Euporie is a terminal based interactive computing environment for Jupyter.
Euporie's apps allow you to interact with Jupyter kernels, and run Jupyter notebooks - entirely from the terminal.
If you're working with Jupyter notebooks in a terminal only environment, like an SSH server or a container, or just prefer working in the terminal, then euporie is the tool for you!
Console | Notebook | Preview | Hub |
You can install euporie with pipx (recommended) or pip
:
$ pipx install euporie
$ # OR
$ python -m pip install --user euporie
You can also try euporie online here.
- Edit and run notebooks in the terminal
- Run code interactively in a console
- Display images using terminal graphics (sixel / iterm / kitty)
- Use Jupyter widgets interactively in the terminal
- Render rich kernel output (markdown, tables, images, LaTeX, HTML, SVG, & PDF)
- Tab-completion, line suggestions and contextual help
- Convert a console session to a notebook
- Micro / Vim / Emacs style key-bindings
Notebooks
You can edit a notebook using
euporie-notebook
, and passing the notebook's file path or URI as a command line argument:$ euporie-notebook notebook.ipynb
Alternatively, launch
euporie-notebooks
and open a notebook file by selecting "Open" from the file menu (Ctrl+O
).
Console
To connect to a Jupyter kernel and run code interactively in a console session, you can run
$ euporie-console
(You can press
Ctrl+C
to open the command palette ineuporie-console
).
Preview
To preview a notebook to the terminal, use the
euporie-preview
subcommand:$ euporie-preview notebook.ipynb
Hub
To run euporie hub, a multi-user SSH server for euporie apps, run:
$ euporie-hub --port 8022 --host-keys=ssh_host_ed25519_key --client-keys=authorized_keys
where
ssh_host_ed25519_key
is the path to your host key file, andauthorized_keys
is a file containing SSH public keys allowed to connect.
View the online documentation at: https://euporie.readthedocs.io/
The code is available on GitHub at: https://github.com/joouha/euporie
Euporie requires Python 3.8 or later. It works on Linux, Windows and MacOS