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You're reading from  Learning Jupyter

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2016
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785884870
Edition1st Edition
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Dan Toomey
Dan Toomey
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Dan Toomey

Dan Toomey has been developing application software for over 20 years. He has worked in a variety of industries and companies, in roles from sole contributor to VP/CTO-level. For the last few years, he has been contracting for companies in the eastern Massachusetts area. Dan has been contracting under Dan Toomey Software Corp. Dan has also written R for Data Science, Jupyter for Data Sciences, and the Jupyter Cookbook, all with Packt.
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Converting notebooks


The standard tool for converting notebooks to other formats is the nbconvert utility. It is built-in to your Jupyter installation. You can access the tool directly in the user interface for your notebook. If you open a notebook, select the Jupyter File menu item, and you will see several options for Download as:

The choices are as follows:

Format type

File extension

Notebook

.ipynb

JavaScript

.js

HTML

.html

Markdown

.md

Restructured text

.rst

PDF

.pdf

For these examples, if we take a notebook from a previous chapter, the Jupyter Notebook looks like this:

Notebook format

The notebook format (IPYNB) is the native format for your notebook. We have looked into this IPYNB file in earlier chapters to see what Jupyter is storing for your notebook.

You would use the notebook format if you wanted to give another user complete access to your notebook since they would run your notebook from their system.

You may also want to do this to save your notebook...

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Learning Jupyter
Published in: Nov 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785884870

Author (1)

author image
Dan Toomey

Dan Toomey has been developing application software for over 20 years. He has worked in a variety of industries and companies, in roles from sole contributor to VP/CTO-level. For the last few years, he has been contracting for companies in the eastern Massachusetts area. Dan has been contracting under Dan Toomey Software Corp. Dan has also written R for Data Science, Jupyter for Data Sciences, and the Jupyter Cookbook, all with Packt.
Read more about Dan Toomey