Thanks. I was worried about that. I guess this means I need pandoc and 
latex installed on the windows machines in our lab to make this work. 

On Sunday, February 2, 2014 12:20:40 PM UTC-5, João Felipe Santos wrote:
>
> You have to call it from command line: ipython nbconvert 
> your_notebook.ipynb --to latex --post PDF
>
> --
> João Felipe Santos
>
>
> On Sun, Feb 2, 2014 at 12:14 PM, j verzani <[email protected]<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> Maybe I'm being dumb, but I can't find that export to pdf feature, just 
>> to .py and .ipynb under "File > Download as..."
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, February 2, 2014 11:34:16 AM UTC-5, John Myles White wrote:
>>
>>> Is asking them to print PDF’s using the notebook export tools too 
>>> onerous? 
>>>
>>>  — John 
>>>
>>> On Feb 2, 2014, at 8:33 AM, j verzani <[email protected]> wrote: 
>>>
>>> > Is there an easy way to print an IJulia notebook? I'm using julia in a 
>>> lab setting and am providing notebooks for students to fill out and turn 
>>> in. I'd prefer they print them. Unfortunately, I don't see a print menu 
>>> item and the browser's print feature only prints the visible parts of the 
>>> page. For the tech savvy I've recommended exporting as an ipynb file, 
>>> uploading to a public site on dropbox, viewing that through nbviewer and 
>>> then printing that web page. Definitely tedious. Am I missing something 
>>> obvious? 
>>>
>>>
>

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