Re: [jupyter] Our licenses have drifted from "pure" BSD, we should fix that...

2016-07-25 Thread Brian Granger
se numbering, like on the opensource.org > website template. > > Jason > > > > On Mon, Jul 25, 2016 at 11:12 PM Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On Mon, Jul 25, 2016 at 7:58 PM, Jason Grout <ja...@jasongrout.org> wrote: >> > For a s

Re: [jupyter] Thanks for SciPy, and Tomorrow's JupyterHub Miniworkshop

2016-07-21 Thread Brian Granger
Matthias, Thanks for the thoughtful and complete summary! Cheers, Brian On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 11:55 AM, Matthias Bussonnier wrote: > Hello all, > > As you might have seen, last week was SciPy2016 in Austin, so most of us > were > overwhelmed during a week, it

Re: [jupyter] Real-time collaboration

2016-08-05 Thread Brian Granger
To clarify, we do plan on adding real-time collaboration to JupyterLab On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 9:09 AM, Matthias Bussonnier wrote: > Hi Pablo, > > The current state of JupyterLab is to reach feature parity with the > current notebook, then we will look at extending

Re: [jupyter] Moving towards a more structured team setup

2016-08-16 Thread Brian Granger
Steven Silvester > > Projects/Functional Areas Repos > jupyter_core jupyter_core <https://github.com/jupyter/jupyter_core> > jupyter client jupyter_client <https://github.com/jupyter/jupyter_client> > Python 2 Support > message spec > testpath <https://githu

[jupyter] Re: Ironing out some issues with nbextension/serverextensions in notebook 5.0 and 4.x

2017-02-06 Thread Brian Granger
Pinging everyone on this one again...we need to resolve this stuff before notebook 5.0 goes out the door... On Thu, Dec 22, 2016 at 1:32 PM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi all, > > We have just released notebook 4.3.1 and are starting to look towards > a notebo

Re: [jupyter] Looking for a co-presenter for a security-related talk at JupyterCon

2017-02-06 Thread Brian Granger
Great! This is definitely the right place to ask... On Mon, Feb 6, 2017 at 4:25 PM, Steven Anton wrote: > Hi everyone, I'm really looking forward to JupyterCon in August. I'd like to > submit a talk regarding some work I've done to enable working with encrypted >

[jupyter] Re: Ironing out some issues with nbextension/serverextensions in notebook 5.0 and 4.x

2017-02-07 Thread Brian Granger
for >> system/sys-prefix/user >> >> Cheers, >> >> Brian >> >> >> On Thu, Dec 22, 2016 at 2:32 PM, Brian Granger <elli...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > Hi all, >> > >> > We have just released notebook 4.3.1 and are starting to loo

Re: [jupyter] New notebook gallery site

2017-01-28 Thread Brian Granger
I have talked with these folks and seen this. The main difference is that users must upload notebooks, rather than simply renering notebooks from URLs/github as nbviewer does. On Fri, Jan 27, 2017 at 10:11 AM, Thomas Kluyver wrote: > On 27 January 2017 at 12:03, Kiko

Re: [jupyter] Re: Formalizing preparing a release

2017-02-21 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks for the update, sounds good! On Mon, Feb 20, 2017 at 12:24 PM, MinRK <benjami...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Sun, Feb 19, 2017 at 8:01 PM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> I teach during the dev meetings this quarter. Was a decision re

Re: [jupyter] Re: Formalizing preparing a release

2017-02-19 Thread Brian Granger
I teach during the dev meetings this quarter. Was a decision reached on this? On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 2:51 AM, MinRK wrote: > > > On Sat, Feb 11, 2017 at 12:15 PM, Thomas Kluyver wrote: >> >> I'm assuming it's already automated? I also like that page; I

Re: [jupyter] Re: Jupyter Notebook 5.0 beta 1

2017-02-16 Thread Brian Granger
Tony, Great questions and feedback! Inline thoughts below... > - will Jupyter notebooks continue to be available as such once Jupyterlab is > available? (could a jupyterlab instance be configured to just mimic a simple > notebook UI, for example) Yes, the core JS component in JupyterLab are

