However, there are a few drawbacks: it uses its own Markup text layout language, and GitHub (where I intend to host my notebooks) does not natively render html. Matlab has a Publish function that attempts to do something similar, and outputs HTML files containing both code and figures. ![]() ![]() This is a great way to share and explain the code you’re writing, since the reader immediately sees how output is generated without having to run all the analyses themselves. figures you’ve just generated) to be shown in one document. Now, Python has the awesome Jupyter (formerly IPyton notebook) feature, that allows for comments, code, and most importantly graphical output (i.e. ![]() At this point, the transition costs are too high for me, but it’s a move I have planned for some point in the future. I really like Python’s philosophy, but over the last years I haven’t been able to switch the code for my research from Matlab. Probably worth checking out instead of the reasonably outdated instructions below! ![]() 21 February 2018, update: the new JupyterLab was just released, and according to this tweet is really easy to integrate with Matlab.
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