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# other
.DS_Store

# JupyterBook
book/q2_fmt_book/_build
19 changes: 19 additions & 0 deletions .readthedocs.yml
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version: 2

build:
os: ubuntu-22.04
tools:
python: "mambaforge-22.9"
jobs:
pre_build:
# Generate the Sphinx configuration for this Jupyter Book so it builds.
- "jupyter-book config sphinx book/q2_fmt_book/"

conda:
environment: environment-files/jupyter-book-build-env.yml

sphinx:
builder: html

formats:
- pdf
21 changes: 21 additions & 0 deletions book/README.md
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# q2-fmt book

User documentation for the q2-fmt project.

## Usage

### Building the book

If you'd like to develop and/or build the q2-fmt book book, you should:

1. Clone this repository
2. Run `pip install -r book/requirements.txt` (it is recommended you do this within a virtual environment)
3. (Optional) Edit the books source files located in the `book/q2_fmt_book/` directory
4. Run `jupyter-book clean book/q2_fmt_book/` to remove any existing builds
5. Run `jupyter-book build book/q2_fmt_book/`

A fully-rendered HTML version of the book will be built in `book/q2_fmt_book/_build/html/`.

## Credits

This project is created using the excellent open source [Jupyter Book project](https://jupyterbook.org/) and the [executablebooks/cookiecutter-jupyter-book template](https://github.com/executablebooks/cookiecutter-jupyter-book).
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#######################################################################################
# A default configuration that will be loaded for all jupyter books
# See the documentation for help and more options:
# https://jupyterbook.org/customize/config.html

#######################################################################################
# Book settings
title : q2-fmt book # The title of the book. Will be placed in the left navbar.
author : Chloe Herman # The author of the book
copyright : "2024" # Copyright year to be placed in the footer
logo : logo.png # A path to the book logo

# Force re-execution of notebooks on each build.
# See https://jupyterbook.org/content/execute.html
execute:
execute_notebooks: force

# Define the name of the latex output file for PDF builds
latex:
latex_documents:
targetname: book.tex

# Add a bibtex file so that we can create citations
bibtex_bibfiles:
- references.bib

# Information about where the book exists on the web
repository:
url: https://github.com/cherman2/q2-fmt book # Online location of your book
path_to_book: book # Optional path to your book, relative to the repository root
branch: dev # Which branch of the repository should be used when creating links (optional)

# Add GitHub buttons to your book
# See https://jupyterbook.org/customize/config.html#add-a-link-to-your-repository
html:
use_issues_button: true
use_repository_button: true
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# Table of contents
# Learn more at https://jupyterbook.org/customize/toc.html

format: jb-book
root: intro
chapters:
- file: markdown
- file: notebooks
- file: markdown-notebooks
5 changes: 5 additions & 0 deletions book/q2_fmt_book/content.md
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Content in Jupyter Book
=======================

There are many ways to write content in Jupyter Book. This short section
covers a few tips for how to do so.
11 changes: 11 additions & 0 deletions book/q2_fmt_book/intro.md
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# Welcome to your Jupyter Book

This is a small sample book to give you a feel for how book content is
structured.
It shows off a few of the major file types, as well as some sample content.
It does not go in-depth into any particular topic - check out [the Jupyter Book documentation](https://jupyterbook.org) for more information.

Check out the content pages bundled with this sample book to see more.

```{tableofcontents}
```
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54 changes: 54 additions & 0 deletions book/q2_fmt_book/markdown-notebooks.md
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---
jupytext:
cell_metadata_filter: -all
formats: md:myst
text_representation:
extension: .md
format_name: myst
format_version: 0.13
jupytext_version: 1.11.5
kernelspec:
display_name: Python 3
language: python
name: python3
---

# Notebooks with MyST Markdown

Jupyter Book also lets you write text-based notebooks using MyST Markdown.
See [the Notebooks with MyST Markdown documentation](https://jupyterbook.org/file-types/myst-notebooks.html) for more detailed instructions.
This page shows off a notebook written in MyST Markdown.

## An example cell

With MyST Markdown, you can define code cells with a directive like so:

```{code-cell}
print(2 + 2)
```

When your book is built, the contents of any `{code-cell}` blocks will be
executed with your default Jupyter kernel, and their outputs will be displayed
in-line with the rest of your content.

```{seealso}
Jupyter Book uses [Jupytext](https://jupytext.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) to convert text-based files to notebooks, and can support [many other text-based notebook files](https://jupyterbook.org/file-types/jupytext.html).
```

## Create a notebook with MyST Markdown

MyST Markdown notebooks are defined by two things:

1. YAML metadata that is needed to understand if / how it should convert text files to notebooks (including information about the kernel needed).
See the YAML at the top of this page for example.
2. The presence of `{code-cell}` directives, which will be executed with your book.

That's all that is needed to get started!

## Quickly add YAML metadata for MyST Notebooks

If you have a markdown file and you'd like to quickly add YAML metadata to it, so that Jupyter Book will treat it as a MyST Markdown Notebook, run the following command:

```
jupyter-book myst init path/to/markdownfile.md
```
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# Markdown Files

Whether you write your book's content in Jupyter Notebooks (`.ipynb`) or
in regular markdown files (`.md`), you'll write in the same flavor of markdown
called **MyST Markdown**.
This is a simple file to help you get started and show off some syntax.

