Editor overview¶
This guide introduces some of marimo editor's features, including a variables panel, dependency graph viewer, table of contents, HTML export, GitHub copilot, code formatting, a feedback form, and more.
Configuration¶
The editor exposes of a number of settings for the current notebook, as well as user-wide configuration that will apply to all your notebooks. These settings include the option to display the current notebook in full width, to use vim keybindings, to enable GitHub copilot, and more.
To access these settings, click the gear icon in the top-right of the editor:
A non-exhaustive list of settings:
- Outputs above or below code cells
- Disable/enable autorun
- Package installation
- Vim keybindings
- Dark mode
- Auto-save
- Auto-complete
- Editor font-size
- Code formatting with ruff/black
- GitHub Copilot
- LLM coding assistant
- Module autoreloading
Vim keybindings¶
marimo supports vim keybindings.
Additional bindings/features:
gd
- go to definitiondd
- when a cell is empty, delete it
Overview panels¶
marimo ships with the IDE panels that provide an overview of your notebook
- file explorer: view the file tree, open other notebooks
- variables: explore variable values, see where they are defined and used, with go-to-definition
- data explorer: see dataframe and table schemas at a glance
- dependency graph: view dependencies between cells, drill-down on nodes and edges
- package manager: add and remove packages, and view your current environment
- table of contents: corresponding to your markdown
- documentation - move your text cursor over a symbol to see its documentation
- logs: a continuous stream of stdout and stderr
- scratchpad: a scratchpad cell where you can execute throwaway code
- snippets - searchable snippets to copy directly into your notebook
- feedback - share feedback!
These panels can be toggled via the buttons in the left of the editor.
Cell actions¶
Click the three dots in the top right of a cell to pull up a context menu, letting you format code, hide code, send a cell to the top or bottom of the notebook, give the cell a name, and more.
Drag a cell using the vertical dots to the right of the cell.
Right-click menus¶
marimo supports context-sensitive right-click menus in various locations of the editor. Right-click on a cell to open a context-sensitive menu; right click on the create-cell button (the plus icon) to get options for the cell type to create.
Go-to-definition¶
- Click on a variable in the editor to see where it's defined and used
Cmd/Ctrl-Click
on a variable to jump to its definition- Right-click on a variable to see a context menu with options to jump to its definition
Keyboard shortcuts¶
We've kept some well-known keyboard
shortcuts for notebooks (Ctrl-Enter
, Shift-Enter
), dropped others, and added a few of our own. Hit Ctrl/Cmd-Shift-H
to pull up the shortcuts.
We know keyboard shortcuts are very personal; you can remap them in the configuration.
Missing a shortcut? File a GitHub issue.
Command palette¶
Hit Cmd/Ctrl+K
to open the command palette.
Missing a command? File a GitHub issue.
Share on our online playground¶
Get a link to share your notebook via our online playground:
Our online playground uses WebAssembly. Most but not all packages on PyPI are supported. Local files are not synchronized to our playground.
Export to static HTML¶
Export the current view your notebook to static HTML via the notebook menu:
You can also export to HTML at the command-line:
Send feedback¶
The question mark icon in the panel tray opens a dialog to send anonymous feedback. We welcome any and all feedback, from the tiniest quibbles to the biggest blue-sky dreams.
If you'd like your feedback to start a conversation (we'd love to talk with you!), please consider posting in our GitHub issues or Discord. But if you're in a flow state and can't context switch out, the feedback form has your back.