nodebook
Nodebook - Multi-Language REPL with Web UI + CLI code runner
Useful to practice algorithms and datastructures for coding interviews.
What is it?
Nodebook is an in-browser REPL supporting many programming languages. Code's on the left, Console's on the right. Click "Run" or press Ctrl+Enter or Cmd+Enter to run your code.
Code is automatically persisted on the file system.
You can also use Nodebook directly on the command line, running your notebooks upon change.
A notebook is a folder containing an {index|main}.{js,py,c,cpp,...}
file. The homepage lists all of the available notebooks.
Supported environments
- C11
(.c)
- C++14
(.cpp)
- C#
(.cs)
- Clojure
(.clj)
- Elixir
(.ex)
- Fsharp
(.fs)
- Go
(.go)
- Haskell
(.hs)
- Java
(.java)
- NodeJS
(.js)
- Lua
(.lua)
- OCaml
(.ml)
- PHP
(.php)
- Python 3
(.py)
- R
(.r, .R)
- Ruby
(.rb)
- Rust
(.rs)
— Uses cargo run
if Cargo.toml
is present, and rustc
otherwise
- Swift
(.swift)
- TypeScript
(.ts)
If --docker
is set on the command line, each of these environments will run inside a specific docker container.
Otherwise, the local toolchains will be used.
Install from release
Head to Releases and download the binary built for your system (mac, linux).
Rename it to nodebook
and place it in your path.
Install from source
Building requires go.
$ make deps
$ make install
# nodebook should be available under $GOPATH/bin/nodebook or $GOBIN/nodebook
Run with Web UI
# With dockerized toolchains
$ nodebook --docker path/to/notebooks
# With local toolchains
$ nodebook path/to/notebooks
Run on CLI (watch and run mode)
$ nodebook cli --docker path/to/notebooks
# Or
$ nodebook cli path/to/notebooks
Usage
Create a Notebook (Web UI)
Click on the + Notebook button on the Home page, then select the language of the notebook to be created.
Once on the notebook edition page, you can rename the notebook by clicking on it's name.
Notebooks are created in the directory specified by the parameter --notebooks
.
Create a Notebook manually (WebUI, CLI)
In the directory where you want your notebooks to be stored, simply create a folder containing a file named {index|main}.{js,py,c,cpp,...}
.
The notebook's name will be the name of the folder. The notebook language is determined automatically.
Command line options
- --docker: Execute code in disposable docker containers instead of local system; defaults to
false
Web UI only:
- --bindaddress: IP address the http server should bind to; defaults to
127.0.0.1
- --port: Port used by the application; defaults to
8000
Notebook environment
If your notebook dir contains a .env
file, the corresponding environment will be set up during notebook execution.
Exemple .env
:
HELLO=World!
More information about the expected file format here: https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv#rules
⚠️ A bit of warning ⚠️
Do not run the Web UI on a port open to public traffic! Doing so would allow remote code execution on your machine.
By default, the server binds to 127.0.0.1
, which allows connection from the localhost only. You can override the bind address using --bindaddress
, but do it only if you know what you're doing.