Re: [jupyter] Load Testing JupyterHub

2017-02-16 Thread Brian Granger
In general, the bottleneck is always going to be the N_students*resources_per_student. That varies widely by what the students are doing. In our data science courses, we give each students 2GB RAM and approximately 4 students per CPU core. The CPU stuff isn't typically the issue - RAM *always*

Re: [jupyter] Formalizing preparing a release

2017-02-09 Thread Brian Granger
I am definitely in favor of this. We have millions of users, with many of them organizations, universities, non-profits, researchers, etc. who are relying on our software and building on top of it. So, in addition to our own developers needing to know about and discuss releases, we also have a

Re: [jupyter] Our licenses have drifted from "pure" BSD, we should fix that...

2016-08-18 Thread Brian Granger
Great, thanks! On Thu, Aug 18, 2016 at 5:43 PM, Fernando Perez wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 18, 2016 at 11:43 AM, ellisonbg wrote: >> >> Fernando, >> >> I think we should move forward with a decision on this issue. Some things >> under consideration: >> >> *

Re: [jupyter] Incorporate spell check into Markdown cells of notebooks?

2016-09-02 Thread Brian Granger
Doug, is the spell checking code in the form a standalone npm package? On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 7:30 AM, Doug Blank wrote: > +1 from me too! > > I'd be glad to hand the Calysto spell checking code over to the Jupyter > Project. The first time I met Fernando I mentioned that

Re: [jupyter] Incorporate spell check into Markdown cells of notebooks?

2016-09-06 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks Doug, I opened an issue on the JupyterLab repo: https://github.com/jupyter/jupyterlab/issues/846 On Sat, Sep 3, 2016 at 4:48 AM, Doug Blank <doug.bl...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 7:59 PM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Doug,

Re: [jupyter] Renewed tmpnb.org

2016-09-24 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks! On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 6:03 PM, Kyle Kelley wrote: > Just thought I'd let everyone know I've renewed the domain for tmpnb.org. > > I also renewed http://armadalovelace.com, a domain I purchased as a tribute > to Ada Lovelace and distributed computing? I'm not using it

Re: [jupyter] nbconvert_reportlab: Alternative to convert notebooks to PDFs

2016-09-29 Thread Brian Granger
O, very nice!!! On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 9:29 AM, Thomas Kluyver wrote: > In the last few days, I've put together an nbconvert plugin that uses > Reportlab to generate PDFs directly, rather than building a Latex document > and converting it to PDF. > > This is very new and

Re: [jupyter] Propose change in how frontends handle payloads

2016-10-04 Thread Brian Granger
that >>> we didn't want that "popup" experience and people seemed to like having it >>> inline. We then faced, exactly as you put it, a lack of reproducibility of >>> the notebook - people wanted to see that "output" of documentation right >>> there

Re: [jupyter] CSS for cell output in notebook

2016-09-29 Thread Brian Granger
Kyle, Thanks for posting about the JSON table schema here. I do think it would be great to start building support for that... Cheers, Brian On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 7:27 PM, Kyle Kelley wrote: > Since I noticed deep within you mentioned nice custom table formatting -- > would

Re: [jupyter] PDF Viewer

2016-10-28 Thread Brian Granger
Here is an example of a plugin that has a custom file viewer: https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab_geojson That would get you started. Let us know if you have questions... On Fri, Oct 28, 2016 at 2:23 PM, Chris Colbert wrote: > We don't have a way to do that out of the

Re: [jupyter] Find the rogue train: nice example of notebook use

2016-12-10 Thread Brian Granger
At one point I played with a notebook -> medium post converter, but the Medium API was pretty limited. More specifically, it was pretty tough to format cells with multiple outputs in a manner that was in any way reasonable. I think they also don't have any support for LaTeX. However, if you have

[jupyter] We are hiring a contract based technical writer for Projet Jupyter

2016-12-14 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, We wanted to let the broader community know that we are in the process of hiring a technical writer for Project Jupyter that will focus on the documentation. Here is a quick sketch of the position: * Work would be on a contract basis * 6-12 month contract on part or full-time basis *

