Skip to main content

Live rich content slides in jupyter notebook

Project description

IPySlides

DOI Binder PyPI version Downloads

IPySlides is a Python library for creating interactive presentations in Jupyter notebooks. It combines the power of Markdown, LaTeX, interactive widgets, and live variable updates in a single presentation framework.


Why IPySlides?

The Problem: Static PowerPoint vs. Superficial Notebook Relayouts

Scientists, engineers, and programmers are trapped between two frustrating extremes. PowerPoint forces you into a dead, non-interactive workflow of pasting static screenshots and endlessly duplicating slides just to reveal a single bullet, equation, or figure element. Conversely, traditional notebook-based presentation tools are nothing more than superficial cell wrappers; they simply relayout your raw notebook cells without providing any native content support, structural design, or layout control. This forces you to awkwardly chop your analysis into dozens of artificial cells just to trigger basic fragments. Moreover, their static exports often break, leaving you without a reliable backup if your live Python kernel is not available.

The Solution: An Interactive, Content-Aware Ecosystem

IPySlides embeds a frame-aware presentation engine directly into your computational workflow, letting you run your full analysis and build high-fidelity slides side-by-side in the same notebook.

By replacing copy-paste duplication and artificial cell chopping with programmatic framing, a single cell acts as a canonical source that natively understands structure, progressing in precise, incremental steps. It keeps execution code, rich outputs, and custom layouts perfectly synchronized while supporting active Jupyter widgets for real-time data manipulation. When it's time to export, it generates a production-grade HTML or crisp PDF backup that accurately mirrors your presentation.

Features

  • 📊 Support for plots, widgets, and rich media
  • 🎨 Customizable themes and layouts
  • 📱 Responsive design for various screen sizes
  • 📤 Export to HTML/PDF (widgets no more interactive or discarded)
  • 🎯 Frame-by-frame animations
  • 📝 Speaker notes support
  • 🔄 Markdown, citations and settings files synchronization
  • ✏️ Drawing support during presentations

Quick Start

Install:

pip install ipyslides        # Basic installation
pip install ipyslides[extra] # Full features

Create Slides:

import ipyslides as isd
slides = isd.Slides()

# Add content programmatically
slides.slide(-1, """
# My First Slide
- Point 1
- Point 2
$E = mc^2$
""")

# Or use cell magic
%%slide 0
# Title Slide
Welcome to IPySlides!

Run Examples:

isd.docs()  # View  and interact with documentation
isd.demo()  # See and interact with demo presentation

✨ Try it in your browser ✨

  • Binder

View Static Notebooks


Content Types

Support for various content types including:

  • 📜 Extended Markdown, see slides.xmd_syntax
  • 📊 Plots (Matplotlib, Plotly, Altair)
  • 🔧 Interactive Widgets
  • 📷 Images and Media
  • ➗ LaTeX Equations
  • ©️ Citations and References
  • 💻 Auto update variables in markdown
  • 🎥 Videos (YouTube, local)
  • 🎮 Enhanced interactive widgets (with fullscreen support, thanks to anywidget)
import numpy as np
from ipywidgets import HTML

@slides.dl.interact(html = HTML(), amplitude= (0, 2),frequency=(0, 5))
def plot(html, amplitude, frequency):
    x = np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi, 100)
    y = amplitude * np.sin(frequency    * x)
    plt.plot(x, y)
    html.value = slides.plt2html(). value
  • For comprehensive dashbords, subclass DashboardBase or use Dashboard from ipyslides.dashlab:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from ipywidgets import HTML
from ipyslides.dashlab import Dashboard

dash = Dashboard(
    html = HTML(),
    amplitude = (0, 2),
    frequency = (0, 5),
)

@dash.callback
def plot(self, html, amplitude, frequency):
    x = np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi, 100)
    y = amplitude * np.sin(frequency * x)
    plt.plot(x, y)
    html.value = slides.plt2html().value # can be directly shown on out-main

