/spellchecker

Spellchecker for JupyterLab notebook markdown cells and file editor.

Primary LanguageTypeScriptBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

jupyterlab-spellchecker

Extension status Github Actions Status Binder PyPI version Conda version

A JupyterLab extension highlighting misspelled words in markdown cells within notebooks and in the text files.

The JupyterLab extension is based on the spellchecker Jupyter Notebook extension and relies on Typo.js for the actual spell checking. Spellchecker suggestions are available from the context menu. The style of the highlights can be customized in the Advanced Settings Editor.

The extension provides (Hunspell) SCOWL dictionaries for:

  • American, British, Canadian, and Australian English
  • French,
  • German (Germany, Austria, Switzerland)
  • Portuguese,
  • Spanish

and will also use the Hunspell dictionaries installed in known paths which vary by operating systems. If you use JupyterLab in a browser running on a different computer than the jupyter server, please note that the dictionaries need to be installed on the server machine.

You can add custom dictionary by placing Hunspell files it in dictionaries folder in one of the data locations as returned by:

jupyter --paths

You should place two files with extensions .aff and .dic, and name following BCP 47 standards. For more details, please see the example below.

JupyterLab Version

The extension has been tested up to JupyterLab version 3.0.

Installation

For JupyterLab 3.x:

pip install jupyterlab-spellchecker

or

conda install -c conda-forge jupyterlab-spellchecker

For JupyterLab 2.x:

jupyter labextension install @ijmbarr/jupyterlab_spellchecker

Adding dictionaries - example

If jupyter --paths looks like:

config:
    /home/your_name/.jupyter
    /usr/local/etc/jupyter
    /etc/jupyter
data:
    /home/your_name/.local/share/jupyter
    /usr/local/share/jupyter
    /usr/share/jupyter
runtime:
    /home/your_name/.local/share/jupyter/runtime

and you want to add Polish language, you would put pl_PL.aff and pl_PL.dic in /home/your_name/.local/share/jupyter/dictionaries (you will need to create this folder), so that the final structure looks similar to:

/home/your_name/.local/share/jupyter
├── dictionaries
│   ├── pl_PL.aff
│   └── pl_PL.dic
├── kernels
│   └── julia-1.5
│       ├── kernel.json
│       ├── logo-32x32.png
│       └── logo-64x64.png
├── nbconvert
│   └── templates
│       ├── html
│       └── latex
├── nbsignatures.db
├── notebook_secret
└── runtime

Where to get the dictionaries from?

Some good sources of dictionaries include:

Using online dictionaries

An alternative to saving the dictionary on your own disk (or more accurately on the disk where jupyter-server is set up) is fetching the dictionaries from a remote URL. This requires an Internet connection to load the dictionary (each time when you open JupyterLab or change the dictionary), and might be useful if you are not able to save dictionaries on disk (e.g. when using JupyterLab on JupyterHub configured by someone else).

To configure the online dictionaries go to Advanced Settings EditorSpellchecker and set onlineDictionaries to an array of JSON objects like in the example below:

[
    {
        "id": "en_US-online",
        "aff": "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/codemirror.spell-checker/latest/en_US.aff",
        "dic": "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/codemirror.spell-checker/latest/en_US.dic",
        "name": "My favorite variant of English"
    }
]

Contributing

Development install

Note: You will need NodeJS to build the extension package.

The jlpm command is JupyterLab's pinned version of yarn that is installed with JupyterLab. You may use yarn or npm in lieu of jlpm below.

# Clone the repo to your local environment
# Change directory to the jupyterlab_spellchecker directory
# Install package in development mode
pip install -e .
# Link your development version of the extension with JupyterLab
jupyter labextension develop . --overwrite
# Rebuild extension Typescript source after making changes
jlpm run build
pip install pytest

You can watch the source directory and run JupyterLab at the same time in different terminals to watch for changes in the extension's source and automatically rebuild the extension.

# Watch the source directory in one terminal, automatically rebuilding when needed
jlpm run watch
# Run JupyterLab in another terminal
jupyter lab

Before commit

Make sure that eslint passes:

jlpm run eslint:check

If there are any issues it might be possible to autofix them with:

jlpm run eslint

Run tests:

python -m pytest