Create and edit Jupyter notebooks
Set up your project
In IntelliJ IDEA, create a new Python project.
Install the jupyter package for the selected interpreter.
When all the indexing processes are finished, you are ready to start working with the notebook files.
Create and open Jupyter notebooks
To open an existing .ipynb file, follow the same steps as for the files of the other types. If needed, you can create a notebook file.
Create a notebook file
Do one of the following:
Right-click the target directory in the Project tool window and select New from the context menu.
Press Alt+Insert
Select Jupyter Notebook.
In the dialog that opens, type a filename.
A notebook file has the *.ipynb extension and is marked with the corresponding icon .
Convert a Python file to a Jupyter notebook
Right-click the file in the
tool window.Select
from the context menu.
Convert a Jupyter notebook to a Python file
Right-click the file in the
tool window.Select
from the context menu.
Export Jupyter notebooks
You can export Jupyter notebooks to various formats:
Right-click the Jupyter notebook file in the Project tool window.
Select
and then select the format from the list.
Edit Jupyter notebooks
You can apply various editing actions to one cell or to the entire notebook. Press the Ctrl+A once to select a cell at the caret and press Ctrl+A twice to select all cells in the notebook.
The editor for Jupyter notebooks has two modes: the edit mode and the command mode. Depending on the mode, you can either edit code in notebook cells or use keyboard shortcuts to perform specific actions with cells.
Edit mode
To toggle the edit mode, press Enter or click any cell.
When a cell is in the edit mode, it has a highlighted line with a caret inside the cell.
When in the edit mode, you can navigate through all cells line-by-line using Up and Down keys.
Command mode
Edit cells
A newly created notebook contains one code cell. You can change its type with the cell type selector in the notebook toolbar:
To edit a code cell, just click it.
To edit a Markdown cell, double-click it or press Enter and start typing. To preview the output, press Shift+Enter.
Work with notebook cells
Add cells
To add a code cell above the selected cell, do one of the following:
In the edit mode, press Alt+Shift+A.
In the command mode, press A.
To add a code cell below the selected cell, do one of the following:
In the edit mode, press Alt+Shift+B.
In the command mode, press B.
Select
from the notebook toolbar.
Use the popup between cells to add
code
,Markdown
orAI
cells to your notebook:
Select cells
To select a cell, click the gutter next to the cell.
To select several cells:
Click the gutter next to cells while holding Shift for a series of consecutive cells, or Ctrl for non-consecutive cells.
In command mode, hold Shift and press the Up and Down keys.
You can execute, copy, merge, expand, and delete the selected cells.
Copy and paste cells
To copy a cell in the command mode, press Ctrl+C, C, or click on the notebook toolbar.
To paste the copied cell below, press Ctrl+V, V, or click .
To paste it above the current cell, press Shift with Ctrl+V/Shift+V.
You can also select the required action from the cell's context menu.
Split and merge cells
To merge a current cell with the cell below, right-click the cell and select the Merge Cell Below command from the context menu.
Similarly, you can merge a cell above the selected cell with the corresponding command.
To merge several cells, select them, and then choose from the main menu.
Alternatively, you can use Find Action to run the Merge Selected Cells command.
To split a cell into two cells, place the caret in the line to break at, then right-click, and select the Split Cell from the context menu.
Expand and collapse cells
Click the border in the gutter to expand or collapse a notebook cell.
Delete cells
Click Delete Cell on the notebook toolbar.
Right-click the cell and select
from the context menu.
Add cell tag
You can assign and view tags for each cell right in the notebook editor:
Right-click the cell.
Select Add Cell Tag from the context menu.
Enter the tag and click Confirm.
To remove the tag, right-click it and select Remove Tag.
Use coding assistance
You can edit code cells with the help of Python code insights, such as syntax highlighting and code completion.
IntelliJ IDEA enables code completion for the names of classes, functions, and variables. Start typing the name of the code construct, and the suggestion list appears.
Intention actions and quick fixes. You can add the missing imports by using the intention actions.
Note that you can add an import statement to the current cell or to the first cell of the notebook.