the first for going from handwriting to LaTeX and the second for a WYSIWYG editor for writing with latex maths support
jupytext
- The Jupyter+Git problem is now solved
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Do you git commit jupyter notebooks?
Jupytext (https://github.com/mwouts/jupytext) has been designed exactly for this
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The hatred towards jupyter notebooks
jupytext is your friend.
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Edit notebooks in Google cloud
So if you run your own jupyter server, -jupy+text can be a great workflow : it takes your notebook synchronized with other formats (python file, makdown, ...), so you can edit your py/md file with neovim, and refresh the browser to execute the notebook.
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Rant: Jupyter notebooks are trash.
Automatically convert ipynb files to py when saving them on JupyterLab
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Two questions regarding working with jupyter notebooks (git, vim)
I don't use Jupyter so I don't know for sure, but on a quick glance you might want to look at https://github.com/mwouts/jupytext to see if that could help at all.
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JupyterLite is a JupyterLab distribution that runs in the browser
The format is only partially invented, it follows Jupytext [0], but adds support for cell metadata. There is no obvious way to get that in fenced codeblocks, especially with the ability to spread it over multiple lines so it plays well with version control.
One more consideration is that it's not "Markdown with code blocks interspersed", one might as well use plaintext or AsciiDoc.
Of course there are tradeoffs.. I wish I had more time to work on it.
[0]: https://github.com/gzuidhof/starboard-notebook/blob/master/d...
[1]: https://github.com/mwouts/jupytext
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Many write research papers in R Markdown - What is the alternative setup in Python?
Using jupytext (allows you to open .md files as notebooks) + jupyter gives you pretty much the same experience. The main issue is that the cell's output will be discarded. To fix it, you can use ploomber to generate an output HTML, so the workflow goes like this:
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Jupyter Notebooks.
First, the format. The ipynb format does not play nicely with git since it stores the cell's source code and output in the same file. But Jupyter has built-in mechanisms to allow other formats to look like notebooks. For example, here's a library that allows you to store notebooks on a postgres database (I know this isn't practical, but it's a great example). To give more practical advice, jupytext allows you to open .py files as notebooks. So you can develop interactively but in the backend, you're storing .py files.
What are some alternatives?
floating-ui - A JavaScript library to position floating elements and create interactions for them.
jupyter - An interface to communicate with Jupyter kernels.
tlk - Group video call for the web. No signups. No downloads. [Moved to: https://github.com/vasanthv/talk]
rmarkdown - Dynamic Documents for R
tex-rs - A port of TeX82 to Rust. (WIP)
sagemaker-run-notebook - Tools to run Jupyter notebooks as jobs in Amazon SageMaker - ad hoc, on a schedule, or in response to events
RusTeX - A (somewhat experimental) implementation of a TeX engine in rust, used to convert LaTeX documents to xhtml.
nbdev - Create delightful software with Jupyter Notebooks
publish - Collection of various things I deem helpful for publishing
papermill - 📚 Parameterize, execute, and analyze notebooks
ploomber - The fastest ⚡️ way to build data pipelines. Develop iteratively, deploy anywhere. ☁️
nbdime - Tools for diffing and merging of Jupyter notebooks.