Leo gains nothing by attempting to work closely with IPython. 

I agree with Edward that complex integration does not bring any benefits.

If I imagine, the combination of Leo and Jupyter may only be a combination 
at the file level. Maybe Leo will parse the ipynb file and turn it into 
blocks, and then we can use Leo's outline feature to 
deconstruct/organize/clone blocks at will.
After the new outline is formed and saved, then in JupyterLab, `reload from 
disk` reads the new ipynb file.

We all know that Leo's outline is unmatched✨✨✨

As I said before, for now, there is no such function, I use jupytext to 
implement the above idea.

ipynb files ----(jupytext)--> py files ----(import and organize by leo) --> 
(modify py files from leo or any other editors) --> (reload from disk) in 
jupyterlab --> (reset kernel and run all cells)

 

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