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Working With Markdown Cells.ipynb
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/ examples / Notebook / Working With Markdown Cells.ipynb

Markdown Cells

Text can be added to IPython Notebooks using Markdown cells. Markdown is a popular markup language that is a superset of HTML. Its specification can be found here:

<http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/%3E;

Markdown basics

You can make text italic or bold.

You can build nested itemized or enumerated lists:

  • One
    • Sublist
      • This
    • Sublist - That - The other thing
  • Two
    • Sublist
  • Three
    • Sublist

Now another list:

  1. Here we go
    1. Sublist
    2. Sublist
  2. There we go
  3. Now this

You can add horizontal rules:


Here is a blockquote:

> Beautiful is better than ugly. > Explicit is better than implicit. > Simple is better than complex. > Complex is better than complicated. > Flat is better than nested. > Sparse is better than dense. > Readability counts. > Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules. > Although practicality beats purity. > Errors should never pass silently. > Unless explicitly silenced. > In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess. > There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. > Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch. > Now is better than never. > Although never is often better than right now. > If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad idea. > If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a good idea. > Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those!

And shorthand for links:

IPython's website

Headings

If you want, you can add headings using Markdown's syntax:

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 2.1

Heading 2.2

BUT most of the time you should use the Notebook's Heading Cells to organize your Notebook content, as they provide meaningful structure that can be interpreted by other tools, not just large bold fonts.

Embedded code

You can embed code meant for illustration instead of execution in Python:

def f(x):
    """a docstring"""
    return x**2

or other languages:

if (i=0; i&lt;n; i++) {
  printf("hello %d\n", i);
  x += 4;
}

LaTeX equations

Courtesy of MathJax, you can include mathematical expressions both inline: $e^{i\pi} + 1 = 0$ and displayed:

$$e^x=\sum_{i=0}^\infty \frac{1}{i!}x^i$$

Github flavored markdown (GFM)

The Notebook webapp support Github flavored markdown meaning that you can use triple backticks for code blocks

```python
print "Hello World"
```

```javascript
console.log("Hello World")
```

Gives

print "Hello World"
console.log("Hello World")

And a table like this :

| This | is   |
|------|------|
|   a  | table| 

A nice Html Table

This is
a table

General HTML

Because Markdown is a superset of HTML you can even add things like HTML tables:

Header 1 Header 2
row 1, cell 1 row 1, cell 2
row 2, cell 1 row 2, cell 2

Local files

If you have local files in your Notebook directory, you can refer to these files in Markdown cells directly:

[subdirectory/]&lt;filename&gt;

For example, in the images folder, we have the Python logo:

<img src="images/python-logo.svg">

No description has been provided for this image

and a video with the HTML5 video tag:

&lt;video controls src="images/animation.m4v" /&gt;

<video controls src="images/animation.m4v" />

These do not embed the data into the notebook file, and require that the files exist when you are viewing the notebook.

Security of local files

Note that this means that the IPython notebook server also acts as a generic file server for files inside the same tree as your notebooks. Access is not granted outside the notebook folder so you have strict control over what files are visible, but for this reason it is highly recommended that you do not run the notebook server with a notebook directory at a high level in your filesystem (e.g. your home directory).

When you run the notebook in a password-protected manner, local file access is restricted to authenticated users unless read-only views are active.