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@yannalin/jupyterlab-understander

v0.2.6

Published

Break free from the linear presentation of Jupyter Notebooks with sticky cells!

Downloads

8

Readme

StickyLand

Github Actions Status Binder Lite pypi license arxiv badge DOI:10.1145/3491101.3519653

Break the linear presentation of Jupyter Notebooks with sticky cells!

Live Demo

You can try StickyLand directly in your browser without installing anything:

| Fast loading | Full functionality | | :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: | | Lite | Binder |

Install

First, you need to install JupyterLab. Then you can install StickyLand with pip:

pip install stickyland

Note StickyLand only supports JupyterLab < 4. In June 2023, JupyterLab 4.0 was released with a lot of breaking changes. I will update StickyLand to support JupyterLab 4.0 when the official extension documentation is more polished. Any contribution to the lab4 branch is greatly appreciated!

Features

feature-gif


With multiple floating cells, users can create a full-fledged interactive dashboard. For example, a machine learning engineer can build an ML Error Analysis Dashboard (shown below) through simple drag-and-drop.

Development

You will need NodeJS to build the extension package. The jlpm command is JupyterLab's pinned version of yarn that is installed with JupyterLab. You may use yarn or npm in lieu of jlpm below.

# Clone the repo to your local environment
# Change directory to the jupyterlab_stickyland directory
# Install package in development mode
pip install -e .
# Link your development version of the extension with JupyterLab
jupyter labextension develop . --overwrite
# Rebuild extension Typescript source after making changes
jlpm run build

You can watch the source directory and run JupyterLab at the same time in different terminals to watch for changes in the extension's source and automatically rebuild the extension.

# Watch the source directory in one terminal, automatically rebuilding when needed
jlpm run watch
# Run JupyterLab in another terminal
jupyter lab

With the watch command running, every saved change will immediately be built locally and available in your running JupyterLab. Refresh JupyterLab to load the change in your browser (you may need to wait several seconds for the extension to be rebuilt).

By default, the jlpm run build command generates the source maps for this extension to make it easier to debug using the browser dev tools. To also generate source maps for the JupyterLab core extensions, you can run the following command:

jupyter lab build --minimize=False

Citation

@inproceedings{wangStickyLandBreakingLinear2022,
  title = {{{StickyLand}}: {{Breaking}} the {{Linear Presentation}} of {{Computational Notebooks}}},
  shorttitle = {{{StickyLand}}},
  booktitle = {Extended {{Abstracts}} of the 2022 {{CHI Conference}} on {{Human Factors}} in {{Computing Systems}}},
  author = {Wang, Zijie J. and Dai, Katie and Edwards, W. Keith},
  year = {2022},
  publisher = {{ACM}}
}

License

The software is available under the BSD-3-Clause License.

Contact

If you have any questions, feel free to open an issue or contact Jay Wang.