Beaker Notebook: Difference between revisions
From charlesreid1
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
===Notes on Installing and Running Beaker Notebooks== | ===Notes on Installing and Running Beaker Notebooks=== | ||
Building Beaker Notebook requires a few prereqs. Instructions for installing are on the Beaker Notebook wiki: | Building Beaker Notebook requires a few prereqs. Instructions for installing are on the Beaker Notebook wiki: | ||
Revision as of 01:02, 5 September 2016
Beaker Notebook
What is it
Beaker notebook is a cloud-based notebook service that can handle a huge variety of different languages: https://pub.beakernotebook.com/
It is of interest to us because we can run Java code in a notebook - perfect for lecture notes.
Finding out about it
Found out about the Beaker notebook at a link [1] talking about various notebook software
- Jupyter Notebook
- Apache Zepplin
- Beaker Notebook
The thing that caught my eye was that it can run Java.
(Zepplin is IMPLEMENTED in Java, but (incredibly) there was no actual explicit statement that you could run Java code in Zeplin.)
Running
Notes
Notes on Installing and Running Beaker Notebooks
Building Beaker Notebook requires a few prereqs. Instructions for installing are on the Beaker Notebook wiki:
- Mac: https://github.com/twosigma/beaker-notebook/wiki/Mac-build-and-run
- Link to wiki TOC: https://github.com/twosigma/beaker-notebook/wiki
Can also be installed with Docker: https://github.com/twosigma/beaker-notebook/blob/master/Dockerfile
Beaker Notebook is open source and available on Github: https://github.com/twosigma/beaker-notebook
Notes on Installing and Running Java in Beaker Notebooks
Here's how to implement Java in a Beaker Notebook: https://lab.beakernotebook.com/publications/7605e53c-fb84-11e5-97c2-4fe48981c03f
first define some classes
package test.beaker;
import java.util.Date;
public class BeakerTest {
private Date _date;
public BeakerTest() {
_date = new Date();
}
public String getDateTxt() {
return _date.toString();
}
public String getDateUpperCaseTxt() {
return _date.toString().toUpperCase();
}
}
then some interactive code
package test.beaker; BeakerTest bt = new BeakerTest(); return bt.getDateTxt();
and heck, draw a graph:
import java.util.List;
import java.util.ArrayList;
Plot p = new Plot();
p.setTitle("this is a Java plot");
Bars b = new Bars();
List<Number> yList = new ArrayList<Number>();
yList.add(2);
yList.add(5);
yList.add(4);
yList.add(8);
b.setY(yList);
b.setColori(Color.orange);
b.setWidth(0.5);
p.add(b);
return p;