Another direction we can take is to make it easier to navigate in a
collection of notebooks. For example, make it easy to make previous/next/up
links in each notebook, plus an index. We do some things like this for the
ipywidgets documentation.

Jason


On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 9:52 AM <[email protected]> wrote:

> I agree. That's what I am doing now. As we go to review with our book, I
> am curious whether instructors/students will find that burdensome, which is
> why I am asking about resets in a single notebook.
>
>
> On Thursday, 28 December 2017 10:24:41 UTC-5, Jason Grout wrote:
>
>> You might consider putting each section in a separate notebook. Then it
>> very naturally starts with a fresh kernel, is self-contained, etc.
>>
>> Jason
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 26, 2017, 23:44 Roland Weber <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
> On Tuesday, December 26, 2017 at 3:42:23 PM UTC+1, [email protected]
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> But once I ship out the notebook to others, they'd need to do the same
>>>> as they execute cells, correct?
>>>>
>>>
>>> Once you ship out the notebook to others, they can execute and
>>> re-execute cells in whatever order they want to. In reverse order, if they
>>> have a mind to.
>>> If you want to give them something that never changes, then make an HTML
>>> export or a screenshot.
>>> If you want to give them something that starts numbering from scratch
>>> with each chapter, then give them a separate notebook for each chapter.
>>>
>>> Notebooks are interactive, everyone will have their personal instance of
>>> them. The execution count shows how someone works with their notebook.
>>> You're trying to control what others will do with their copies of your
>>> notebook(s). It's a waste of time. It's like trying to control in which
>>> order people read the different articles in a newspaper, or on a news
>>> website.
>>>
>>> cheers,
>>>   Roland
>>>
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