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] nbconvert 5.0

2016-12-16 Thread Brian Granger
Many congrats, great to see nbconvert moving forward! On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 7:09 AM, MinRK wrote: > We’ve just released nbconvert 5.0, with lots of nice fixes and improvements. > Among the key changes are switching the default latex engine from pdflatex > to xelatex,

Re: [jupyter] Smooth interaction with graphics

2017-01-14 Thread Brian Granger
The main thing I have found with using matplotlib with interact is that you have to do a bit of extra work to make sure that the overall frame/ticks/limits/etc are the same as you vary your parameter. Because each call to plt.plot is new, matplotlib has no way of knowing it should hold those

Re: [jupyter] PyCon tutorial

2016-11-29 Thread Brian Granger
I don't know my travel schedule yet, but I would like to be able to go to PyCon. Please feel free to put my name down to help with any tutorial there... On Sun, Nov 27, 2016 at 1:45 AM, MinRK wrote: > Hi Matthias and Mike! > > I think doing the IPython-in-depth is a good

[jupyter] Jupyter/governance: document describing how we are using labels/milestones

2017-01-06 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, In the JupyterLab repo, we have been experimenting with a slightly more formal and structured approach to using Github labels and milestones. The flat nature of the GitHub label namespace makes it difficult to manage large numbers of issues. We have come up with a label taxonomy that is

[jupyter] Writeup of JupyterLab style issues/milestones: application to jupyter/notebook

2017-01-07 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, I have opened this PR describing how we are using labels/milestones in JupyterLab: https://github.com/jupyter/governance/pull/29 I recently restructured the notebook labels/milestones to use this approach. In the coming weeks, I would like to work with Grant - and anyone else wanting to

Re: [jupyter] Re: Clarification of the widget landscape

2016-12-20 Thread Brian Granger
Brad, Great question. Nick has done a great job and answering this question and providing a lot of background. I wanted to fill in a few other aspects that may help you decide what fits for you and where things are headed. In general, there are a number of factors that go into where the project

[jupyter] Governance: draft process for authoring papers

2016-12-21 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, I have submitted a PR to the governance repo adding a process for authoring papers. In particular, at this point, I have specified a detailed process for writing papers for the Journal of Open Source Software (http://joss.theoj.org/). Because JOSS papers are very short the process is a

[jupyter] Ironing out some issues with nbextension/serverextensions in notebook 5.0 and 4.x

2016-12-22 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, We have just released notebook 4.3.1 and are starting to look towards a notebook 5.0 release. We have a number of small issues related to the installation and enabling of nextensions and serverextensions in the 4.x release series and 5.0/master. Because the notebook 5.0 will likely be

[jupyter] Re: Ironing out some issues with nbextension/serverextensions in notebook 5.0 and 4.x

2016-12-22 Thread Brian Granger
22, 2016 at 2:32 PM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi all, > > We have just released notebook 4.3.1 and are starting to look towards > a notebook 5.0 release. We have a number of small issues related to > the installation and enabling of nextensions and serverex

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter JVM Repr

2017-04-06 Thread Brian Granger
Great! On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 1:39 PM, Kyle Kelley wrote: > It is now done. > > https://github.com/jupyter/jvm-repr is now live! Thanks all. > > On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 7:13 AM, Damián Avila wrote: >> >> > If we have a steering council member

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter JVM Repr

2017-04-05 Thread Brian Granger
I am +1 on this proposal. I think having good JVM support is really important and there is a huge benefit to having it "in-org". Thanks for working on this stuff Kyle! On Wed, Apr 5, 2017 at 12:00 PM, Kyle Kelley wrote: > Hey all, > > Following up on the Scala discussion and

Re: [jupyter] Transportation Data Challenge (May 2-3, Seattle, WA)

2017-04-21 Thread Brian Granger
Very cool!!! On Fri, Apr 21, 2017 at 10:30 AM, Ian Rose wrote: > Hi Jupyter community, > > This is both an advertisement for an event and a request for information. > The NSF-sponsored West Big Data Innovation Hub is hosting a series of > workshops/hackathons focused on

