Spyder
jupyter-book
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Spyder | jupyter-book | |
---|---|---|
84 | 15 | |
8,039 | 3,692 | |
0.9% | 1.6% | |
9.9 | 8.5 | |
4 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Spyder
- Spyder – The Scientific Python Development Environment
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I've coded in R for years, but I want to learn Python for machine learning/statistical analysis. Where to start, and which IDE?
IDE-wise, I find Spyder to be the most R-like. If you are comfortable with R Studio, maybe check it out.
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Email proves Microsoft's Activision bid is designed to eliminate Playstation
For anyone else who hadn’t heard of Spyder: https://www.spyder-ide.org/
- R user, trying to learn Python... what´s the Rstudio equivalent?
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The Best Python IDE For Mac Users - Part 1
Spyder
- PYTHON vs OCTAVE for Matlab alternative
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Why does Python look one way on my laptop and completely different in this video i wanted to watch?
Spyder - a popular editor for scientific work, the default option if you get the Anaconda implementation of Python which includes many packages used in science and engineering fields
- Too many people go to college for a hobby instead of for a major.
- Which IDE is your favorite? And which IDE would you recommend for trading
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What is your favorite IDE/Text Editor to use for Python?
I also have a fondness for Spyder, which was my first non-IDLE IDE experience. It is heavily geared toward scientific computing.
jupyter-book
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I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
Sphinx supports ReStructuredText and Markdown.
MyST-Markdown supports MathJaX and Sphinx roles and directives. https://myst-parser.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
jupyter-book supports ReStructuredText, Jupyter Notebooks, and MyST-Markdown documents:
You can build Sphinx and Jupyter-Book projects with the ReadTheDocs container, which already has LaTeX installed: https://github.com/executablebooks/jupyter-book/issues/991
myst-templates/plain_latex_book:
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Ask HN: Fastest way to turn a Jupyter notebook into a website these days?
your task is very very broad
you mention you don't want to deal with AWS, if it's because of ad-hoc installation concerns and nothing else you can just run your notebooks in ready-made solutions like Google Colab, or Jupyter-book in Github ( https://github.com/executablebooks/jupyter-book ))
that would cover a lot of use cases right away without next to no learning curve
If you don't want to deal with AWS or similar, in that case:
- if it's a static notebook then you can obviously render it and serve the web content (might seem obvious but needs to be considered)
- if it's dynamic but has light hardware requirements, you can try jupyterlite which runs in the browser and should do a pyodine (webassembly CPython kernel) can do: https://jupyterlite.readthedocs.io/en/latest/try/lab/
- otherwise, you can try exposing a dockerised jupyter env ( as in https://github.com/MKAbuMattar/dockerized-jupyter-notebook/b... ) or even better a nixified one ( https://github.com/tweag/jupyenv )
there might be other approaches I'm missing, but I think that's pretty much it that doesn't entail some proprietary solution or an ad-hoc installation as you've been doing
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How to raise the quality of scientific Jupyter notebooks
Note: If you want to present a cleaner version of the notebook without assertions, you can use Jupyter book to render it into a site and use the remove-cell tag to omit assertions from the output.
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Sunday Daily Thread: What's everyone working on this week?
See this thread for example.
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Are there any frameworks/methodologies/libraries that can help to create a PDF printable professionally looking written report?
And maybe take a look at executablebooks/jupyter-book.
- [P] I Made An Easy-To-Use Python Package That Creates Beautiful Html Reports From Jupyter Notebooks
- RStudio Is Becoming Posit
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Python toolkits
Our team has transferred from Sphinx for documentation to JupyterBook. There have been some growing pains with it but I prefer the look of the output and being able to play with the examples on Colab or Binder at the click of a button is a great feature.
- Ask HN: Tools to generate coverage of user documentation for code
- Why does [::-1] reverse a list?
What are some alternatives?
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
sphinx-thebe - A Sphinx extension to convert static code into interactive code cells with Jupyter, Thebe, and Binder.
thonny - Python IDE for beginners
MyST-Parser - An extended commonmark compliant parser, with bridges to docutils/sphinx
Atom - :atom: The hackable text editor
quarto-cli - Open-source scientific and technical publishing system built on Pandoc.
qtconsole - Jupyter Qt Console
pre-commit - A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks.
jupyterlab-lsp - Coding assistance for JupyterLab (code navigation + hover suggestions + linters + autocompletion + rename) using Language Server Protocol
heron
Anaconda - Anaconda turns your Sublime Text 3 in a full featured Python development IDE including autocompletion, code linting, IDE features, autopep8 formating, McCabe complexity checker Vagrant and Docker support for Sublime Text 3 using Jedi, PyFlakes, pep8, MyPy, PyLint, pep257 and McCabe that will never freeze your Sublime Text 3
talk - Issues and discussions for the notes app, Nota.