Books With Jupyter Chris Holdgraf
Jupyter Books lets you build an online book using a collection of Jupyter Notebooks and Markdown files. Its output is similar to the excellent Bookdown tool, and adds extra functionality for people running a Jupyter stack. For an example of a book built with Jupyter Books, see the textbook for Data 100 at UC Berkeley (or this website!) Here are a few features of Jupyter Books Check out other features in the Features section. Note: Throughout this guide you may see an experimental tag that looks like this:
Over the past four years, the Executable Book(s) (EB) project has been working to improve workflows for writing and publishing with Jupyter Notebooks, along with the broader open source science ecosystem. Within this collaboration, much of the development effort has been spent on building Jupyter Book, which has been a tremendous success; there are at least 13,209 GitHub repositories using the tool according to the... For example, six of the flagship scientific python projects[3] like NumPy, Pandas, and Dask make use of at least one of the Sphinx-based tools we’ve developed such as the PyData Sphinx Theme, the Sphinx... Over the past three years, the Executable Books team has focused its efforts on building a Sphinx-based technical stack underlying the Jupyter Book project. This has been extremely successful, and Jupyter Book and the associated MyST ecosystem in Sphinx have gained adoption across both scientific and open source communities. The MyST Parser for Sphinx averages around 350,000 downloads a month, which makes up about 13% of all Sphinx downloads (https://www.pepy.tech/projects/myst-parser?versions=*).
There are over 4000 Jupyter Books in public GitHub repositories (https://github.com/search?q=%22format%3A+jb-book%22&type=code), many of which are now featured at gallery.executablebooks.org. The AGU 2021 conference just wrapped up, and Jupyter Book made a few appearances at the conference this year. Below are a few links to videos and Google Slides for each session. How the team took advantage of being co-located and working closely with Scientific Python developers. Scientific Python is an ecosystem of open-source software packages and a community of developers and maintainers that is working ... To better coordinate the ecosystem and support the community of contributors and maintainers.
This month, the organizers of the 2025 Scientific Python Developer Summit invited to the Jupyter Book team to join them in Seattle, Washington, where Chris Holdgraf, Franklin Koch, and Angus Hollands spent five days... Photograph of Angus and Franklin co-working with Scientific Python developers during the summit. Image redistributed from a LinkedIn post shared by Scientific Python. Executive Director of 2i2c and long-time contributor to the Jupyter Project. Open communities 🙌 open source 💻 open science 🧪 education 🎓 communication 💬 and cloud infrastructure ☁. Big announcement: Jupyter Book 2.0 has an alpha release 🎉 This is a major overhaul to use the @MystMarkdown engine under the hood.
Lots of improvements and lots of changes. If you're willing to try bleeding edge tools, try it out and give feedback! https://lnkd.in/gjQGxTQv The biggest improvement with 2.0 is that MyST has grown beyond just being a markdown format, and is now its own document engine! It is faster, more integrated with computational workflows, and natively encourages the re-use of content and outputs across documents. https://mystmd.org There's still a lot to work out and improve in Jupyter Book 2, so if you're willing, try it out and give feedback because we're actively working to fix bugs and add missing... We're really excited about the next phase of the project!
Open Source Leader | Founder, pyOpenSci | Building inclusive open source communities so scientists spend less time fighting code and more time solving our greatest challenges Oooh exciting. i'm excited to try it out! Chris Holdgraf why would we use jupyter book vs mystmarkdown by itself? Does Jupyter Book provide additional features? David R.
Anderson Director, UW-Madison Data Science Institute and Professor of Physics, Statistics, and Computer Science I talk about the Jupyter Project, an open community that builds public tools for solving data analytics problems. I also discuss a new project, Jupyter Book, that lets you weave multiple Jupyter Notebooks together into a single book-like document. All slide content and descriptions are owned by their creators. Posted Aug 14, 2020 11:42 UTC (Fri) by MuckiSG (subscriber, #127183) [Link] (1 responses) Posted Aug 15, 2020 14:00 UTC (Sat) by ms-tg (subscriber, #89231) [Link]
More book output types — By leveraging Sphinx, Jupyter Book will be able to support more complex outputs than just an HTML website. For example, we are currently prototyping PDF Outputs, both via HTML as well as via LaTeX. This gives Jupyter Book more flexibility to generate the right book for your use case. Copyright © 2020, Eklektix, Inc. Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds
Chris gave a talk about Jupyter Book 2 and MyST at the UC Berkeley Data Science Education Program’s annual meeting. It covered the next direction for the Jupyter Book project, and its recent adoption of the MyST Document Engine for Jupyter Book 2. This page describes some of the major projects that I have worked on over the past and present. The International Interactive Computing Collaboration is a non-profit organization dedicated to developing and providing infrastructure for interactive computing in research and education. It is an attempt at providing sustainable, vendor-agnostic, and open infrastructure that maximizes flexibility, choice, and productivity for research and education. Jupyter Book is an open source project for building beautiful, publication-quality books and documents from computational material.
It is stewarded by the Executable Books Project, an international collaboration to build open-source tools that facilitate publishing computational narratives using the Jupyter ecosystem. Binder allows you to create custom computing environments that can be shared and used by many remote users. It is powered by BinderHub, an open-source tool to deploy the Binder service in the cloud. One such deployment lives at mybinder.org, where it is run as a free service. I help make open source tools be useful for research and education, and help these communities apply open source technology to do their work. I work with a bunch of open-source communities and projects, most-notably in the Project Jupyter ecosystem.
I'm also the Director of 2i2c, a non-profit dedicated to interactive computing in research and education. A few links where you can learn more about me! And a few open source projects that work on:
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Jupyter Books Lets You Build An Online Book Using A
Jupyter Books lets you build an online book using a collection of Jupyter Notebooks and Markdown files. Its output is similar to the excellent Bookdown tool, and adds extra functionality for people running a Jupyter stack. For an example of a book built with Jupyter Books, see the textbook for Data 100 at UC Berkeley (or this website!) Here are a few features of Jupyter Books Check out other featu...
Over The Past Four Years, The Executable Book(s) (EB) Project
Over the past four years, the Executable Book(s) (EB) project has been working to improve workflows for writing and publishing with Jupyter Notebooks, along with the broader open source science ecosystem. Within this collaboration, much of the development effort has been spent on building Jupyter Book, which has been a tremendous success; there are at least 13,209 GitHub repositories using the too...
There Are Over 4000 Jupyter Books In Public GitHub Repositories
There are over 4000 Jupyter Books in public GitHub repositories (https://github.com/search?q=%22format%3A+jb-book%22&type=code), many of which are now featured at gallery.executablebooks.org. The AGU 2021 conference just wrapped up, and Jupyter Book made a few appearances at the conference this year. Below are a few links to videos and Google Slides for each session. How the team took advantage of...
This Month, The Organizers Of The 2025 Scientific Python Developer
This month, the organizers of the 2025 Scientific Python Developer Summit invited to the Jupyter Book team to join them in Seattle, Washington, where Chris Holdgraf, Franklin Koch, and Angus Hollands spent five days... Photograph of Angus and Franklin co-working with Scientific Python developers during the summit. Image redistributed from a LinkedIn post shared by Scientific Python. Executive Dire...
Lots Of Improvements And Lots Of Changes. If You're Willing
Lots of improvements and lots of changes. If you're willing to try bleeding edge tools, try it out and give feedback! https://lnkd.in/gjQGxTQv The biggest improvement with 2.0 is that MyST has grown beyond just being a markdown format, and is now its own document engine! It is faster, more integrated with computational workflows, and natively encourages the re-use of content and outputs across doc...