Python Turtle graphics for Jupyter notebooks
For a quick demo, open the lab notebook.
To use on a local Jupyter Notebook,
just download the jupyter.py
file to the same folder where your notebook is saved,
and import it.
(I need more time to figure out how to deploy on Binder because Jupyturtle is not on conda forge yet )
The idea and some of the code for this module came from Tolga Atam's ColabTurtle, which I discovered reading a pre-print version of Allen Downey's book Think Python, Third Edition (O'Reilly, 2024).
Atam's best idea was to use SVG for drawing, which makes the code simple and lightweight,
requiring only the Python standard library and the
ipython
module that is always available in Jupyter.
This is a rewrite from scratch, using classes to model the turtle and the drawing. My goal was to make it easier to understand and extend by encapsulating the state.
I used metaprogramming techniques to build the procedural API
with global functions like fd()
to move the turtle.
The techniques are easier to understand in the didactic project
abacus.
jupyturtle2
is a fork
that uses
ipycanvas
to draw pixels on an HTML canvas, instead of generating SVG,
so it handles complex drawings better.
But jupyturtle2
has two main drawbacks:
-
ipycanvas
requires the binary dependenciesnumpy
andpillow
, which may be harder to install in some environments. -
the generated drawings are not saved with the notebook like most other output cells; this is also a limitation of
ipycanvas