Contributing to the Jupyter Notebook ==================================== If you're reading this section, you're probably interested in contributing to Jupyter. Welcome and thanks for your interest in contributing! Please take a look at the Contributor documentation, familiarize yourself with using the Jupyter Notebook, and introduce yourself on the mailing list and share what area of the project you are interested in working on. General Guidelines ------------------ For general documentation about contributing to Jupyter projects, see the `Project Jupyter Contributor Documentation`__. __ https://jupyter.readthedocs.io/en/latest/contributor/content-contributor.html Setting Up a Development Environment ------------------------------------ Installing Node.js and npm ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Building the Notebook from its GitHub source code requires some tools to create and minify JavaScript components and the CSS. Namely, that's Node.js and Node's package manager, ``npm``. If you use ``conda``, you can get them with:: conda install -c javascript nodejs If you use `Homebrew `_ on Mac OS X:: brew install node For Debian/Ubuntu systems, you should use the ``nodejs-legacy`` package instead of the ``node`` package:: sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install nodejs-legacy npm You can also use the installer from the `Node.js website `_. Installing the Jupyter Notebook ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Once you have installed the dependencies mentioned above, use the following steps:: pip install setuptools pip --upgrade --user git clone https://github.com/jupyter/notebook cd notebook pip install -e . --user If you want the development environment to be available for all users of your system (assuming you have the necessary rights) or if you are installing in a virtual environment, just drop the ``--user`` option. Once you have done this, you can launch the master branch of Jupyter notebook from any directory in your system with:: jupyter notebook Rebuilding JavaScript and CSS ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There is a build step for the JavaScript and CSS in the notebook. To make sure that you are working with up-to-date code, you will need to run this command whenever there are changes to JavaScript or LESS sources:: npm run build **IMPORTANT:** Don't forget to run ``npm run build`` after switching branches. When switching between branches of different versions (e.g. ``4.x`` and ``master``), run ``pip install -e .``. If you have tried the above and still find that the notebook is not reflecting the current source code, try cleaning the repo with ``git clean -xfd`` and reinstalling with ``pip install -e .``. Development Tip """"""""""""""" When doing development, you can use this command to automatically rebuild JavaScript and LESS sources as they are modified:: npm run build:watch Git Hooks """"""""" If you want to automatically update dependencies and recompile JavaScript and CSS after checking out a new commit, you can install post-checkout and post-merge hooks which will do it for you:: git-hooks/install-hooks.sh See ``git-hooks/README.md`` for more details. Running Tests ------------- Python Tests ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Install dependencies:: pip install -e .[test] --user To run the Python tests, use:: nosetests If you want coverage statistics as well, you can run:: nosetests --with-coverage --cover-package=notebook notebook JavaScript Tests ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To run the JavaScript tests, you will need to have PhantomJS and CasperJS installed:: npm install -g casperjs phantomjs@1.9.18 Then, to run the JavaScript tests:: python -m notebook.jstest [group] where ``[group]`` is an optional argument that is a path relative to ``notebook/tests/``. For example, to run all tests in ``notebook/tests/notebook``:: python -m notebook.jstest notebook or to run just ``notebook/tests/notebook/deletecell.js``:: python -m notebook.jstest notebook/deletecell.js Building the Documentation -------------------------- To build the documentation you'll need `Sphinx `_, `pandoc `_ and a few other packages. To install (and activate) a `conda environment`_ named ``notebook_docs`` containing all the necessary packages (except pandoc), use:: conda env create -f docs/environment.yml source activate notebook_docs # Linux and OS X activate notebook_docs # Windows .. _conda environment: http://conda.pydata.org/docs/using/envs.html#use-environment-from-file If you want to install the necessary packages with ``pip`` instead, use (omitting --user if working in a virtual environment):: pip install -r docs/doc-requirements.txt --user Once you have installed the required packages, you can build the docs with:: cd docs make html After that, the generated HTML files will be available at ``build/html/index.html``. You may view the docs in your browser. You can automatically check if all hyperlinks are still valid:: make linkcheck Windows users can find ``make.bat`` in the ``docs`` folder. You should also have a look at the `Project Jupyter Documentation Guide`__. __ https://jupyter.readthedocs.io/en/latest/contrib_docs/index.html