Spyder-notebook is a plugin that allows you to open, edit and interact with Jupyter Notebooks right inside Spyder.
Using notebooks inside Spyder allows you to take advantage of their web interface alongside Spyder’s powerful features such as the Variable explorer, console and debugger.
If you installed Spyder using conda, the best way to install Spyder-notebook is to run the following command in your terminal or Anaconda prompt on Windows:
conda install spyder-notebook -c spyder-ide
Important
At the moment it is not possible to use this plugin with the Spyder Standalone installers for Windows and macOS. We’re working to make that possible in the future.
Restart Spyder in order to be able to use the plugin.
When the Notebook is installed, it will be available under the menu item View ‣ Panes ‣ Notebook.
You will see it then as a tab in the bottom of the editor area. When switching to it, a welcome screen will be displayed, from where you can create a new notebook by right-clicking it and selecting New notebook.
You can also click the Plus button at the top right of the pane. A new Jupyter Notebook will be opened as a tab, ready for user input in a temporary file. This can serve as a scratch pad where you can do quick calculations and plots.
To save this notebook go to the options menu at the top right of the pane and click the Save as… option. This will store your notebook locally with the ipynb extension, which will allow you to open it then as a Jupyter Notebook outside of Spyder.
ipynb
You can also open any Jupyter Notebook inside Spyder. For this go to the options menu at the top right of the pane and click Open, which will allow you to look for ipynb files in your computer. Click any notebook that you want to open inside Spyder and you will be able to see it as a new tab in the Notebook pane.
The Open recent option displays a list of the recent notebooks you opened in Spyder, from which you can select them and open them again in Spyder.
You can connect an IPython Console to your notebook, which will allow you to view your variables in the Variable Explorer. To do so, go to the options menu and click the Open console option. This will open a new console with the same name of your notebook and display the variables of the cells that you have executed previously in your Notebook. If you don’t see them, press Enter in the console.
You can view, modify and create new ones in the console too.
Since the Variable Explorer is associated to each console, closing the notebook’s console will immediately hide the variables from the Variable Explorer.
The context menu, available by right-clicking the pane area outside the notebook, allows you to zoom your notebook in or out.
You can also select the code from your Notebook and copy it on your clipboard to paste this code anywhere you want.
Finally, you can see all the server information of your notebook by clicking the Server info option in the context menu.