Skip to main content

Build and publish python packages from marimo notebooks

Project description

marimo-dev

PyPI version

[!WARNING] This project is under active development and is not an official marimo tool - Mar 2026

Build Python packages (and applications[in progress]) from Marimo notebooks.

Why this exists

Marimo notebooks are excellent for development - they manage dependencies automatically, provide instant feedback, and let you import functions between notebooks without configuration. But publishing requires traditional Python packages with proper module structure and __init__.py files.

marimo-dev bridges this gap. It extracts decorated functions and classes from your notebooks and writes them to clean Python modules, leaving behind the exploratory code, UI elements, and notebook-specific logic.

Quick start

uv init --lib my-project
cd my-project
uv add marimo marimo-dev
mkdir notebooks

Create notebooks/a_core.py:

import marimo
app = marimo.App()

@app.function
def greet(name:str="World"):
    "Return a greeting"
    return f"Hello, {name}!"

Build and publish:

md build
md publish --test

Project structure

my-project/
├── pyproject.toml
├── notebooks/
│   ├── a_core.py      # letter prefix avoids collision with 'core' package
│   ├── b_utils.py     # avoids collision with 'utils' package
│   └── XX_draft.py    # XX_ prefix = ignored during build
├── src/               # generated by md build
│   └── my_project/
│       ├── __init__.py 
│       ├── core.py    # letter prefix stripped
│       └── utils.py
└── docs/              # generated by md build
    └── llms.txt       # API signatures for LLM consumption

Module naming

Prefix notebooks with letters (a_, b_, c_) to avoid name collisions with common packages like requests, utils, or core. The prefix is stripped in the built package.

During development, import from other notebooks using their full names:

from a_core import greet

marimo-dev rewrites these to relative imports in the built package:

from .core import greet

What gets exported

  1. Constants in setup cells — any assignment in a setup cell becomes a constant
  2. Decorated functions and classesself-contained functions and classes with @app.function or @app.class_definition
  3. Export-named cells — name a cell export (or export_something) to export arbitrary code as a blob:
@app.cell
def export_main():
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        main()
    return

This is useful for code that isn't a function or class, like if __name__ == "__main__" blocks.

Hash pipe directives

Control export and documentation behavior with #| directives on the line immediately after a decorator:

@app.function
#| nodoc
def helper(): 
    pass  # exported but not in llms.txt

@app.function
#| internal
def private(): 
    pass  # not added to __all__

@app.function
#| nodoc internal
def helper(): 
    pass  # neither exported nor documented

Documentation style

Use inline comments for parameter documentation:

@app.function
def add(
    a:int, # first number
    b:int, # second number
)->int:    # sum of a and b
    "Add two numbers"
    return a + b

These comments appear in llms.txt, making your API documentation useful for LLM-assisted coding.

Configuration

Add to pyproject.toml to override defaults:

[tool.marimo-dev]
nbs = "notebooks"           # notebook directory (default: "notebooks")
out = "src"                 # output directory (default: "src")
docs = "docs"               # docs directory (default: "docs")
decorators = ["app.function", "app.class_definition"]  # export markers
skip_prefixes = ["XX_", "test_"]  # ignore these files

Commands

md build              # build package from notebooks and make docs
md bundle             # bundle into single file with PEP 723 dependencies
md bundle app.py      # bundle to specific filename at project root
md docs               # build the static docs (beta)
md publish --test     # publish to Test PyPI
md publish            # publish to PyPI
md tidy               # remove __pycache__ and cache files
md nuke               # remove all build artifacts (dist, docs, src, temp*)

If you make a temp folder it will be explicitly removed when running md nuke

Single-file applications

Use md bundle to create a standalone Python file with PEP 723 inline dependencies:

md bundle app.py
uv run app.py

The generated file includes a dependency header that uv reads automatically:

# /// script
# dependencies = ["fasthtml", "uvicorn"]
# ///

This lets you deploy a single .py file — anyone with uv can run it without manual dependency installation.

Dependencies

Marimo manages package dependencies automatically through its package tab. You do not need to manually maintain pyproject.toml dependencies during development.

When you build, ensure your pyproject.toml includes all packages your exported functions import.

Requirements

  • Python 3.12+
  • marimo
  • uv

Tips

  • Update version in pyproject.toml before publishing
  • Use uv sync --upgrade to update dependencies
  • Use uv cache clean if you encounter caching issues
  • Rebuild takes ~18ms, so you can run md build frequently during development

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distribution

marimo_dev-0.3.1.tar.gz (18.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

marimo_dev-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl (21.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file marimo_dev-0.3.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: marimo_dev-0.3.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 18.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.9.18 {"installer":{"name":"uv","version":"0.9.18","subcommand":["publish"]},"python":null,"implementation":{"name":null,"version":null},"distro":{"name":"macOS","version":null,"id":null,"libc":null},"system":{"name":null,"release":null},"cpu":null,"openssl_version":null,"setuptools_version":null,"rustc_version":null,"ci":null}

File hashes

Hashes for marimo_dev-0.3.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 beed237f67e4772aeac9c3259c7358736cd4befa8db6fbdb31500beb3289f5c2
MD5 3ae1c61b3a3b99713c3286791a6db76e
BLAKE2b-256 dd307c40aaa6206536e3db33130039487bdc464008b6da338966f4ffe894e1bf

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file marimo_dev-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: marimo_dev-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 21.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.9.18 {"installer":{"name":"uv","version":"0.9.18","subcommand":["publish"]},"python":null,"implementation":{"name":null,"version":null},"distro":{"name":"macOS","version":null,"id":null,"libc":null},"system":{"name":null,"release":null},"cpu":null,"openssl_version":null,"setuptools_version":null,"rustc_version":null,"ci":null}

File hashes

Hashes for marimo_dev-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 fa87c16db857420b185ed1f8264dcbc96b2807a5c5cf73ac9691ce933a0528e0
MD5 2eea57bc3326aa0b14b59222780d0e2c
BLAKE2b-256 899296715fd29f3f01338ba1c0158e1a72d84179281eeb81290bdb2117acbad6

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