You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

13 KiB

Importing Jupyter Notebooks as Modules

It is a common problem that people want to import code from Jupyter Notebooks. This is made difficult by the fact that Notebooks are not plain Python files, and thus cannot be imported by the regular Python machinery.

Fortunately, Python provides some fairly sophisticated hooks into the import machinery, so we can actually make Jupyter notebooks importable without much difficulty, and only using public APIs.

In [ ]:
import io, os, sys, types
In [ ]:
from IPython import get_ipython
from nbformat import read
from IPython.core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell

Import hooks typically take the form of two objects:

  1. a Module Loader, which takes a module name (e.g. 'IPython.display'), and returns a Module
  2. a Module Finder, which figures out whether a module might exist, and tells Python what Loader to use
In [ ]:
def find_notebook(fullname, path=None):
    """find a notebook, given its fully qualified name and an optional path

    This turns "foo.bar" into "foo/bar.ipynb"
    and tries turning "Foo_Bar" into "Foo Bar" if Foo_Bar
    does not exist.
    """
    name = fullname.rsplit('.', 1)[-1]
    if not path:
        path = ['']
    for d in path:
        nb_path = os.path.join(d, name + ".ipynb")
        if os.path.isfile(nb_path):
            return nb_path
        # let import Notebook_Name find "Notebook Name.ipynb"
        nb_path = nb_path.replace("_", " ")
        if os.path.isfile(nb_path):
            return nb_path

Notebook Loader

Here we have our Notebook Loader. It's actually quite simple - once we figure out the filename of the module, all it does is:

  1. load the notebook document into memory
  2. create an empty Module
  3. execute every cell in the Module namespace

Since IPython cells can have extended syntax, the IPython transform is applied to turn each of these cells into their pure-Python counterparts before executing them. If all of your notebook cells are pure-Python, this step is unnecessary.

In [ ]:
class NotebookLoader(object):
    """Module Loader for Jupyter Notebooks"""

    def __init__(self, path=None):
        self.shell = InteractiveShell.instance()
        self.path = path

    def load_module(self, fullname):
        """import a notebook as a module"""
        path = find_notebook(fullname, self.path)

        print("importing Jupyter notebook from %s" % path)

        # load the notebook object
        with io.open(path, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as f:
            nb = read(f, 4)

        # create the module and add it to sys.modules
        # if name in sys.modules:
        #    return sys.modules[name]
        mod = types.ModuleType(fullname)
        mod.__file__ = path
        mod.__loader__ = self
        mod.__dict__['get_ipython'] = get_ipython
        sys.modules[fullname] = mod

        # extra work to ensure that magics that would affect the user_ns
        # actually affect the notebook module's ns
        save_user_ns = self.shell.user_ns
        self.shell.user_ns = mod.__dict__

        try:
            for cell in nb.cells:
                if cell.cell_type == 'code':
                    # transform the input to executable Python
                    code = self.shell.input_transformer_manager.transform_cell(cell.source)
                    # run the code in themodule
                    exec(code, mod.__dict__)
        finally:
            self.shell.user_ns = save_user_ns
        return mod

The Module Finder

The finder is a simple object that tells you whether a name can be imported, and returns the appropriate loader. All this one does is check, when you do:

import mynotebook

it checks whether mynotebook.ipynb exists. If a notebook is found, then it returns a NotebookLoader.

Any extra logic is just for resolving paths within packages.

In [ ]:
class NotebookFinder(object):
    """Module finder that locates Jupyter Notebooks"""

    def __init__(self):
        self.loaders = {}

    def find_module(self, fullname, path=None):
        nb_path = find_notebook(fullname, path)
        if not nb_path:
            return

        key = path
        if path:
            # lists aren't hashable
            key = os.path.sep.join(path)

        if key not in self.loaders:
            self.loaders[key] = NotebookLoader(path)
        return self.loaders[key]

Register the hook

Now we register the NotebookFinder with sys.meta_path

In [ ]:
sys.meta_path.append(NotebookFinder())

After this point, my notebooks should be importable.

Let's look at what we have in the CWD:

In [ ]:
ls nbpackage

So I should be able to import nbpackage.mynotebook.

In [ ]:
import nbpackage.mynotebook

Aside: displaying notebooks

Here is some simple code to display the contents of a notebook with syntax highlighting, etc.

In [ ]:
from pygments import highlight
from pygments.lexers import PythonLexer
from pygments.formatters import HtmlFormatter

from IPython.display import display, HTML

formatter = HtmlFormatter()
lexer = PythonLexer()

# publish the CSS for pygments highlighting
display(
    HTML(
        """
<style type='text/css'>
%s
</style>
"""
        % formatter.get_style_defs()
    )
)
In [ ]:
def show_notebook(fname):
    """display a short summary of the cells of a notebook"""
    with io.open(fname, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as f:
        nb = read(f, 4)
    html = []
    for cell in nb.cells:
        html.append("<h4>%s cell</h4>" % cell.cell_type)
        if cell.cell_type == 'code':
            html.append(highlight(cell.source, lexer, formatter))
        else:
            html.append("<pre>%s</pre>" % cell.source)
    display(HTML('\n'.join(html)))


show_notebook(os.path.join("nbpackage", "mynotebook.ipynb"))

So my notebook has some code cells, one of which contains some IPython syntax.

Let's see what happens when we import it

In [ ]:
from nbpackage import mynotebook

Hooray, it imported! Does it work?

In [ ]:
mynotebook.foo()

Hooray again!

Even the function that contains IPython syntax works:

In [ ]:
mynotebook.has_ip_syntax()

Notebooks in packages

We also have a notebook inside the nb package, so let's make sure that works as well.

In [ ]:
ls nbpackage/nbs

Note that the __init__.py is necessary for nb to be considered a package, just like usual.

In [ ]:
show_notebook(os.path.join("nbpackage", "nbs", "other.ipynb"))
In [ ]:
from nbpackage.nbs import other

other.bar(5)

So now we have importable notebooks, from both the local directory and inside packages.

I can even put a notebook inside IPython, to further demonstrate that this is working properly:

In [ ]:
import shutil
from IPython.paths import get_ipython_package_dir

utils = os.path.join(get_ipython_package_dir(), 'utils')
shutil.copy(
    os.path.join("nbpackage", "mynotebook.ipynb"), os.path.join(utils, "inside_ipython.ipynb")
)

and import the notebook from IPython.utils

In [ ]:
from IPython.utils import inside_ipython

inside_ipython.whatsmyname()

This approach can even import functions and classes that are defined in a notebook using the %%cython magic.