compact.
* Reduced padding between cells from 15px to 5px.
* Prompt width is now dynamic to grow/shrink as the prompt number
increases in width.
* Reduced padding between input and output from 15px to 5px.
* ipython_notebook_config.py is now created and staged.
* New certfile/keyfile config=True attributes for enabling SSL/TLS.
* Examples of usage added.
* New handling for --ip=*
* Aliases added.
* Old routers were not being shutdown and removed.
* We were incorrectly associating the new kernel with the notebook
(we were using the *old* kernel_id for this).
* General clean ups in the kernel manager.
* The .py notebook reader now uses that ast module to split
a plain python file into blocks. These blocks become cells in
the notebook.
* Proper mime types are used for xml (application/xml), json
(application/json) and python (application/x-python).
* Other fixes to file uploading.
Previously, the package list was manually specified, which meant that
it became out of date any time a package was added, and IPython would
become uninstallable. This would not be noticed for some time by
developers, who always use `setupegg.py --develop` or symlinks.
This update immediately revealed that IPython.zmq.tests and IPython.extensions.tests were never included in 0.11. Other than that, there is no difference in the package list.
The PDF docs are huge, take forever to build and aren't particularly
useful in practice being so unwieldy. We can always build and
manually upload a static copy if there's demand, but they don't really
serve much useful purpose anymore and bloat our downloads.
In a notebook setting being able to delete and add cells makes it
virtually impossible to correctly guess what the next input
prompt number should be. We now follow the convention that our
prompts look like "In [ ]:" before execution.
In this mode, a new cell is not created after the current cell
is run. Once the cell is run, the current input is cleared, so
it acts just like the terminal.