Variable Explorer in Jupyter Notebook

PythonJupyter NotebookFacilities

Python Problem Overview


Is there a variable explorer in Jupyter (IPython) like in Spyder? It is very uncomfortable having to print the list of variables all the time each time I run through the test code.

Has this feature been implemented yet? If so, how to enable it?

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

UPDATE

Scroll down to the section labeled update for a much less convoluted method.

OLD ANSWER

Here is a notebook on how to make your own Variable Inspector. I think it was written back when jupyter notebook was called ipython notebook but it works on the latest version.

I'll post the code below just in case the link breaks.

import ipywidgets as widgets # Loads the Widget framework.
from IPython.core.magics.namespace import NamespaceMagics # Used to query namespace.

# For this example, hide these names, just to avoid polluting the namespace further
get_ipython().user_ns_hidden['widgets'] = widgets
get_ipython().user_ns_hidden['NamespaceMagics'] = NamespaceMagics

class VariableInspectorWindow(object):
    instance = None

def __init__(self, ipython):
    """Public constructor."""
    if VariableInspectorWindow.instance is not None:
        raise Exception("""Only one instance of the Variable Inspector can exist at a 
            time.  Call close() on the active instance before creating a new instance.
            If you have lost the handle to the active instance, you can re-obtain it
            via `VariableInspectorWindow.instance`.""")
    
    VariableInspectorWindow.instance = self
    self.closed = False
    self.namespace = NamespaceMagics()
    self.namespace.shell = ipython.kernel.shell
    
    self._box = widgets.Box()
    self._box._dom_classes = ['inspector']
    self._box.background_color = '#fff'
    self._box.border_color = '#ccc'
    self._box.border_width = 1
    self._box.border_radius = 5

    self._modal_body = widgets.VBox()
    self._modal_body.overflow_y = 'scroll'

    self._modal_body_label = widgets.HTML(value = 'Not hooked')
    self._modal_body.children = [self._modal_body_label]

    self._box.children = [
        self._modal_body, 
    ]
    
    self._ipython = ipython
    self._ipython.events.register('post_run_cell', self._fill)
    
def close(self):
    """Close and remove hooks."""
    if not self.closed:
        self._ipython.events.unregister('post_run_cell', self._fill)
        self._box.close()
        self.closed = True
        VariableInspectorWindow.instance = None

def _fill(self):
    """Fill self with variable information."""
    values = self.namespace.who_ls()
    self._modal_body_label.value = '<table class="table table-bordered table-striped"><tr><th>Name</th><th>Type</th><th>Value</th></tr><tr><td>' + \
        '</td></tr><tr><td>'.join(['{0}</td><td>{1}</td><td>{2}'.format(v, type(eval(v)).__name__, str(eval(v))) for v in values]) + \
        '</td></tr></table>'

def _ipython_display_(self):
    """Called when display() or pyout is used to display the Variable 
    Inspector."""
    self._box._ipython_display_()

Run inline with the following:

inspector = VariableInspectorWindow(get_ipython())
inspector

Make it a javascript pop out;

%%javascript
$('div.inspector')
    .detach()
    .prependTo($('body'))
    .css({
        'z-index': 999, 
        position: 'fixed',
        'box-shadow': '5px 5px 12px -3px black',
        opacity: 0.9
    })
    .draggable();

UPDATE

Date: May 17 2017

@jfbercher created a nbextension variable inspector. The source code can be seen here jupyter_contrib_nbextensions. For more information see the docs.

Install

User
pip install jupyter_contrib_nbextensions
jupyter contrib nbextension install --user
Virtual environment
pip install jupyter_contrib_nbextensions
jupyter contrib nbextension install --sys-prefix

Enable

jupyter nbextension enable varInspector/main

Here's a screen-shot;

enter image description here

Solution 2 - Python

If you use Jupyter Notebooks within Jupyter Lab there has been a lot of discussion about implementing a variable explorer/inspector. You can follow the issue here

As of right now there is one Jupyter Lab extension in the works that implements a Spyder-like variable explorer. It is based on the notebook extension that James mentioned in his answer. You can find the lab extension (with installation instructions) here: https://github.com/lckr/jupyterlab-variableInspector

enter image description here

Solution 3 - Python

This might help you, though it's not exactly what Spyder offers and is much simpler:

To get a list of all currently defined variables, run who :

In [1]: foo = 'bar'

In [2]: who
foo

For more detail, run whos:

In [3]: whos
Variable   Type    Data/Info
----------------------------
foo        str     bar

For a complete list of built-in functions see Magic Commands

Solution 4 - Python

If you are using Visual Studio Code, it's already there:

enter image description here

Solution 5 - Python

Another solution would be to connect the spyder-console to the running kernel

On any platform it would be:

  1. In jupyter: run the following (from this source):
from jupyter_client import find_connection_file
print(find_connection_file()) #this will show which json-file is associated to your jupyter

it should give you something like: ~/.local/share/jupyter/runtime/kernel-<SOME-ID>.json'

  1. In your spyder console, right-click and select "Connect to an existing kernel", browse to that file you found previously.
    • tick the "Save connection settings" to make it easier to find it next time
    • un-tick the "This is a remote kernel (via SSH)" (except if you know what you're doing)
  2. You can then browse the variable with spyder that are in your jupyter instance

Perks of this method is that you don't need to install an aditionnal package you just need spyder & jupyter.

EDIT: I was too optimistic, but it seems that spyder also has a problem,I can use the variables in the console, but it doesn't show the variable in the actual GUI/browser. I'm leaving the answer in the hopes that this will be fixed in the future. (it may also work depending on the version you installed). Maybe a solution would be to connect the jupyter to an existing kernel, but I haven't been able to make it work. Any help is welcome !

Solution 6 - Python

Just to piggyback off of the accepted answer, the best way to install in a VE is to run the following:

import sys
!{sys.executable} -m pip install jupyter_contrib_nbextensions

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