Re: [jupyter] Scala Kernel Discussion

2017-03-04 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks for taking the lead on this Kyle! On Fri, Mar 3, 2017 at 5:14 PM, Kyle Kelley wrote: > On February 27, 2017 a group of us met to talk about Scala kernels and pave > a path forward for Scala users. There is a youtube video available of the > discussion available here: > >

Re: [jupyter] Preparing for IPython 6.0

2017-02-28 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks Matthias, very exciting! On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 4:04 PM, Matthias Bussonnier wrote: > Hi all > > I think we are closing-in on IPython 6.0 > > There are about 30 issues/PR open [1], I've opened a meta issue to discuss > remaining changes and potentially

Re: [jupyter] newbie how to reflow comments?

2017-04-18 Thread Brian Granger
+1 fully agree! I have opened an issue on the JupyterLab repo where we would implement this: https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab/issues/2056 On Tue, Apr 18, 2017 at 12:18 PM, Andy Davidson wrote: > Hi > > One features I mis from R-studio is the ability to

[jupyter] Re: [jupyter-education] nbgrader v0.5.0 released

2017-07-09 Thread Brian Granger
Jess, Many congrats on this release, I look forward to using it! Cheers, Brian On Sat, Jul 8, 2017 at 1:36 PM, Jessica B. Hamrick wrote: > Hi all, > > I am excited to announce that the nbgrader v0.5.0 has been released! You can > install it via pip: > > pip

[jupyter] Re: [jupyter-education] nbgrader v0.5.2 released

2017-07-20 Thread Brian Granger
Very nice! On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 11:55 AM, Jessica B. Hamrick wrote: > Hi all, > > nbgrader version 0.5.2 has been released. This is a bugfix release, with > most of the bugs being discovered and subsequently fixed by the sprinters at > SciPy 2017! A huge thank you

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Notebook Mobile Experience Study

2017-04-25 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks, Cameron! On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 9:32 AM, Cameron Oelsen wrote: > Hey everyone! > > Over the next week or two, I am going to be conducting a study on how the > Jupyter Notebook / JupyterLab should function in a mobile app. If you use > the Notebook or JupyterLab

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] nbformat 4.4.0

2017-08-20 Thread Brian Granger
Hmm, I think there has been a significant miscommunication about the purpose of the `source_hidden` and `outputs_hidden` metadata. Here is a summary of my understanding: https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab/issues/2740 I remember us specifically talking as a groupt at the in person meeting

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Notebook Frontend Extension wait for other Frontend Extension

2017-05-19 Thread Brian Granger
Yes, the classic notebook is not really setup for multiple runtime extensions to resolve their runtime dependencies. This dependency resolution is independent of the code loading on the page through require.js. We have solved these things with the new extension system in JupyterLab, but doing it

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] nbconvert 5.2.1 release

2017-05-27 Thread Brian Granger
Many congrats Mike! On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 5:31 AM, Damián Avila wrote: > Congrats on the release Michael !! > > Cheers. > > 2017-05-26 1:03 GMT-03:00 Matthias Bussonnier > : >> >> Thanks ! That's great congratulation on the release ! >> >>

Re: [jupyter] Syncronize Code Between Jupyter and External Scripts

2017-06-05 Thread Brian Granger
I think the best way to start playing with this is to build it as an extension, and use notebook metadata that tracks separate file should be pointed to by a given cell. I completely agree this is an good usage case. On Sat, Jun 3, 2017 at 11:19 AM, Utkonos wrote: > I have

Re: [jupyter] How to share a Jupyter installation for team notebook development

2017-06-06 Thread Brian Granger
Jean, Thanks for the feedback! The pain you are feeling around collaboration isn't unique. We are hearing the same things from many users and that feedback is strongly driving our roadmap...but it takes time...years in many cases to build a robust architecture that supports these things. I

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] JupyterHub 0.8

2017-10-03 Thread Brian Granger
Nice! Many congrats to the JupyterHub team! On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 12:55 PM, MinRK wrote: > We’ve just released JupyterHub 0.8 to PyPI. Tagged Docker images and > conda-forge should propagate shortly. > > This is a big one with lots of fixes and exciting improvements. See

