In addition to the wonderful work being done with the J Playground, I think it would be worthwhile exploring the option of running J in the JupyterLab, which has most of the features being built in the J playground + more. This has been suggested earlier (see below), but not much attention has been given to it. [Jgeneral] j in the browser (wasm / emscripten) <http://www.jsoftware.com/pipermail/general/2021-December/038777.html> joebog...@gmail.com Thu, 09 Dec 2021
I just set up another option to play with J in the browser using binder --https://github.com/joebo/jkernel-docker (all credit goes Martin Sauer) -- I just retrofitted his Dockerfile so it can be launched from the browser. Click 'launch binder' on the github page or go to [Jprogramming] addons/api/python3 updated <http://www.jsoftware.com/pipermail/programming/2018-February/050663.html> bakerj...@gmail.com Tue, 20 Feb 2018 Encouraging the use of J from Python is a welcome. If people are really interested in exploring options take a look at Martin Sauer’s integration of J into Jupyter notebooks.https://github.com/martin-saurer/jkernel In many ways notebooks are an ideal lab environment. I think it would serve the J community well if J kernels for Jupyter were supported officially. <http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail> Virus-free. www.avg.com <http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail> <#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2> ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm