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Rob's oceanography project translated into Geo-Smart Jupyter Book space

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Jupyter Book, GitHub repo.

Oceanography Jupyter Book

Preamble

Deploy Jupyter Book Badge Binder GeoSMART Use Case

Build a working Jupyter Book: Get Started

Before diving in a couple notes:

  • Jupyter Book documentation here
  • Be sure to pip install -U jupyter-book in a local computer conda environment
  • If a commit fails to produce a new version of the Book: Go to the GitHub Actions tab to read the fail diagnostic

I advocate for documenting process... so here is how I began with the Geo-Smart organization 'simple skeleton' repository and built out an Oceanography JupyterBook. The important idea is that in addition to a repo there is a website compiled from that repo.

  • There are two templates hosted by Geo-Smart on GitHub: A simple one and a more comprehensive version
  • Simple template gives directions on building a new Jupyter Book: Template README.md file
    • Click "Use This Template"
      • Name a new repo; choose the Geo-Smart organization
      • Fork the main branch (default)
      • Breadcrumbs: This README.md
    • Edit book/_config.yml to reflect the topic, again oceanography
    • Settings > Pages > Source = GitHub Actions
      • Every commit triggers a recompile of the website
    • (4) Edit environment.yml to establish a working environment
      • Template includes environment.yml: essential libraries for the Jupyter Book
        • Do not clobber this file!
          • Test the build now (see below), verify the Book
          • Add other libraries as needed
          • Open question: Myst-nb? See below on image embed
      • My test build failed
        • Top left of the GitHub console tabs: Code, Issues, Pull requests, Actions, ..., Settings
        • Earlier: > Settings > Pages > Source > enable Github Actions: Done
        • Fixing the website compile fail: > Actions tab
          • GitHub may require workflow approval: Approve
          • Trigger a build (compile): Commit a change or start it manually
          • Build fail error message: environment.yml outdated versions
            • Example: python=3.10
            • Solution: Edit environment.yml to remove =xx.yy versions
            • Example python=3.10 > python, and so for jupyter-book
            • Commit environment.yml: Book build ok
      • The section below expands environment.yml modifications
        • Read about Python environments
        • clone the repo locally
          • Sketch of setting up a local working Python environment:
            • Blank slate workstation: install miniconda
              • miniconda is lightweight and includes the conda package manager
            • **git clone https://github.com/geo-smart/newbookreponame
            • Create an environment and activate it
            • In case we forget: We include the activate command as a .bashrc echo
              • Activate this environment on each work session
              • Install libraries, develop content
                • This will introduce errors in the JupyterBook
                • ...because the environment is built from environment.yml which...
                • ...has not been updated yet. Continued below...
              • environment.yml is a derived record of installed libraries
                • From a working (activated) environment: conda env export > environment.yml
                  • pip freeze is an analogous approach
                • Plan: Do not wholesale copy-paste env.yml into the GitHub repo.
                • Rather: Take a more minimalist approach; again see below

Building the JupyterBook: Content development

So far

  • The Book builds / compiles with every commit
  • _config.yml has been modified
  • The subfolder /books/chapters is where notebooks go
  • The subfolder /books/img is where static visual content (png files) reside

Questions, procedures, issues

  • Each .ipynb notebook maps to a book chapter: ~/book/chapters/newchapter.ipynb.
    • Create a new chapter entry in /book/_toc.yml
      • This will look like - file: chapters/newchapter
      • Corresponding to chapters/newchapter.ipynb
  • How does the Book environment develop along with increasing content?
    • First example error: No module named 'matplotlib'
      • Notice the JupyterBook builds despite errors of this sort
      • Added a matplotlib entry and an xarray entry to environment.yml fixed this error
  • How much Python functionality is present in the Book?
  • LaTeX?
  • How much data can be bundled with the Book?

Inline images

Per the JupyterBook documentation: HTML is not recommended so I will revert to markdown inlining of images. This does not seem to work for jpegs so convert jpg to png using Python:

from PIL import Image
Image.open('revelle.jpg').save('revelle.png')

Issue The corresponding basic markdown ![text](path_to_image.png) works. A more sophisticated version seems to require Myst-nb (?) and does not seem to work natively.

To organize static content: ~/book/img/ += subfolders /rca/images/<category> and /rca/animations/<category>.

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