Re: [jupyter] Introducing the binderhub-dev mailing list

2017-10-10 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks Yuvi! On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 9:06 AM, Yuvi Panda wrote: > Heya! > > With the increasing number of people involved in the development of > beta.mybinder.org, we've created a mailing list to coordinate and be > more transparent about development activities. > >

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Notebook 5.2.0

2017-10-14 Thread Brian Granger
Congrats everyone! On Fri, Oct 13, 2017 at 10:55 AM, Grant Nestor wrote: > We are pleased to announce the release of Jupyter Notebook 5.2.0. This is a > minor release that includes mostly bug fixes and improvements with the > notable addition of RTL (right-to-left)

Re: [jupyter] Re: Congratulations to Thomas Kluyver

2017-10-14 Thread Brian Granger
Thomas, many congrats on this recognition of your wide reaching, fantastic work! On Sat, Oct 14, 2017 at 1:12 PM, Carlos Córdoba wrote: > Congrats Thomas!! Thanks for all your hard work in IPython/Jupyter, it's > been a terrific contribution to all the Scientific Python

Re: [jupyter] ipywidgets 7.0.0

2017-08-21 Thread Brian Granger
Many congratulations to the entire ipywidgets team, especially the many new contributors! This is a huge release! On Fri, Aug 18, 2017 at 5:40 PM, Jason Grout wrote: > We are pleased to announce the ipywidgets 7.0.0 release, along with the > corresponding python package

[jupyter] Any kernels with immutable namespaces

2017-10-22 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, Does anyone know of any Jupyter kernels that have an immutable namespace that flows between blocks of code? I am looking at how pure functional languages implement persistent state in Jupyter kernels. Cheers, Brian -- Brian E. Granger Associate Professor of Physics and Data Science

Re: [jupyter] Rich representation of exceptions/tracebacks

2017-11-27 Thread Brian Granger
One further question - do you think there is anything we can do in the meantime in upstream libraries such as Altair so support rich reprs of errors? Sure we could just publish a mimebundle, but then then we can't raise, right? On Mon, Nov 27, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.

Re: [jupyter] Rich representation of exceptions/tracebacks

2017-11-27 Thread Brian Granger
33994098688) in response > to same blog post, so you are 4 days late :-) :-) Thanks for the update, glad I wasn't alone in thinking about these things. Cheers, Brian > -- > Matthias > > > On Sun, Nov 26, 2017 at 7:04 PM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >&g

[jupyter] Rich representation of exceptions/tracebacks

2017-11-26 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, Has anyone done work on using rich MIME based representations of exceptions and tracebacks in IPython+Jupyter? This nice blog post got me thinking about providing more helpful representations of errors to users: https://blog.keras.io/user-experience-design-for-apis.html Cheers, Brian

Re: [jupyter] Moving nbmanager into Jupyter Github org?

2017-11-10 Thread Brian Granger
As a side point - we are adding these types of capabilities to the JupyterLab electron app, including smart searching for all the python+jupyter installations and envs on a system... On Fri, Nov 10, 2017 at 7:52 AM, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: > +1 > > On Fri, Nov 1

Re: [jupyter] Moving nbmanager into Jupyter Github org?

2017-11-11 Thread Brian Granger
guidelines: >> https://github.com/jupyter/governance/blob/master/newsubprojects.md#incorporation-of-an-existing-external-subproject >> >> It is already incubated, so the proposal should be accepted quickly... I >> know it is probably a formality but still I think it makes sense to

Re: [jupyter] Supported Markdown syntax

2017-11-12 Thread Brian Granger
Unfortunately, our best answer currently is "whatever our particular markdown parser supports". We know that is a painful situation to be in. It is our intention to document the syntax supported in the classic notebook and then begin to make changes to support commonmark. The repo that Matthias

Re: [jupyter] Moving Terminado into Jupyter maintenance

2017-11-20 Thread Brian Granger
+1, let me know if you want help reaching out to MSFT folks On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 6:59 AM, Matthias Bussonnier wrote: > I'm +1 to transferring the repository. I would also try to ping > whoever-we-know at Microsoft, as enabling this will likely impact them > the

Re: [jupyter] Re: The Kernel appears to have died. It will restart automatically ? Please help !

