#jupyterbook
Question to people who produce web-books, open source gitlab/github-published:

I am used to Jupyterbook but now I am doing something with need for a simple interface for those who do not know how to write in Markdown.

Gitbook seems to be an alternative? Recommendations anyone? #digitalhumanities
November 12, 2025 at 7:17 PM
Spørsmål til dere som jobber med å produsere open source web-bøker publisert på github:

Jeg er bare vant med Jupyterbook (fordi python) men jeg trenger noe som andre som ikke kan markdown kan være med på å utforme.

Gitbook er ganske grei der fordi det gir enkelt grensesnitt MEN er det beste valg?
November 12, 2025 at 8:50 AM
JupyterBook 2 is released! This is now built on top of the @mystmd.org engine directly.

🚀

Please reach out on our GitHub discussions if you have any problems upgrading.
November 3, 2025 at 2:31 PM
JupyterBook with pt-br content coming soon (tomorrow) 😁
October 18, 2025 at 11:38 PM
on the topic of MyST specifically though: I haven't used it in a minute, but I used to get a TON of mileage out of the Jupyterbook + panel + voila combo.

It drives me crazy that the python community favors stuff like streamlit and gradio. There's already a superior ecosystem.
July 29, 2025 at 5:37 PM
My maternity leave project is now somewhat out: I made a jupyterbook about the basics of ML, that I teach at TUE. You can check it out here:
sibylse.github.io/TUEML/intro....
The linA part is not yet formulated out and there are other todos, but maybe it helps someone with their own course design 😅
Welcome to the Data Mining and Machine Learning Book — Data Mining and Machine Learning Jupyter Book
sibylse.github.io
July 25, 2025 at 5:49 PM
AFAIK, the only major missing feature for instructors using JupyterBook (and the @jupyter.org) is a robust way to present notebooks slides.

Here, @quarto.org really has clean and tight workflow! 🎉

So I’ll be working on building a Jupyterbook with Quarto Live slides…

r-wasm.github.io/quarto-live/
Introduction – Quarto Live Documentation
r-wasm.github.io
July 22, 2025 at 1:24 AM
Project Pythia has a fresh new look. Take a look here to learn about our transition to MyST / JupyterBook 2: projectpythia.org/posts/2025/m...
Reflections on MyST-ification - Project Pythia
projectpythia.org
July 15, 2025 at 5:22 PM
A lot is changing with our documentation, including a transition from a single-source to multiple sources. Learn more in this News post on the forum: forum.qiime2.org/t/the-qiime-...

#qiime2 #bioinformatics #documentation #jupyterbook
July 2, 2025 at 12:42 PM
... and Ciera Martinez (@cieramartinez.bsky.social) introduced GeoJupyter for hands-on geo-spatial learning. Chris Holdgraf (@choldgraf.com) previewed MyST & JupyterBook, and Brigitta Sipőcz (@bsipocz.bsky.social) emphasized tested, reproducible tutorials.
June 28, 2025 at 2:33 PM
A new look! We have created a new version of The Fuzzing Book, based on #JupyterBook, bringing

* easier navigation
* dark mode
* search
* mobile layout

and lots of other features. Check it out at www.fuzzingbook.org/beta/html/in...

Should we continue with this new look? Comments are welcome!
April 29, 2025 at 1:55 PM
going into the JupyterBook 2.0
March 16, 2025 at 6:48 PM
it's promising to see that project #jupyterbook 2.0 (based on @mystmd.org ) is able to use @typst.app as a PDF engine! Those 2 projects have a good chance to revolutionize our scientific publishing toolchain! @curvenote.com is in that boat as well, but feels like is a bit behind due to efforts...
March 16, 2025 at 6:48 PM
📚💨 Apply for the Book Dash Planning Committee and get involved with an evolving year for our bi-annual contribution event

🛠️ Learn more about our upgrade to JupyterBook v2 thanks to the Infrastructure Working Group
March 4, 2025 at 5:17 PM
Throw in jupyterbook and MyST and you will have a bunch more features. jupyterbook.org/en/stable/co...
MyST Markdown overview
jupyterbook.org
March 2, 2025 at 7:22 PM
But here's where it gets awesomer. You can set up a GH repo to automatically build your notebooks into a *nice* website (via JupyterBook). Your repository, your work, code, results, and narrative *as a website*. Automatically. Automagically. The sims project? pdimens.github.io/haplotagging...
Linked Read Inversion Detection Performance Simulations - Inversion Simulations
The code and data exploration of the D. melanogaster haplotagging simulation experiment
pdimens.github.io
February 26, 2025 at 3:32 PM
So I committed to something I've been meaning to explore for a while: Jupyter + JupyterBook. If you aren't familiar, Jupyter is a "notebook" system where you write narrative and executable code in one document. Think Rmarkdown/Quarto but more what-you-see-is-what-you-get, and results get embedded.
February 26, 2025 at 3:32 PM
#SWAT4HCLS starts Feb 24 At the #Biohackathon, I’d like to explore how #Pandoc, #Myst, #JupyterBook can generate RDF and SPARQL-driven reports while also supporting ontology maintenance and hosting.
Inspired by #Biohackrxiv, which uses GitHub & Pandoc.
www.linkedin.com/posts/andra-...
Andra Waagmeester on LinkedIn: Barcelona 2025
#SWAT4HCLS 2025 kicks off on February 24th! Expect a full week of tutorials, conference talks, and the #Biohackathon! 📅 The Biohackathon will be the last day…
www.linkedin.com
February 15, 2025 at 12:31 PM
Our February newsletter is out! Catch up on our latest news such as: our JupyterBook to learn machine learning for climate led by Dhruv Balwada, a recent study to address artifacts in ML parametrization, youtube channel by Carlos Fernandez-Granda, and more! mailchi.mp/382387c99943...
February 4, 2025 at 7:08 PM
I don't know if it's any good, but I sort of wrote the index of the book while revising the content after it was all there. I used jupyterbook for writing, so it was (relatively) easy to insert index items as I was revising and then I iterated on the index itself to see what's missing or no good
December 20, 2024 at 2:46 PM
Jupyterbook is pretty good. It's built on MyST, which is a superset of Markdown and it works well with the Jupyter ecosystem, it builds and AST so it can be easily exported into HTML, PDF, DOCX, etc. and they recently worked on migrating its build engine to JS so it makes compiling modern and easy.
Jupyter Book
next.jupyterbook.org
December 1, 2024 at 10:34 PM
Is there a framework overview graphic that enables easy dissemination of the fact JB 2.0 is an "opinionated" version of mystmd? In the past at least it was difficult to understand how the different available docs frameworks interrelate (mystmd, jupyterbook, sphinx-notebooks) and which 2 choose.
November 25, 2024 at 1:01 PM
Love your stuff Dan! Have hijacked your super basic python LIF model for my teaching. Love that it's super simple and works with the most basic python. Like in the Jupyerhub part of @neurodesk.bsky.social you just paste 15 lines into the Jupyterbook and you are good to go! Awesome for beginners!
November 21, 2024 at 3:01 AM
Huge congrats to @row1.ca @choldgraf.com and the rest of the MyST/JupyterBook team! The first alpha of JupyterBook based on MyST is now out! 🚀

Please help us kick the tires and file issues on Github, so we can make this as smooth a transition as possible.

blog.jupyterbook.org/posts/2024-1...
Announcing the Jupyter Book 2 alpha - Jupyter Book: Blog
Updates from the Jupyter Book subproject.
blog.jupyterbook.org
November 16, 2024 at 3:08 AM