I could use Python Kernel with Jupyter. I am looking for a way to use sagemath inside Jupyter.I couldnt see a way for installing it. How to do that?
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Consider accepting @Layek's answer instead.– Samuel LelièvreJul 12, 2020 at 15:49
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See also: sage-devel: Installing sage as a kernel in the system-wide jupyter.– Samuel LelièvreJul 12, 2020 at 15:56
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Conversely: Installing systemwide kernels for Sage's Jupyter.– Samuel LelièvreJul 12, 2020 at 15:58
4 Answers
I have just installed SageMath kernel on my existing Jupyter installation. It's super easy.
$ sudo jupyter kernelspec install ./SageMath/local/share/jupyter/kernels/sagemath
Where SageMath is your root sagemath directory. Hope this will help someone.
If you don't have sudo rights you won't be able to install system-wide,
but you can still install for yourself using the --user
flag:
$ jupyter kernelspec install --user ./SageMath/local/share/jupyter/kernels/sagemath
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11If needed, additionally edit the
kernel.json
file to make the SageMath Jupyter kernel aware of SageMath's location, by adding"env":{"SAGE_ROOT":"/path/to/sage"}
at the end of the dictionary inkernel.json
. You will find the location ofkernel.json
by executingjupyter kernelspec list
. (Replace/path/to/sage
by the actual path to thesage
executable.) Jan 19, 2017 at 13:48 -
1Thanks for the information. Also, sage executable should be in the PATH and the easiest way to do this is creating a symlink in /usr/local/bin/sage– LayekJan 20, 2017 at 14:34
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I've had success with this method with anaconda jupyter. Here's one more tip: to get jsmol and threejs working in this SageMath kernel, be sure to create symlinks to SageMath/local/share/jsmol and SageMath/local/share/threejs as /anaconda/share/jupyter/nbextensions/jsmol and /anaconda/share/jupyter/nbextensions/threejs respectively (change the path to jupyter/nbextensions as necessary for your installation of jupyter).– j.c.Mar 2, 2018 at 19:44
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I had success with it. I had to set
"env":{"SAGE_ROOT":"/path/to/sage"}
inkernel.json
as described in another answer. Make sure/path/to/sage
is the actual root path (for me on macOS this was/Applications/SageMath-9.1.app/Contents/Resources/sage
) not the path to the actual executable.– WizardOct 24, 2020 at 17:33
The answer suggesting
$ jupyter kernelspec install --user <path to SageMath/local/share/jupyter/kernels/sagemath>
works only if you provide the environment variable SAGE_ROOT in the kernel spec. This requires adding an "env" item to the kernel.json. The line that must be added is:
"env":{"SAGE_ROOT":"<Path to sage root>"}
An example specific to an installed mac app for version 8.7 is:
"env":{"SAGE_ROOT":"/Applications/SageMath-8.7.app/Contents/Resources/sage"}
See this question for general information and a complete example.
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2For conda, I also had to set
SAGE_LOCAL
to the same path asSAGE_ROOT
. But it works now.– MikeNov 19, 2019 at 19:54
You are going about it backwards; Sage includes the Jupyter notebook inside of it, and you can use it with that kernel that way. (As well as others.) Use
$ sage --notebook ipython
I believe. See also here.
(I think there are also some people who have had success redirecting their Jupyter to "see" the Sage kernel by editing some file or configuration. On Arch Linux this is apparently supported ... ?)
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2But that sagemath notebook does not have features to publish. But Jupyter notebook does. Sep 2, 2016 at 17:07
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1I'm not talking about the sagenb notebook, but the Jupyter notebook, which you should be able to invoke as in my edited post...– kcrismanSep 2, 2016 at 19:29
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7This seems contrary to the model other Jupyter kernels follow. I already have an instance of Jupyter installed and configured, I just want to add sage as an extra kernel in addition to my regular Python/Julia/R kernels. Nov 28, 2016 at 1:25
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2Let me try to reconcile the last two comments: the way things are now, SageMath installs its own Python and Jupyter. So kcrisman says you can install additional kernels in that Jupyter installation, and you don't need to install another Jupyter. The other answer (by Layek) points out that if you have another Jupyter installed in your system, you can also make it aware of the SageMath Jupyter kernel. You could do both, making your system-wide Jupyter aware of the SageMath Jupyter kernel, and making SageMath's Jupyter aware your other kernels! Apr 12, 2017 at 16:43
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2On Ubuntu 20.04, installing sagemath as a package seems to allow to concile both perspectives: you can install sagemath without the 'recommended' dependency sagemath-jupyter ( sudo apt install sagemath sagemath-jupyter- ). In this case the jupyter kernel is not installed nor jupyter. However, if it occurs that the jupyter package is already installed and you do not exclude sagemath-jupyter in the above apt command, no new jupyter will be installed, and the sage kernel will seamlessly be added to the installed jupyter. @moderator, please erase previous comment.– gcousinAug 14, 2021 at 0:05
I know this is an old question, but I stumbled onto it and ended up making a docker container to accomplish this for anyone who is interested.
https://hub.docker.com/r/sharptrick/sage-notebook
The dockerfile may be of interest as it has explicit instructions which install the kernel to the official "jupyter/minimal-notebook".
https://github.com/sharpTrick/sage-notebook/blob/master/Dockerfile