بنقرة واحدة
marimo-notebook
Write a marimo notebook in a Python file in the right format.
التثبيت باستخدام Codex أو Claude انسخ هذا Prompt والصقه في Codex أو Claude أو مساعد آخر ليراجع صفحة Skill ويثبّتها لك.
القائمة
Write a marimo notebook in a Python file in the right format.
التثبيت باستخدام Codex أو Claude انسخ هذا Prompt والصقه في Codex أو Claude أو مساعد آخر ليراجع صفحة Skill ويثبّتها لك.
استنادا إلى تصنيف SOC المهني
| name | marimo-notebook |
| description | Write a marimo notebook in a Python file in the right format. |
# Run as script (non-interactive, for testing)
uv run <notebook.py>
# Run interactively in browser
uv run marimo run <notebook.py>
# Edit interactively
uv run marimo edit <notebook.py>
Use mo.app_meta().mode == "script" to detect CLI vs interactive:
@app.cell
def _(mo):
is_script_mode = mo.app_meta().mode == "script"
return (is_script_mode,)
Show all UI elements always. Only change the data source in script mode.
if not is_script_mode conditionals# Always show the widget
@app.cell
def _(ScatterWidget, mo):
scatter_widget = mo.ui.anywidget(ScatterWidget())
scatter_widget
return (scatter_widget,)
# Only change data source based on mode
@app.cell
def _(is_script_mode, make_moons, scatter_widget, np, torch):
if is_script_mode:
# Use synthetic data for testing
X, y = make_moons(n_samples=200, noise=0.2)
X_data = torch.tensor(X, dtype=torch.float32)
y_data = torch.tensor(y)
data_error = None
else:
# Use widget data in interactive mode
X, y = scatter_widget.widget.data_as_X_y
# ... process data ...
return X_data, y_data, data_error
# Always show sliders - use their .value in both modes
@app.cell
def _(mo):
lr_slider = mo.ui.slider(start=0.001, stop=0.1, value=0.01)
lr_slider
return (lr_slider,)
# Auto-run in script mode, wait for button in interactive
@app.cell
def _(is_script_mode, train_button, lr_slider, run_training, X_data, y_data):
if is_script_mode:
# Auto-run with slider defaults
results = run_training(X_data, y_data, lr=lr_slider.value)
else:
# Wait for button click
if train_button.value:
results = run_training(X_data, y_data, lr=lr_slider.value)
return (results,)
if StatementsMarimo's reactivity means cells only run when their dependencies are ready. Don't add unnecessary guards:
# BAD - the if statement prevents the chart from showing
@app.cell
def _(plt, training_results):
if training_results: # WRONG - don't do this
fig, ax = plt.subplots()
ax.plot(training_results['losses'])
fig
return
# GOOD - let marimo handle the dependency
@app.cell
def _(plt, training_results):
fig, ax = plt.subplots()
ax.plot(training_results['losses'])
fig
return
The cell won't run until training_results has a value anyway.
Don't wrap code in try/except blocks unless you're handling a specific, expected exception. Let errors surface naturally.
# BAD - hiding errors behind try/except
@app.cell
def _(scatter_widget, np, torch):
try:
X, y = scatter_widget.widget.data_as_X_y
X = np.array(X, dtype=np.float32)
# ...
except Exception as e:
return None, None, f"Error: {e}"
# GOOD - let it fail if something is wrong
@app.cell
def _(scatter_widget, np, torch):
X, y = scatter_widget.widget.data_as_X_y
X = np.array(X, dtype=np.float32)
# ...
Only use try/except when:
Marimo only renders the final expression of a cell. Indented or conditional expressions won't render:
# BAD - indented expression won't render
@app.cell
def _(mo, condition):
if condition:
mo.md("This won't show!") # WRONG - indented
return
# GOOD - final expression renders
@app.cell
def _(mo, condition):
result = mo.md("Shown!") if condition else mo.md("Also shown!")
result # This renders because it's the final expression
return
Variables in for loops that would conflict across cells need underscore prefix:
# Use _name, _model to make them cell-private
for _name, _model in items:
...
# /// script
# requires-python = ">=3.12"
# dependencies = [
# "marimo",
# "torch>=2.0.0",
# ]
# ///
Use pathlib.Path for file path operations instead of os.path:
# GOOD - use pathlib
from pathlib import Path
data_dir = Path(tempfile.mkdtemp())
parquet_file = data_dir / "data.parquet"
# BAD - avoid os.path
import os
parquet_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, "data.parquet")
When working on a notebook it is important to check if the notebook can run. That's why marimo provides a check command that acts as a linter to find common mistakes.
uvx marimo check <notebook.py>
Make sure these are checked before handing a notebook back to the user.