2017-11-20 Thread Brian Granger
I haven't looked into the details of your configuration, but in general, Jupyter and the python kernels have no problem using whatever RAM the system makes available to it. I have created single NumPY arrays with 1TB of RAM with no problem. If you are running out of RAM, it is a system level thing

Re: [jupyter] enlarge GUI's stop button

2017-11-01 Thread Brian Granger
see discussion here: https://github.com/jupyter/notebook/pull/2965 On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 1:55 PM, Camille Goudeseune wrote: > Can the GUI include the letters "stop" beside that button, just like the run > button? > That makes it a bigger target for the mouse. > > Or, can

Re: [jupyter] enlarge GUI's stop button

2017-11-01 Thread Brian Granger
Also, the stop button is bound to the "i i" (double press i in command mode). In the browser we have fewer keyboard options available - however, you should be able to customize that shortcut in the Help menu -> Edit Keyboard shortcuts. On Wed, Nov 1, 2017 at 1:08 PM, Brian Gr

Re: [jupyter] Fork or Revert Kernel?

2017-11-02 Thread Brian Granger
JupyterLab has a "Code Console" that is similar to this Scratchpad, but allows more flexibility in terms of which kernel is used. As far as 1) and 2) are concerned, I don't know of any general way of forking, rewinding a full runtime without full blown process level checkpointing. I am guessing

[jupyter] Repo for exploring a debugger protocol + UI for Jupyter

2017-11-02 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, Wanted to let the community know that we have created a repo for exploring an interactive debugger protocol and UI for Jupyter: https://github.com/jupyter/debugger We will be using this repo for discussions, research and prototypes of the different pieces. If you are interested in

Re: [jupyter] Fork or Revert Kernel?

2017-11-02 Thread Brian Granger
's interest, but I'll hold off on > further thread hijacking for now. > > Robert > > [1] http://www.reinteract.org/ > > > On Nov 2 2017, at 4:16 pm, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> JupyterLab has a "Code Console" that is similar t

Re: [jupyter] Help contribute to science and determine the future of exploratory data analysis and visualization t

2017-11-09 Thread Brian Granger
On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 7:52 PM, Kanit Wongsuphasawat <kan...@gmail.com> wrote: > Our team at University of Washington are conducting an interview study on > exploratory data analysis and visualization tools. As we have been > collaborating with Brian Granger on visualization tools

Re: [jupyter] https://beta.observablehq.com

2018-05-14 Thread Brian Granger
I would love to see a high quality reactive data flow kernel for Jupyter. I think we have most of the pieces in place to do this type of thing in Jupyter (we have updatable outputs now). On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 9:08 AM, 'Aaron Watters' via Project Jupyter wrote: > Hi

Re: [jupyter] nbdime 1.0.0 released

2018-05-16 Thread Brian Granger
Congrats! On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 4:27 AM, Carol Willing wrote: > Congrats Vidar and all who contributed to nbime :D > > > On May 15, 2018, at 5:33 AM, Vidar Tonaas Fauske wrote: > > We've just release version 1.0 of nbdime! > > Some highlights: > > -

Re: [jupyter] Notebook 5.5 RC1

2018-05-01 Thread Brian Granger
Hi Thomas thanks for the notice. Has there been anything that changed that might be leaking file descriptors? I started to see that last week Sent from my iPhone > On May 1, 2018, at 1:00 PM, Thomas Kluyver wrote: > > I've just uploaded a release candidate of notebook 5.5

Re: [jupyter] Re: Any kernels with immutable namespaces

2017-10-22 Thread Brian Granger
Hi Doug! Most Jupyter kernels that I know of have a persistent namespace that is mutable - each new block of code is executed in that namespace and can mutate its state. In python this is something like exec(code, global_ns, local_ns). I am looking for any examples where there is persistent

Re: [jupyter] Organizing posting on the Jupyter Blog.

