Hi, The post you are replying to is about 9 years old. Meanwhile, it is (I think) recommended to not use the legacy Sage notebook (sagenb), but use jupyter.
So, do you really have the problem of converting a Sage notebook, or a jupyter worksheet? Best regards, Simon On 2019-07-23, 'Perez Verona Isabel Cristina' via sage-support <sage-support@googlegroups.com> wrote: > Hi David, > > I'm facing same problem. > Did you found an elegant way to solve this problem? > > On Thursday, July 8, 2010 at 8:26:01 PM UTC+2, David Sanders wrote: >> >> >> >> On Jul 8, 5:45 am, TianWei <ltwis...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > > I built a worksheet with several cells in the notebook, and then >> > > wanted to try to run it on a remote computer using the command line >> > > interface. But I could not find a convincing way to export the >> > > worksheet to a simple text file that I could import directly to sage, >> > > i.e. a "something.sage" file. >> > > In the end, I had to copy and paste each cell separately into a text >> > > file on the remote machine, which I then imported with "load >> > > something.sage" But this is clearly not a reasonable solution for a >> > > long worksheet. >> > > I tried the "Text" option in the worksheet, but that produced output >> > > which I could not just copy straight into the sage command line, or >> > > import with "load". >> > >> > If Sage has an easy, automatic way of doing this, I'm not aware of it. >> > However, there's a couple ways to accomplish what you want to do >> > without doing a bunch of repetitive actions (for example, manually >> > copying out each the text cell). Unfortunately, both of my suggestions >> > require a bit of work: >> > >> > (1) Open the worksheet through the notebook interface, then click on >> > the "Text" tab. Copy the text there, then write a little script to >> > strip out every line that doesn't begin with "sage: ". The lines that >> > have "sage: " prepended are lines in the input cells (assuming you >> > didn't type "sage: " somewhere in the worksheet itself). Strip out the >> > "sage: " text. >> >> OK, this is the idea that I came up with. >> It is also necessary to strip out the "..." that come at the start of >> indented lines, the <html> lines corresponding to the pretty-printed >> output, etc. >> >> I guess I just assumed that this must already have been done and be >> easily accessible, since it seems like a reasonably obvious thing to >> want to do -- use the nice notebook interface to create a document, >> and then convert it to plain Python and/or Sage to use for whatever. >> >> > >> > (2) You could tinker around with Notebook, Worksheet, and Cell objects >> > in Sage (using a script, command-line, or notebook interface). In >> > summary, you could create a Notebook object; get the desired Worksheet >> > object using one of the methods of the Notebook object; get a list of >> > Cell objects from the Worksheet; then pull out the input text from >> > each Cell object. The documentation for these objects are: >> > >> > >> http://www.sagemath.org/doc/reference/sagenb/notebook/notebook.htmlhttp://www.sagemath.org/doc/reference/sagenb/notebook/worksheet.htmlhttp://www.sagemath.org/doc/reference/sagenb/notebook/cell.html >> >> > >> > Again, I'm (obviously) not aware of a cleaner way to just pull out the >> > input text from a worksheet, and these two suggestions are just the >> > work-arounds I could think of. >> >> Thanks to all for the suggestions. >> >> David. >> >> > >> > As a side-note, the inverse process (converting from plain-text >> > commands to a sage worksheet) is easy; just upload it through the >> > notebook interface. >> > >> > -- Tianwei > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-support" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sage-support+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sage-support/qh769h%242kbh%241%40blaine.gmane.org.