Book Image

Mastering IPython 4.0

By : Thomas Bitterman, Dipanjan Deb
Book Image

Mastering IPython 4.0

By: Thomas Bitterman, Dipanjan Deb

Overview of this book

IPython is an interactive computational environment in which you can combine code execution, rich text, mathematics, plots, and rich media. This book will get IPython developers up to date with the latest advancements in IPython and dive deep into interactive computing with IPython. This an advanced guide on interactive and parallel computing with IPython will explore advanced visualizations and high-performance computing with IPython in detail. You will quickly brush up your knowledge of IPython kernels and wrapper kernels, then we'?ll move to advanced concepts such as testing, Sphinx, JS events, interactive work, and the ZMQ cluster. The book will cover topics such as IPython Console Lexer, advanced configuration, and third-party tools. By the end of this book, you will be able to use IPython for interactive and parallel computing in a high-performance computing environment.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Mastering IPython 4.0
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
6
Works Well with Others – IPython and Third-Party Tools
Index

What happened to the Notebook?


Readers familiar with previous versions of IPython might notice that nothing has been said about the Notebook. That is because the Notebook has split off from the main IPython project. It is now a project on its own, named Jupyter, which can be found at https://jupyter.org/. As the IPython project grew, it was determined that it was trying to be too many things to too many people: a terminal, a Python kernel, a notebook, a parallel framework, and much more. The decision was made to split the project into two main parts, Jupyter and IPython, with IPython calving off into several subprojects.

As such, this book will focus on IPython and its interactive terminal. An overview of Jupyter will be provided in Chapter 11, Into the Future, but the primary focus will be on working with the terminal. This does not mean that graphical I/O will be neglected. The truth is far from it, in fact, as the terminal supports many quality graphics packages.