Jupyter notebook extension which supports (some) LaTeX environments within markdown cells. Also provides support for labels and crossreferences, document wide numbering, bibliography, and more...
Project description
(some) LaTeX environments for Jupyter notebook
This extension for Jupyter notebook enables to use some LaTeX commands and environments markdown cells.
LaTeX commands and environments
support for some LaTeX commands within markdown cells, e.g. \textit, \textbf, \underline
support for theorems-like environments, support for labels and cross references
support for lists: enumerate, itemize,
limited support for a figure environment,
support for an environment listing,
additional textboxa environment
Citations and bibliography
support for \cite with creation of a References section
Document-wide numbering of equations and environments, support for ``label`` and ``ref``
Configuration toolbar
LaTeX_envs dropdown menu for a quick insertion of environments
User’s LaTeX definitions file can be loaded and used
Export to HTML and LaTeX with a customized exporter
Environments title/numbering can be customized by users in user_envs.json config file.
Styles can be customized in the latex_env.css stylesheet
More environments can be simply added in user_envs.json or in the source file (thmsInNb4.js).
It is possible to export the notebooks to plain \(\LaTeX\) and html while keeping all the features of the latex_envs notebook extension in the converted version. We provide specialized exporters, pre and post processors, templates. We also added entry-points to simplify the conversion process. It is now as simple asIt is now as simple as
jupyter nbconvert --to html_with_lenvs FILE.ipynb
or
jupyter nbconvert --to latex_with_lenvs FILE.ipynb
to convert FILE.ipynb into html/latex while keeping all the features of the latex_envs notebook extension in the converted version. The LaTeX converter also expose several conversion options (read the docs.
Demo/documentation
The doc subdirectory that constains an example notebook and its html and pdf versions. This serves as the documentation. A demo notebook latex_env_doc.ipynb is provided. Its html version is latex_env_doc.html and a pdf resulting from conversion to LaTeX is available as documentation.
Installation
The extension consists in a package that includes a javascript notebook extension. Since Jupyter 4.2, this is the recommended way to distribute nbextensions. The extension can be installed
from the master version on the github repo (this will be always the most recent version)
via pip for the version hosted on Pypi
as part of the great Jupyter-notebook-extensions collection. Follow the instructions there for installing. Once this is done, you can open a tab at http://localhost:8888/nbextensions to enable and configure the various extensions.
From the github repo or from Pypi,
step 1: install the package
pip3 install https://github.com/jfbercher/jupyter_latex_envs/archive/master.zip [--user][--upgrade]
or pip3 install jupyter_latex_envs [--user][--upgrade]
or clone the repo and install git clone https://github.com/jfbercher/jupyter_latex_envs.git python3 setup.py install
With Jupyter >= 4.2, step 1 should sufficient as the files will be automatically copied to the target drectories and the extension enabled. For ealier versions of Jupyter or if something fails, you will have to add two more steps.
step 2: install the notebook extension
jupyter nbextension install --py latex_envs [--user]
step 3: and enable it
jupyter nbextension enable latex_envs [--user] --py
For Jupyter versions before 4.2, the situation is more tricky since you will have to find the location of the source files (instructions from @jcb91 found here): execute
python -c "import os.path as p; from jupyter_highlight_selected_word import __file__ as f, _jupyter_nbextension_paths as n; print(p.normpath(p.join(p.dirname(f), n()[0]['src'])))"
Then, issue
jupyter nbextension install <output source directory> jupyter nbextension enable latex_envs/latex_envs
where <output source directory> is the output of the python command.
Disclaimer, sources and acknowledgments
Originally, I used a piece of code from the nice online markdown editor stackedit https://github.com/benweet/stackedit/issues/187, where the authors also considered the problem of incorporating LaTeX markup in their markdown.
I also studied and used examples and code from https://github.com/ipython-contrib/IPython-notebook-extensions.
This is done in the hope it can be useful. However there are many impovements possible, in the code and in the documentation. Contributions will be welcome and deeply appreciated.
If you have issues, please post an issue at https://github.com/jfbercher/jupyter_latex_envs/issues here.
Self-Promotion – Like latex_envs? Please star and follow the repository on GitHub.
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