## What is MyST?

MyST stands for "Markedly Structured Text". It
is a slight variation on a flavor of markdown called "CommonMark" markdown,
with small syntax extensions to allow you to write **roles** and **directives**
in the Sphinx ecosystem.

For more about MyST, see [the MyST Markdown Overview](https://jupyterbook.org/content/myst.html).

## Sample Roles and Directives

Roles and directives are two of the most powerful tools in Jupyter Book. They
are kind of like functions, but written in a markup language. They both
serve a similar purpose, but **roles are written in one line**, whereas
**directives span many lines**. They both accept different kinds of inputs,
and what they do with those inputs depends on the specific role or directive
that is being called.

Here is a "note" directive:

```{note}
Here is a note
```

It will be rendered in a special box when you build your book.

Here is an inline directive to refer to a document: {doc}`markdown-notebooks`.


## Citations

You can also cite references that are stored in a `bibtex` file. For example,
the following syntax: `` {cite}`holdgraf_evidence_2014` `` will render like
this: {cite}`holdgraf_evidence_2014`.

Moreover, you can insert a bibliography into your page with this syntax:
The `{bibliography}` directive must be used for all the `{cite}` roles to
render properly.
For example, if the references for your book are stored in `references.bib`,
then the bibliography is inserted with:

```{bibliography}
```

## Learn more

This is just a simple starter to get you started.
You can learn a lot more at [jupyterbook.org](https://jupyterbook.org).
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{
"cells": [
{
"cell_type": "markdown",
"metadata": {},
"source": [
"# Content with notebooks\n",
"\n",
"You can also create content with Jupyter Notebooks. This means that you can include\n",
"code blocks and their outputs in your book.\n",
"\n",
"## Markdown + notebooks\n",
"\n",
"As it is markdown, you can embed images, HTML, etc into your posts!\n",
"\n",
"![](https://myst-parser.readthedocs.io/en/latest/_static/logo-wide.svg)\n",
"\n",
"You can also $add_{math}$ and\n",
"\n",
"$$\n",
"math^{blocks}\n",
"$$\n",
"\n",
"or\n",
"\n",
"$$\n",
"\\begin{aligned}\n",
"\\mbox{mean} la_{tex} \\\\ \\\\\n",
"math blocks\n",
"\\end{aligned}\n",
"$$\n",
"\n",
"But make sure you \\$Escape \\$your \\$dollar signs \\$you want to keep!\n",
"\n",
"## MyST markdown\n",
"\n",
"MyST markdown works in Jupyter Notebooks as well. For more information about MyST markdown, check\n",
"out [the MyST guide in Jupyter Book](https://jupyterbook.org/content/myst.html),\n",
"or see [the MyST markdown documentation](https://myst-parser.readthedocs.io/en/latest/).\n",
"\n",
"## Code blocks and outputs\n",
"\n",
"Jupyter Book will also embed your code blocks and output in your book.\n",
"For example, here's some sample Matplotlib code:"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": null,
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [],
"source": [
"from matplotlib import rcParams, cycler\n",
"import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n",
"import numpy as np\n",
"plt.ion()"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": null,
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [],
"source": [
"# Fixing random state for reproducibility\n",
"np.random.seed(19680801)\n",
"\n",
"N = 10\n",
"data = [np.logspace(0, 1, 100) + np.random.randn(100) + ii for ii in range(N)]\n",
"data = np.array(data).T\n",
"cmap = plt.cm.coolwarm\n",
"rcParams['axes.prop_cycle'] = cycler(color=cmap(np.linspace(0, 1, N)))\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"from matplotlib.lines import Line2D\n",
"custom_lines = [Line2D([0], [0], color=cmap(0.), lw=4),\n",
" Line2D([0], [0], color=cmap(.5), lw=4),\n",
" Line2D([0], [0], color=cmap(1.), lw=4)]\n",
"\n",
"fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 5))\n",
"lines = ax.plot(data)\n",
"ax.legend(custom_lines, ['Cold', 'Medium', 'Hot']);"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "markdown",
"metadata": {},
"source": [
"There is a lot more that you can do with outputs (such as including interactive outputs)\n",
"with your book. For more information about this, see [the Jupyter Book documentation](https://jupyterbook.org)"
]
}
],
"metadata": {
"kernelspec": {
"display_name": "Python 3",
"language": "python",
"name": "python3"
},
"language_info": {
"codemirror_mode": {
"name": "ipython",
"version": 3
},
"file_extension": ".py",
"mimetype": "text/x-python",
"name": "python",
"nbconvert_exporter": "python",
"pygments_lexer": "ipython3",
"version": "3.8.0"
},
"widgets": {
"application/vnd.jupyter.widget-state+json": {
"state": {},
"version_major": 2,
"version_minor": 0
}
}
},
"nbformat": 4,
"nbformat_minor": 4
}
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