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Actively developed community fork of Atom here: https://pulsar-edit.dev
Finally, newer Pulsar versions (from the master branch on the CI) allow you to install ppm and pulsar from the command-line. We also fixed some of the issues on installing a package directly from github - for example, you can run "pulsar -p https://github.com/nteract/hydrogen.git -t v2.16.5" to install hydrogen on tag v2.16.5 now (tested on Linux and Silicon mac). Package publication is an ongoing process - we fixed lots of issues of the first version, and now it's working for some people, but we are still aware that we have some bugs too... it's hard because we need to "reverse engineer" the old API :(
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).
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).
EIN also looks good but I haven't used it.
If you need a staring point for configuring there's some nice light ones like emacs-bedrock and crafted-emacs, and also some fully pre-configured Emacs distributions that you can choose from (though those look harder to configure to one's personal needs to me, but I haven't tried them so wouldn't know).
If you need a staring point for configuring there's some nice light ones like emacs-bedrock and crafted-emacs, and also some fully pre-configured Emacs distributions that you can choose from (though those look harder to configure to one's personal needs to me, but I haven't tried them so wouldn't know).