I'm Windows 10 (64-bit) user and I'm using Anaconda2 (Python 2.7).
I have created many gists (as Markdown .md file) on Github which supports almost all the smileys available in this Web page.
When I tried to use :smile:, :boom: etc. in Markdown cell of Jupyter Notebook, it did not work and it seems Jupyter Notebook does not support smileys.
Please suggest me if there's any way to fix this.
Thanks.
I also checked by visiting a lot many sites and found Jupyter Notebook does not support Github styled emojis.
#RajmaniArya suggested good way in the comment above.
And it brought me to use copy paste technique to use emojis in Markdown cells of Jupyter Notebook.
https://emojikeyboard.org and https://www.webpagefx.com/tools/emoji-cheat-sheet/ are also best to quick copy of emojis as we don't need to do copy paste things (Just one click is enough to copy).
Have a look on the below gif which clears it.
You can also visit http://getemoji.com/ suggested by #RajmaiArya and https://gist.github.com/rxaviers/7360908 to copy and paste emojis if you want other different kind of emojis.
Thanks.
Markdown in Jupyter notebooks doesn't support github-style :emoji:
Related
I've looked for this across the web a few times, and I feel like this hasn't been asked exactly, or I may just be getting bogged down with the wrong syntax. Hoping to get an easy answer here (yes, you can't get this, is an acceptable answer).
The variations from the base CentOS image are listed here: Link to GCP
However, they don't actually provide a download for this image. I'm trying to get a local VM running in VMWare with this image.
I feel as though they'd provide this to their clients to make it easier to prepare for use of their product, but I'm not finding it anywhere.
If anyone could toss me a link to a pre-configured CentOS ISO with the minor changes, I'd definitely take that as an alternative. I'm just not confident in my skills with Linux enough to configure the firewall properly :)
GCP doesn't support Google-provied images for exporting. However, they support exporting images for custom images.
I don't have any experience about image exporting, but I think this works.
Create custom images
You can create custom images based on your GCE VM instance.
Go navigation -> Compute engine -> images page.
You can create custom image via disk or snapshot in this page.
Select one and create a custom image.
Export your image
After creating custom image successfully, Go custom image page and click "export" on upper side.
Select export format and GCS destination. then click export.
Now you have an image in the Google Cloud storage.
Download image file and import to your local VM machine.
I would like to add a Google Trends chart for a specific search term to my Google Data Studio report, but Trends is not an option in the Data Source list. I wasn't able to find an option to embed JavaScript either. Is it possible to add a Trends chart to a report in Data Studio? Thanks!
I am posting this workaround as it seems no similar solution has been provided since.
You can actually do this, using a small workaround:
Create the graph you want to embed using Google Trends.
Click the "embed" icon in the upper right corner of the graph, and copy the JS-code (for either desktop or mobile device)
Create a simple empty HTML-file using notepad or similar text editor. (including , , as per common standard). Place it in an empty folder on your hard drive.
Paste the Google Trends-embed code into the section of your HTML-file.
Go to https://app.netlify.com/drop and upload the whole folder (including your .html-file). Copy the direct link provided by Netlify. (note: Any other form of public hosting should work fine, this is just my personal preference)
In Google Data Studio, click "URL embed" and paste your direct link.
Voila!
(Note: As this is a direct graph link and not a data feed, it, unfortunately, won't let you filter or change settings. but if configured wisely before copying the embed code, should do the trick for any time range, year-on-year or similar needs.)
Hope this helps someone :)
You can use supermetrics.com that has a google trends (free) datasource and then import a common sheet into your dashboard, the only problem is that you wont be able to change the date range, meaning its only "one way"
Unfortunately, the Google Trends data connector has stopped working in Supermetrics. They use an unofficial Google API that has been faulty lately.
The connector was removed Dec 2018.
The GC docs say
and show
but I get no EDIT button
How do I get the EDIT button?
Setup is
Thanks, ChrisJJ. As we head towards GA for Cloud Source Repositories, we're trimming out underused and half-baked features, of which this is both. It's particularly half-baked because you can't use it to create new files or folders, move files or folders around, delete files, keep files in sync with the cloud shell, etc.
So, we've pulled this feature (and are updating the docs appropriately). However, if you'd like to edit your files on the web, you can do so with the Cloud Shell directly (via nano, vi or emacs) or you can use the new code editor feature described here: https://cloudplatform.googleblog.com/2016/10/introducing-Google-Cloud-Shels-new-code-editor.html
I think you'll find that this is a MUCH more full-featured editor experience and we're continuing to look at ways to make it even better.
I have a Foswiki wiki on a server. Is it possible to script the following without FTP access (for various reasons I can't use it):
Download a topic's wikitext, modify it locally, then upload it again (overwriting the topic)
Upload wikitext to a new topic
I've been doing these tasks manually, but I'd like to automate them. I've looked into the Foswiki API and a few plugins, but nothing seems capable of doing this.
Is there a way? (any programming language)
If you have web access, you could drive the bin/view and bin/save scripts remotely from a script.
Take a look at our BuildContrib upload target for an example. It gets a strikeone key and downloads the original topic to recover any form data. It then uploads the topic text, creating a new version. It's written in perl, and uses LWP.
https://github.com/foswiki/distro/blob/master/BuildContrib/lib/Foswiki/Contrib/BuildContrib/Targets/upload.pm
The following isn't(!) the right solution (sure exists an nice Foswiki-way approach), but if you know perl, you can do anything with the:
Install Firefox
install MozRepl addon into it
Install the WWW::Mechanize::Firefox perl module
Now, you can script anything what you can do directly from the browser, e.g. logging into the Foswiki, click buttons, save topics, etc..etc. Drawback - it isn't an easy way - you need to know many details.
Myself using this technique for testing.
I have an ipython notebook that I invoke through Django's
shell_plus --notebook
command.
I would like to save the notebook, meaning the code cells, without saving the output that follows each code cell.
I use this notebook to do analytics and reporting on sensitive patient data covered by HIPAA and so I'd like to be able to persist the notebook in git without exposing the sensitive patient data in the git repository.
Reposting as an answer:
You can set up a git hook that will strip the output from the notebook whenever you commit: gist.github.com/minrk/6176788
A bit more advanced, but less tested, is a tool I wrote called nbexplode, that splits the notebook up into multiple pieces and recombines them. The advantage of this is that you could keep the output in your local copy and only commit the code. But if the simpler approach works for you, I'd go for that.