2018-01-06 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks Matthias, this sounds great! Also, if drafts are being done on Google Drive or Dropbox Paper, please paste a link to the draft in the draft Medium post so others can find it. Cheers, Brian On Sat, Jan 6, 2018 at 3:25 AM, Matthias Bussonnier wrote: > Happy

Re: [jupyter] An example of what can be built with the JupyterLab ecosystem

2018-02-09 Thread Brian Granger
Very cool, thanks for sharing! On Fri, Feb 9, 2018 at 12:24 AM, Simon Biggs wrote: > Hi, > > Standing upon the shoulders of giants I have created a tool that allows one > to quickly and easily create powerful reactive form like front ends for > python > scripts and

Re: [jupyter] Time Travel Analysis or Undo in Jupyter

2018-02-23 Thread Brian Granger
I built something similar to reinteract as well last year. Doing the simple case isn't very hard - was just deep copying the namespace before exec'ing each cell and storing those as a python list. As Robert mentions, doing this type of thing well and efficiently, gets to be much more difficult.

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Lab and ISO 8601

2018-02-23 Thread Brian Granger
I think we are using moment.js. Not sure how I feel about showing users ISO 8601 formatted datetimes though. It is not a particularly human friendly datetime format. Maybe having some sort of toggle in the UI to switch between the moment.js times and a more human friendly variant of the ISO 8601

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] nbconflux: Publish notebooks as Atlassian Confluence pages

2018-02-26 Thread Brian Granger
Pete, Thanks for sharing! I have never used Confluence, but this look like it would be useful. Cheers, Brian On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:34 AM, Peter Parente wrote: > Hi all, > > I wanted to make you aware of a utility we recently open sourced called > nbconflux, a tool for

Re: [jupyter] [ANN] NBConvert 5.4 -- A year's worth of changes

2018-09-06 Thread Brian Granger
Matthew, many thanks for all your work on nbconvert and congrats to everyone who helped out! On Thu, Sep 6, 2018 at 1:06 PM Matthew Seal wrote: > NBConvert 5.4 > > After a long period between releases, we are pleased to announced > nbconvert 5.4.0! > > It is available via pypi (pip install

Re: [jupyter] Just ran "conda upgrade notebook" to get .5.3.1 now notebook won't start

2018-01-22 Thread Brian Granger
can you try updating the jupyter_core package using conda or pip. We may have forgotten to update a dependency version. On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 1:28 PM, Tom Brander wrote: > Got no error on the upgrade but get this now when trying to run notebook so > I'm stuck! > Some sort

Re: [jupyter] Vega3 support in JupyterLab

2018-03-12 Thread Brian Granger
For the 0.31 release it was a separate package: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@jupyterlab/vega3-extension That package is still available on npm, so you should be able to install it on 0.31 with: jupyter labextension install @jupyterlab/vega3-extension In JupyterLab master and moving forward

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Lab and ISO 8601

2018-02-28 Thread Brian Granger
Sorry folks, things are crazy this week so I am a bit behind on emails... >From the user experience perspective there are two questions a user might be interested in: 1) At what exact time was this document last edited? The ISO 8601 format is possibly the right format for that information. I am

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Lab and ISO 8601

2018-02-28 Thread Brian Granger
On a call right now, but I really like the example from Gnome that Thomas posted. On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 2:27 PM, Matthias Bussonnier <bussonniermatth...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On 28 February 2018 at 13:42, Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Ma

[jupyter] Resources for learning JavaScript/TypeScript online

2018-04-22 Thread Brian Granger
Hi all, We are getting started with the Summer 2018 Jupyter internship at Cal Poly. In previous years, I had used CodeSchool to get the interns started learning things like HTML/CSS/JavaScript/TypeScript/Node/React. However, it looks like CodeSchool is going away (bought by PluralSight, and

Re: [jupyter] Resources for learning JavaScript/TypeScript online

2018-04-23 Thread Brian Granger
Kyle, many thanks, that is *perfect*! On Sun, Apr 22, 2018 at 4:19 PM, Kyle Kelley <rgb...@gmail.com> wrote: > I use egghead.io quite a bit, though it's not a comprehensive one-track > curriculum. > > On Sun, Apr 22, 2018 at 1:05 PM Brian Granger <elliso...@gmail.com

Re: [jupyter] tmpnb.org is shutdown

2018-03-04 Thread Brian Granger
Thanks Min! On Sun, Mar 4, 2018 at 11:20 AM, Kyle Kelley wrote: >  Thank you Min and all the Binder folks!  > > On Sun, Mar 4, 2018 at 4:33 AM, MinRK wrote: > >> As announced earlier on this list, the tmpnb.org service is now shutdown >> in favor of

Re: [jupyter] How to authenticate same domain users from multiple OUs with ldapauthenticator?

