Skip to main content

JupyterLab computational environment

Project description

Installation | Documentation | Contributing | License | Team | Getting help |

JupyterLab

PyPI version Downloads Build Status Build Status Documentation Status Crowdin GitHub Discourse Gitter

Binder

Open in Gitpod

An extensible environment for interactive and reproducible computing, based on the Jupyter Notebook and Architecture. Currently ready for users.

JupyterLab is the next-generation user interface for Project Jupyter offering all the familiar building blocks of the classic Jupyter Notebook (notebook, terminal, text editor, file browser, rich outputs, etc.) in a flexible and powerful user interface. JupyterLab will eventually replace the classic Jupyter Notebook.

JupyterLab can be extended using npm packages that use our public APIs. The prebuilt extensions can be distributed via PyPI, conda, and other package managers. The source extensions can be installed directly from npm (search for jupyterlab-extension) but require additional build step. You can also find JupyterLab extensions exploring GitHub topic jupyterlab-extension. To learn more about extensions, see the user documentation.

The current JupyterLab releases are suitable for general usage, and the extension APIs will continue to evolve for JupyterLab extension developers.

Read the current JupyterLab documentation on ReadTheDocs.


Getting started

Installation

If you use conda, mamba, or pip, you can install JupyterLab with one of the following commands.

  • If you use conda:
    conda install -c conda-forge jupyterlab
    
  • If you use mamba:
    mamba install -c conda-forge jupyterlab
    
  • If you use pip:
    pip install jupyterlab
    
    If installing using pip install --user, you must add the user-level bin directory to your PATH environment variable in order to launch jupyter lab. If you are using a Unix derivative (FreeBSD, GNU / Linux, OS X), you can achieve this by using export PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH" command.

For more detailed instructions, consult the installation guide. Project installation instructions from the git sources are available in the contributor documentation.

Installing with Previous Versions of Jupyter Notebook

When using a version of Jupyter Notebook earlier than 5.3, the following command must be run after installing JupyterLab to enable the JupyterLab server extension:

jupyter serverextension enable --py jupyterlab --sys-prefix

Running

Start up JupyterLab using:

jupyter lab

JupyterLab will open automatically in the browser. See the documentation for additional details.

If you encounter an error like "Command 'jupyter' not found", please make sure PATH environment variable is set correctly. Alternatively, you can start up JupyterLab using ~/.local/bin/jupyter lab without changing the PATH environment variable.

Prerequisites and Supported Browsers

The latest versions of the following browsers are currently known to work:

  • Firefox
  • Chrome
  • Safari

See our documentation for additional details.


Getting help

We encourage you to ask questions on the Discourse forum. A question answered there can become a useful resource for others.

Bug report

To report a bug please read the guidelines and then open a Github issue. To keep resolved issues self-contained, the lock bot will lock closed issues as resolved after a period of inactivity. If related discussion is still needed after an issue is locked, please open a new issue and reference the old issue.

Feature request

We also welcome suggestions for new features as they help make the project more useful for everyone. To request a feature please use the feature request template.


Development

Extending JupyterLab

To start developing an extension for JupyterLab, see the developer documentation and the API docs.

Contributing

To contribute code or documentation to JupyterLab itself, please read the contributor documentation.

JupyterLab follows the Jupyter Community Guides.

License

JupyterLab uses a shared copyright model that enables all contributors to maintain the copyright on their contributions. All code is licensed under the terms of the revised BSD license.

Team

JupyterLab is part of Project Jupyter and is developed by an open community. The maintenance team is assisted by a much larger group of contributors to JupyterLab and Project Jupyter as a whole.

JupyterLab's current maintainers are listed in alphabetical order, with affiliation, and main areas of contribution:

  • Mehmet Bektas, Splunk (general development, extensions).
  • Alex Bozarth, IBM (general development, extensions).
  • Eric Charles, Datalayer, (general development, extensions).
  • Frédéric Collonval, QuantStack (general development, extensions).
  • Martha Cryan, IBM (general development, extensions).
  • Afshin Darian, Two Sigma (co-creator, application/high-level architecture, prolific contributions throughout the code base).
  • Vidar T. Fauske, JPMorgan Chase (general development, extensions).
  • Brian Granger, AWS (co-creator, strategy, vision, management, UI/UX design, architecture).
  • Jason Grout, Bloomberg (co-creator, vision, general development).
  • Michał Krassowski, University of Oxford (general development, extensions).
  • Max Klein, JPMorgan Chase (UI Package, build system, general development, extensions).
  • Gonzalo Peña-Castellanos, QuanSight (general development, i18n, extensions).
  • Fernando Perez, UC Berkeley (co-creator, vision).
  • Isabela Presedo-Floyd, QuanSight Labs (design/UX).
  • Steven Silvester, Apple (co-creator, release management, packaging, prolific contributions throughout the code base).
  • Jeremy Tuloup, QuantStack (general development, extensions).

Maintainer emeritus:

  • Chris Colbert, Project Jupyter (co-creator, application/low-level architecture, technical leadership, vision, PhosphorJS)
  • Jessica Forde, Project Jupyter (demo, documentation)
  • Tim George, Cal Poly (UI/UX design, strategy, management, user needs analysis).
  • Cameron Oelsen, Cal Poly (UI/UX design).
  • Ian Rose, Quansight/City of LA (general core development, extensions).
  • Andrew Schlaepfer, Bloomberg (general development, extensions).
  • Saul Shanabrook, Quansight (general development, extensions)

This list is provided to give the reader context on who we are and how our team functions. To be listed, please submit a pull request with your information.


Weekly Dev Meeting

We have videoconference meetings every week where we discuss what we have been working on and get feedback from one another.

Anyone is welcome to attend, if they would like to discuss a topic or just to listen in.

Notes are archived on GitHub JupyterLab team compass.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

jupyterlab-4.0.0a15.tar.gz (16.8 MB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

jupyterlab-4.0.0a15-py3-none-any.whl (8.0 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file jupyterlab-4.0.0a15.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: jupyterlab-4.0.0a15.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 16.8 MB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.5.0 importlib_metadata/4.8.2 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.3 CPython/3.9.7

File hashes

Hashes for jupyterlab-4.0.0a15.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e5fd712640c8e4bbd02e04b87e26026d6636671c3454185fd69410f23ef11d97
MD5 81346e6cb72c6c7d560f6c81106d47e5
BLAKE2b-256 3eaa362864857e0d741d8b38d297323ebd9ed64023d62934f4bfab50b55af3ca

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file jupyterlab-4.0.0a15-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: jupyterlab-4.0.0a15-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.0 MB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.5.0 importlib_metadata/4.8.2 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.3 CPython/3.9.7

File hashes

Hashes for jupyterlab-4.0.0a15-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 964fd6e3e9f4750615208e3ee4df42b6304451f49e61aef020ce26f5542b7e91
MD5 196d1ad922eb5a0788a3082a777b2e0b
BLAKE2b-256 8bdb8e65bad07aeeba7a7cd97b2848bc4528e80566a26acedcc3ea804d6014f3

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page