@dash.callback('out-text')
def text(self, amplitude, frequency):
    print(f"Amplitude: {amplitude}\n Frequency: {frequency}")

dash.set_layout( 
    left_sidebar = ['*ctrl'], # all controls in left sidebar 
    center = ['html','out-.*'], # out-main, out-text collected in center
    pane_widths = [3,5,0]
)
dash.set_css(
    main = { # can also be set via post_init callback
        'grid-gap': '4px', 'margin': '8px',
        '.left-sidebar': {'background': '#eee','border-radius': '8px'},
    },
    center = { # can be set in main through '> .center' selector
        '> *': {'background-color': 'whitesmoke', 'border-radius': '8px','padding':'8px'},
        'grid-template-columns': '5fr 3fr', # side-by-side layout for outputs
        'grid-gap': '4px', # central grid gap
        '> *': {'background-color': 'whitesmoke', 'border-radius': '8px','padding':'8px'}
})
display(dash)

Dashboard Example See more examples in DashLab repository and try it out in

  • And much more!

Export Options

  • HTML Export
    Use slides.export_html to build static slides that you can print to PDF. Read export details in settings panel, where you can also export with a single click.

  • PDF Export Support for direct PDF printing from slides using Ctrl + P (use options in side panel to prepare for print) is available, although some IDEs like VSCode may not allow it. Use Save as PDF option and enable background graphics if necessary. If issues arise in direct printing, consider exporting to HTML first and printing from there.

See demo.pdf for an example exported PDF.


Advanced Features

  • Custom Objects Serialization:

    • You can serialize custom objects to HTML using Slides.serializer API.
    • You can extend markdown syntax using Slides.extender API. See some good extensions to add from PyMdown.
  • Speaker Notes: Enable via Settings Panel → Show Notes and add notes via slides.notes.

  • Custom Styling:

slides.css({
    'p': {'font-size':'1.2em', 'line-height':'1.5em'}, # relaxed paragraph
}, applyto=1, bg1 = '#f0f0f0') # set theme color on slide 1, or 'all' or list of slides
  • File Sync: Live edit a linked markdown file that updates slides in real-time using slides.sync_with_file.

  • Content Animations:

    • Slides builders now support skeleton animation automatically for a premium editing experience.
    • Beside slides switch transitions, you can animate content anywhere in slides using anim- prefixed classes and related varaiables. See slides.css_animations for details.

Caveats

  1. Markdown Cells:

    • Jupyter markdown cells are not processed by IPySlides
    • Instead, you can use %%slide number -m cell magic and link an external markdown file using slides.sync_with_file
  2. Slide Numbering:

    • Use -1 for automatic slide numbering
    • Manual numbering requires careful tracking to avoid overwriting slides
  3. Speaker Notes:

    • Experimental feature - use with caution
    • Notes appear at top of slide in PDF to grab speaker's attention and are meant for speaker reference only, e.g. printed handout.
    • Place extended projector on top/bottom of laptop screen while presenting in Jupyter Notebook to allow right/left edges click navigation work smoothly.

Development

git clone https://github.com/asaboor-gh/ipyslides.git
cd ipyslides
pip install -e .

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.


Documentation

Acknowledgements


Made with ❤️ by Abdul Saboor

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

ipyslides-7.0.7.tar.gz (187.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

ipyslides-7.0.7-py2.py3-none-any.whl (246.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2Python 3

File details

Details for the file ipyslides-7.0.7.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: ipyslides-7.0.7.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 187.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.9.13

File hashes

Hashes for ipyslides-7.0.7.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 11bad1c06d8bc17a86cc0a59d5957546a677b3455eed818bad247e4811b2b451
MD5 006f1f94f7a16a6e94cdcf9778964311
BLAKE2b-256 404987f23e18521be31158c82718f8d86bfb808186cd08e7ecc555cf85ad861d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file ipyslides-7.0.7-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: ipyslides-7.0.7-py2.py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 246.5 kB
  • Tags: Python 2, Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.9.13

File hashes

Hashes for ipyslides-7.0.7-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 6ece4a74532575a104bdbcc8aab6f35ff2c5a757a02264edfe1072f2ec320bdb
MD5 7caadd256cefc19b36c8ab55162acfde
BLAKE2b-256 5204c0cd7b154a76edcd5d4b337a2a0fbbd353166dd30938e9f62045ae79e718

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page