Hello Edward.

I have used Jupyter notebooks sparingly, but I do like their utility and 
interactivity.

At my workplace last year, I have successfully integrated Pyzo in my team 
for interactive python debugging and testing workflows.

http://www.pyzo.org/features.html

pyzo is being developed for scientific computing and has borrowed a lot of 
ideas from Jypyter and other sources. I particularly like the cell based 
execution (A pyzo editor document can be split up into cells) where you can 
only execute the cell under cursor. No need to select the text.

As you said, a Leo @jupyter node's children could be executable cells!

On Thursday, January 5, 2017 at 10:13:11 PM UTC+8, Edward K. Ream wrote:
>
> On Wednesday, January 4, 2017 at 11:20:43 PM UTC-5, Satish Goda wrote:
>
> > I have started using Leo+PlantUML UI to generate my diagrams.
>
> I have been thinking of Jupyter Notebooks lately, because they are often 
> used in Deep learning.
>
> By analogy with your UML workflow, I am thinking that there should be an 
> *easy* way of having Leo support notebooks. Maybe something like @jupyter 
> or @notebook.
>
> The Jupyter Notebook Viewer 
> <http://nbviewer.jupyter.org/faq#how-do-you-render-notebooks> uses 
> nbconvert, as standard part of the Anaconda distro.  So it should be 
> straightforward to duplicate what the notebook viewer does.
>
> Not sure how this will work out...
>
> EKR
>

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