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I have tried to replicate the "movies" example found on Bokeh Movies Example but with other parameters to fit my own needs. New to Bokeh, I can't seem to understand the syntax of actually getting an output file/icon that I can use later on to run the program from.

Basically I'm not sure what curdoc is doing by the end of the movies-code, and why there isn't a output_file("movies.html", title="Movies Tester", mode="cdn") or alike, somewhere.

If there is a better example of where I can make use of an input pandas DataFrame, whose columns I would like to present in different forms in an interactive plot, at a homepage, it would of course be appreciable as well.

Any tips or tricks that I can make use of is very much welcome!

Thanks you!

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The Movies example is a bokeh server application. It can only be used by running it with a Bokeh server, i.e. by executing

bokeh serve --show movies

on the command line. There is no output file to create. To interact with a Bokeh server application, it has to be run.

The job of the code inside a Bokeh application is to build up a Bokeh document (i.e. put in plots and widgets, etc) so that is what it is doing with curdoc().add_root(...). The code in the script is building up plots and widgets in a layout, and adding that to a new document. Every time a browser connects to a Bokeh server, the Bokeh server runs the application code to create a new fresh Document for that session.

The output_file function, by contrast, is for generating standalone HTML/JS that does not rely on the Bokeh server. (It's still possible to have lots of interactions in standalone documents, with things like CustomJS callbacks, you generally just can't run real Python code.)

(It is also possible to "embed" a Bokeh serve as a library in a regular python script, but that's a more advanced usage. See, e.g. the user's guide section Embedding Bokeh Server as a Library for more information.)

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