jupyter notebook vs live scripts

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What are the differences between Live Scripts and Jupyter notebooks?

Accepted Answer

David Garrison
David Garrison on 17 Mar 2017

The Live Editor and the Jupyter Notebook are similar in that you can mix code with output, run code in sections, and add formatted text, images, and equations to tell a story.

The Live Editor provides a new way to develop code for exploratory programming, to create an interactive narrative, and to present or teach. In particular, the Live Editor allows you to

  • Choose between inline output and output on the right
  • Zoom, pan, and rotate plots and get the generated code
  • Format text interactively rather than through markdown
  • Create equations using LaTeX or through an interactive equation editor
  • Use functions hints, tab completion, and code analysis tools

The Live Editor is available in desktop MATLAB and in MATLAB Online. To find out more about the Live Editor, go the Live Editor web page. You can find example live scripts in the MATLAB documentation and on the MATLAB File Exchange.

  4 Comments
LeChat
LeChat on 5 Sep 2024
PS: I haven't tried this setup for a while so do not hesitate to send me any feedback.

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More Answers (2)

Hechuan Wang
Hechuan Wang on 4 Sep 2018
More importantly, livescript utilize matlab debugger and workspace inspector, but jupyter does not have debugger or variable inspector out of box.

Kouichi C. Nakamura
Kouichi C. Nakamura on 3 Jul 2019
Both Jupyter Notebook and R Notebooks support markdown, but for back-compatibility reasons (I think) MATLAB's Live Editor uses MATLAB's own markup language for the text part. This is OK, but rather unfortunate, I think.
  2 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 5 Sep 2024
If I understand correctly, Live Editor uses MathML for the markup. I am not sure exactly how LaTex is handled... I think it goes through a LaTex to MathML layer for the rendering, while keeping a copy of the original LaTex.
But it doesn't matter so much that it uses MathML, as it hides the MathML layer.

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