Create Jupyter notebooks from Markdown and Python scripts.
Project description
The nbless
python package
Using nbless
you can create and execute Jupyter notebooks in
- your terminal or
- your favorite Python environment (e.g. PyCharm or Visual Studio Code).
The nbless
python package consists of 3 functions:
nbuild
, which creates a notebook from python scripts and plain text files, e.g. markdown (.md
) and text (.txt
) files.nbexec
, which runs a notebook from top to bottom and saves an executed version, leaving the source notebook untouched.nbless
, which callsnbuild
andnbexec
to create and execute a notebook.
These functions rely on the nbconvert
and nbformat
modules that are included with jupyter
.
Basic usage: terminal
Creating and executing a notebook with nbless
in the terminal
Run nbless.py
script in your terminal, providing all of the names of the source files as arguments, e.g.
python nbless.py README.md plot.py notes.txt
First, the contents of Python code files (.py
) are stored as Jupyter notebook code cells, while the contents of all other files are stored in markdown cells.
Then, the newly created notebook is copied, run from top to bottom and saved. The default name of the first notebook is raw.ipynb
while the executed notebook is called out.ipynb
by default output. The default filepath where the notebooks are saved is the current directory ('./'
).
You can provide more descriptive names for the notebooks and set a different path:
python nbless.py README.md plot.py notes.txt --raw unexecuted --out executed.ipynb --path notebooks/
# Or
python nbless.py README.md plot.py notes.txt -r not_executed.ipynb -o executed.ipynb -p notebooks/
Creating a notebook with nbuild
in the terminal
If you do not want an executed version of the notebook, run nbuild.py
instead of nbless.py
.
python nbuild.py README.md plot.py notes.txt
The default output filename for nbuild
is raw.ipynb
. The default output filepath is the current directory ('./'
).
You can provide a more descriptive filename (-o
) and set a different path (-p
):
python nbuild.py README.md plot.py -o not_executed.ipynb -p notebooks/
# Or
python nbuild.py README.md plot.py --out not_executed.ipynb --path notebooks/
If you only want to execute a notebook, run nbexec.py
.
python nbexec.py raw.ipynb
The default output filename for nbexec.py
is out.ipynb
. The default output filepath is the current directory ('.'
).
You can provide more descriptive names for the output name (-o
) and path (-p
):
python nbexec.py raw.ipynb -o executed.ipynb -p notebooks/
# Or
python nbexec.py raw.ipynb --out executed.ipynb --path notebooks/
Basic usage: python environment
from nbuild import nbuild
from nbexec import nbexec
from nbless import nbless
nbuild(["README.md", "plot.py", "notes.txt"], output_path="notebooks/")
nbexec("notebooks/raw.ipynb", output_path="notebooks/")
# Or to run both nbuild and nbexec at once, use nbless
nbless(["README.md", "plot.py", "notes.txt"], nbexec_path="notebooks/")
Missing a dependency?
If you installed Anaconda, you should already have all of the dependencies (python
, nbformat
, and nbconvert
).
If not, or if you have Miniconda installed, run
conda install -yc conda-forge jupyter
If you have any other Python installation, run
pip install jupyter
Too many file names to type out?
You can use the ls
command to assign all of the relevant names in the current directory to a variable and pass this variable as an argument to nbconvert.py
.
To preserve the order and differentiate files that should be incorporated into the notebook, I recommend left padding your file names with zeros (e.g. 01_intro.md, 02_figure1.py).
Consider the example below:
touch {01..09}.py
name_list=`ls 0*.py`
python nbuild.py `echo $name_list`
In a python environment, I recommend os.listdir
to obtain a list of all files:
from os import listdir
from os.path import isfile, join
onlyfiles = [f for f in listdir(mypath) if isfile(join(mypath, f))]
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