2018-09-28 Thread Brian Granger
Something like keycloak could be helpful with things like this: https://www.keycloak.org/ We have used it with JupyterHub successfully. On Sun, Sep 23, 2018 at 7:18 PM Raymond Xie wrote: > Hi MinRK, everyone, > > Is it supported to authenticate same domain users from multiple OUs with >

Re: [jupyter] Re: [IPython-dev] [ANN] Release of IPython 7.0 – you've awaited long enough

2018-09-28 Thread Brian Granger
Congrats to the entire team! On Fri, Sep 28, 2018 at 11:29 AM Wes Turner wrote: > > > On Friday, September 28, 2018, Wes Turner wrote: > >> >> The new asyncio docs also look great and will likely be helpful for >> learning async/await: >> >> New (3.7): >>

Re: [jupyter] Jupytercon 2018 Conference Videos -- Where are the rest of them?

2018-09-20 Thread Brian Granger
It is part of our agreement with O'Reilly that full videos of all keynotes and sessions will be posted publicly on YouTube. What William said is correct - they are highly "produced" so it takes a while for them to get them posted. I recall them saying it would take "about a month" - so fingers

Re: [jupyter] Re: commenting on someone else's Jupyter Notebook

2018-09-21 Thread Brian Granger
That poster is part of a new grant we have funded to work on commenting and annotation in JupyterLab. It is just getting started, but there will be activity related to this on GitHub as things begin to move forward. On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 7:58 AM Colin Rowat wrote: > Thank you Jason and David.

Re: [jupyter] Re: Javascript Extension to enable arbitrary control of JupyterLab

2018-12-03 Thread Brian Granger
I agree with Grant that the preferred way of doing this would be to use the JupyterLab command system. You could write a mime renderer that takes JSON data and runs corresponding command. Then you don't have to send it JavaScript code over the wire. On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 9:17 AM Grant Nestor

Re: [jupyter] Jupyter Kernel Gateway 2.2.0 and NB2KG 0.5.0 are available

2019-03-01 Thread Brian Granger
Congrats Kevin! On Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 4:17 PM Kevin Bates wrote: > The combination of these releases essentially enable the serving of > kernelspec resource files (primarily kernel icons) that wasn't available > previously. > > NB2KG is a Jupyter Notebook

Re: [jupyter] JVM Magics

2019-02-21 Thread Brian Granger
Great news, thanks for sharing! On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 5:20 PM Kyle Kelley wrote: > Hey all, > > A couple weeks ago a bunch of Scala kernel maintainers came together > during the Notebook Enterprise Summit . > One of the topics of discussion was making

Re: [jupyter] nbformat: Removing code to read XML notebook files

2019-02-11 Thread Brian Granger
+1 On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 1:41 PM Matthew Seal wrote: > I'm 100% for removing -- I can't think of any recent tools that even > support xml. Thanks for making the PR! > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 7:01 AM Thomas Kluyver wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> Way back in 2011, when the first version of the

Re: [jupyter] Possibility to separate the JupyterLab Web and Server

2019-04-29 Thread Brian Granger
What you are describing is possible, but there are a set of constraints and trade-offs that may not give the experience you want. Colab faces these same constraints and tradeoffs. * JupyterLab/classic Notebook have a range of different service APIs - kernels, contents (file/dirs), terminals,

Re: [jupyter] Papermill 1.0 Released

2019-04-25 Thread Brian Granger
Many congrats to everyone who worked on this release of Papermill. I am also excited to see nbconvert moving forward as part of this as well, with widgets support, better LaTeX templates, execution improvements, etc. :-) Cheers, Brian On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 3:29 PM Matthew Seal wrote: > >