Thanks for your work on this Matthias!

2016-11-29 16:07 GMT-03:00 Big Stone <[email protected]>:

> Hi Mathias,
>
> Thanks for the summary, reading through hackpads is not a pleasant task.
>
> Request:
> - would it be possible NOT to propose the "terminal" in Jupyterlab when
> it's not possibly working (aka not WSL Windows behind) ?
>
>
> On Tuesday, November 29, 2016 at 7:08:41 PM UTC+1, Matthias Bussonnier
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> This is an attempt to capture the weekly meeting in a written summary.
>> I’ll try to do that each Tuesday after each meeting. Though I have to
>> cap the time I spend on writing this summary to 30 minutes. Apologies
>> if it is a bit rough.
>>
>> I hope that going through written notes is easier than listening to 45
>> minute video on youtube.
>>
>> If this is useful to you, please say so. If you are open to helping in
>> making these notes more readable help is extremely appreciated.
>> Classic notebook:
>>
>> We are closing on a 4.3 release (long due). If you have some last
>> minutes requests or want to give a hand, now is the time.
>> JupyterLab
>>
>> Long time requested feature in progress, restoring the sate of
>> Jupyterlab:
>>
>>    -
>>
>>    There’s a large, open PR on state management and application
>>    restoration on page refreshes that should be finished within a day
>>    or so. If you want to follow along, there’s an overview of the
>>    restoration lifecycle in the PR description:
>>    https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab/pull/1291. If you buy into
>>    this system with your extension you should get state restoration for
>>    free on page reload.
>>    -
>>
>>    JupyterLab 0.11 should be release in the next day or so. As usual
>>    for any last minutes critical bugfixes it is now.
>>    -
>>
>>    JupyterLab was demoed at Gateways 2016, NYU, PlotCon and multiple
>>    other venues. It was very well received, lots of interest for
>>    potential collaborations. Special thanks to Matt Rocklin & Luke
>>    Canavan for great Dask demo.
>>
>> NBformat
>>
>>    - Discussion on draft spec for capturing a notebook environment is
>>    reaching a consensus soon,
>>    (https://github.com/jupyter/nbformat/pull/60) if you have anythong
>>    to say speak now.
>>
>> JupyterHub
>>
>>    - Jupyterhub 0.7 is due this week, one more documentation pass and it
>>    should be ready. A couple of eyes on
>>    https://github.com/jupyterhub/jupyterhub/pull/886 would be
>>    appreciated (Expand traitlet documentation for spawner base class).
>>
>> nbdime (NoteBook DIff and MErge)
>>
>>    - Should get a 0.1 release this week.
>>    - Last pass on documentation.
>>
>> Project is still on early stages and its the right time to get
>> involved.
>> QtConsole
>>
>>    - 4.3 likely going to be released this week.
>>
>> IPywidgets
>>
>> Ongoing work for a 6.0 release. Two betas released, including a
>> styling overhaul and fixing many small bugs. We’re concentrating
>> particularly on easing the transition from the 5.x releases.
>>
>> Ongoing work on the embedding of widgets with formal json spec for
>> widget state + sphinx extension. (Widget state can be fully generated
>> from python backend now, which will enable pure-python sphinx
>> extensions)
>>
>> There will be some small backwards-incompatible changes with 5.x in
>> JupyterLab For example, in the javascript, the way to specify widget
>> defaults is slightly changed, but the changes are fairly
>> straightforward. We also have ongoing discussion about some possible
>> changes to the Layout widget’s display functionality (see
>> ipython/ipywidgets#919, for example).
>>
>> The changes should (IIUC) mostly affect you if you are writing widgets
>> for JupyterLab.
>> GitHub automation
>>
>> We are working on GitHub automation: A bot that Backport PRs, Greet
>> users, migrate issue. Code not public yet but if you are interested to
>> participate let us know.
>> New Book on the website
>>
>> We added the Mastering IPython 4.0 book on IPython.org :
>> http://ipython.org/books.html
>>
>> We know have a policy on adding new books:
>> http://ipython.org/books_policy.html#books-policy
>>
>> Feedback and link to new books welcomed.
>> Pycon Talk Proposal
>>
>> We have a Pycon Tutorial proposal due today.
>> https://github.com/ipython/ipython-in-depth/pull/38 It’s a little late
>> to request feedback, we’ll try to do better next time.
>>
>> Writing the Talk proposal about migrating to Python 3 only.
>> https://github.com/python3statement/pycon-2017/blob/master/proposal.md
>> Collaboration welcomed.
>>
>> Considering making a Jupyter Talk Proposal, if anyone is interested in
>> helping writing one, (and co-presenting ?) if you plan to attend. Help
>> welcomed.
>> Nbconvert
>>
>>    - progress on header id filtering (the headers ids have someissues)
>>    - trying to figure out what exactly pandoc is doing, haskell is…fun
>>    - need to use regex (not re) in python to get access to unicode
>>    character property classes do any one have good or bad experience
>>    with it ? Do you have anything better to suggest ?
>>    - trying to find good comparable javascript library, XRegExp seems
>>    like a good candidate, known issues?
>>
>> Quantitative analysis of notebooks: proof of concept (Sam Penrose)
>>
>> Sam Penrose and Connor Ameres are starting to be regularly involved,
>> they are working on the following:
>>
>> The wrote a notebook feature exrtactor
>> https://github.com/cameres/notebook-feature-extractor it extract
>> cell-wise and notebook-wise feature extraction from IPython notebooks
>> to a Dataframe.
>>
>> This make them able to cluster Mozilla’s notebooks into is / not used
>> for distributed data processing.
>>
>> The goal is to understand notebooks as distributed data processing
>> IDE.
>>
>> To help then they need :
>>
>>    - Point them at notebook collections (working / messy, not
>>    presentation / tutorial)
>>    - Download and run their extractor your own notebooks:
>>       - Add feature extractors: typically 1-5 line Python functions
>>    - send PRs !
>>
>> How can we make this a useful resource for the community?
>> Ideas for a shared place to collect analyses? gist.github.com or ?
>>
>> That’s it I’m out of time to clean these notes, only 2 minutes left. I of
>> course got some things wrong, please correct me.
>>
>> See you next week.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> ​
>> --
>> Matthias
>>
>>
>>
>> --
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-- 
*Damián Avila*

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