This project is DEPRECATED because its functionality now exists in otter grader. Use that instead!
Format and tools for authoring and distributing Jupyter notebook assignments
Requires: Python 3 (even if it's installed, check that it's your working version python --version
)
Course instructors author assignments as Jupyter notebooks by creating a notebook that contains setup code, questions, solutions, and tests to validate those solutions. This project prepares an assignment to be distributed to students and later scored automatically.
The notebook format is not specific to a programming language or autograding framework, but was designed to be used with okpy, which is Python based. Contributions to support other testing frameworks, such as [nbgrader, and other programming languages are welcome.
An example notebook appears in tests/example.ipynb
, which uses the notebook
format. To convert it, run:
jassign tests/example.ipynb tests/output some/course
tests/example.ipynb
: an example notebook path that you'll need to replace with the path to the master solution notebook, which was augmented with the metadata and commands from the notebook format.tests/output
: the path to where the output will be stored- the output contains two directories
autograder
andstudent
- the
autograder
directory contains the full set of tests and a solution notebook (a solution notebook is different from the master notebook, because it is not formatted accordidng to the notebook format but instead looks like the student notebook with solutions) - the
student
directory contains an automatically created redacted version. - Note: currently, the output directories will not contain the data files, e.g., csv or json files, that you used when creating the master notebook: make sure you add them to the
student
directory before releasing it to students
- the output contains two directories
some/course
is the endpoint/path of the assignment that's listed on okpy (typically starts with your university abbreviation and has a course name in it, ending with the assignment name).
Before you run the jassign
command, make sure that you run the entire notebook top to bottom (Cell -> Run All
) to make sure that every cell has the correct output -- the output of the cells will be turned into the appropriate tests stored in the provided output directory (second argument of the jassign
command). If you change the tests, you need to re-generate the files by re-running the notebook and the jassign
command. Note: jassign
will issue an error and quit if the output directory already exists.
You can then generate a PDF from the result:
jassign-pdf tests/output/autograder/example.ipynb tests/output/autograder/example.pdf
File "/opt/conda/lib/python3.6/site-packages/jassign/to_ok.py", line 141, in gen_ok_cells
assert not is_test_cell(cell), 'Test outside of a question: ' + str(cell)
AssertionError: Test outside of a question:
If you get this error, this means that you have more than one cell between the markdown cell that declared the question (i.e., the one that contains #BEGIN QUESTION
) and the cell that contains the # TEST
.
SOLUTION: remove the extra code/markdown cell(s) either between the solution cell and the markdown cell with the #BEGIN QUESTION
or between the solution cell and the # TEST
cell.
If your test contains a blank/newline after the test, jassign seems to automatically add a semicolon at the end of the test, thus, supressing the output of the command.
Example:
# TEST
movies.head(1)['plots'][0]=='Two imprisoned men bond over a number of years, finding solace and eventual redemption through acts of common decency.'
Turns into the following failed test in the students' notebook:
>>> movies.head(1)['plots'][0]=='Two imprisoned men bond over a number of years, finding solace and eventual redemption through acts of common decency.';
>>>
# Error: expected
# True
# but got
SOLUTION: remove the blank line at the end of the # TEST
cell.