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Jupyter Book also lets you write text-based notebooks using MyST Markdown. See the Notebooks with MyST Markdown documentation for more detailed instructions. This page shows off a notebook written in MyST Markdown.
With MyST Markdown, you can define code cells with a directive like so:
print(2 + 2)
When your book is built, the contents of any {code-cell}
blocks will be
executed with your default Jupyter kernel, and their outputs will be displayed
in-line with the rest of your content.
Jupyter Book uses [Jupytext](https://jupytext.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) to convert text-based files to notebooks, and can support [many other text-based notebook files](https://jupyterbook.org/file-types/jupytext.html).
MyST Markdown notebooks are defined by two things:
- YAML metadata that is needed to understand if / how it should convert text files to notebooks (including information about the kernel needed). See the YAML at the top of this page for example.
- The presence of
{code-cell}
directives, which will be executed with your book.
That's all that is needed to get started!
If you have a markdown file and you'd like to quickly add YAML metadata to it, so that Jupyter Book will treat it as a MyST Markdown Notebook, run the following command:
jupyter-book myst init path/to/markdownfile.md