theme-cookiecutter
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A cookiecutter template to help you make new JupyterLab theme extensions
theme-cookiecutter
Archived
This project is archived. It is now possible to create a Theme Extension for JupyterLab using the following cookiecutter: https://github.com/jupyterlab/extension-cookiecutter-ts.
A cookiecutter template to help you make new JupyterLab theme extensions.
Examples
Usage
Install cookiecutter:
pip install cookiecutter
Use cookiecutter to generate a package:
cookiecutter https://github.com/jupyterlab/theme-cookiecutter
Prompts
The cookiecutter will prompt you with the following questions and generate a project according to your responses:
author_name: Your full name.python_name: The name of the Python package for your JupyterLab extension (e.g.jupyterlab_pink_theme).labextension_name: Your JupyterLab extension name (e.g.@my-organization/jupyterlab-pink-theme).project_short_description: A short description of your JupyterLab theme extension.has_binder: Whether you extension has a binder link or not.repository: Your theme's repository. If the code of your theme is hosted on Github, this should just be the main Github url (e.g.https://github.com/my-organization/jupyterlab_pink_theme).
Project structure
Once you fill in the cookiecutter prompts, you'll get a basic theme extension. The files within are structured as follows:
python_namestyle: The assets (.cssfiles, images, etc) that will make up your theme's actual style. This start out with the style from the default Jupyterlab light theme.src- The extension source.index.ts: Entry point for the JupyterLab extension
package.json: Metadata files that defines the files in your extension and their dependenciestsconfig.json: Tells the TypeScript compiler how to build your extensionsetup.py: The Python distribution file
Package names
We suggest that extension names start with jupyterlab_ and use underscores or dashes if needed to improve readability, such as jupyterlab_myextension.