This manual assists you in creating and collaborating on JupyterBooks for educational purposes. Some parts are specifically aimed for teachers at Delft University of Technology, although all material and tools are openly available. This manual aims at providing an easy start and advanced usages for new and existing users with or without skills on this topic. it is part of TeachBooks, for more information visit https://teachbooks.io/.
If you encounter any issues and you have a TU Delft account, report it by clicking the gitlab icon and lightbulb on the top right corner of this page. Or contribute directly by creating a merge request in the repository.
If you have questions, contact Tom van Woudenberg, Robert Lanzafame or our TA Julie Kirsch at [email protected], also for non-TU Delft account holders. TU Delft account holder can also contact us in the MS Teams Open Interactive Textbooks Community
We really value your feedback on this manual. This helps us improving it. Please keep using the manual as you build your own Jupyter Book and come back to fill out this short survey.
This book will continue to develop, so feel free to contribute https://github.com/TeachBooks/manual! You can do so directly by forking this repository and creating a merge request.
The released book can be found on on https://teachbooks.io/manual. This page shows the built book of the release
branch All branches will also be visible as seen in the action's summaries: https://github.com/TeachBooks/mirror_teachbook_manual/actions
Some parts of this book are taken from other sources in the form of submodules (linked in the folder book/external). To contribute to those pages, contribute to the source repository directly with a fork and merge/pull request. If you intent to clone this boko including its submodules, clone using: git clone --recurse-submodules [email protected]:TeachBooks/manual.git
Happy book building!