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jupyter/accessibility

Jupyter Accessibility

🔔 Looking for accessibility docs?

Welcome to the GitHub repository for the Jupyter Accessibility Project. This software subproject was formed in early 2019. Its goal is to gather stakeholders interested in working to make Jupyter's core user-facing software and related tooling accessible.

These core user-facing software include:

Important notice As of August 2022 this software is not accessible. Significant work will be required to reach that goal. In the meantime, you can track the progress and initiatives in our Jupyter Accessibility Team Compass

Community projects:

No longer maintained community projects (not recommended):

Getting involved 🙌🏼

Join the conversation 💬

Join our JupyterLab accessibility meetings 🤝

Anyone is welcome to attend, if they would like to discuss a topic or to listen in.

We also have a public archive of all the previous meeting notes.

Links to accessibility standards and resources 🔗

One of our goals is to collect information about accessibility and create documentation to empower the Jupyter community to help us make our software accessible. Please use this section to begin to aggregate relevant third party standards, guides, and documentation related to this:

Contributing to this repo

Pre-commit hooks 🧹

This repository uses the prettier pre-commit hook to standardize our YAML and markdown structure.

  1. Before you can run the hooks, you need to install the pre-commit package manager:

    # using pip
    pip install pre-commit
    
    # if you prefer using conda
    conda install -c conda-forge pre-commit
  2. From the root of this project, install the git hook scripts:

    # install the pre-commit hooks
    pre-commit install
  3. Optional- run the hooks against the files in this repository

    # run the pre-commit hooks
    pre-commit run --all-files

Once installed, the pre-commit hooks will run automatically when you make a commit in version control.

Building the documentation 📖

The documentation is built with the Jupyter Book documentation engine.

Follow the instructions below to build the documentation.

Automatically with nox

The easiest way to build the documentation in this repository is to use the nox automation tool, a tool for quickly building environments and running commands within them. This ensures that your environment has all the dependencies needed to build the documentation.

To do so, follow these steps:

  1. Install nox

    pip install nox
  2. Build the documentation:

    nox -s docs

This should create a local environment in a .nox folder, build the documentation (as specified in the noxfile.py configuration), and the output will be in docs/_build/html.

To build live documentation that updates when you update local files, run the following command:

nox -s docs-live

Manually with conda

If you wish to manually build the documentation, you can use conda to do so.

  1. Create a conda environment to build the documentation.

    conda env create -n a11y-team-compass-docs python=3.9
  2. Activate the new environment and install the rest of the dependencies:

    conda activate a11y-team-compass-docs
    conda install -f docs/requirements.txt -c conda-forge
  3. Build the documentation:

    jupyterbook build docs

This will generate the HTML for the documentation in the docs/_build/html folder. You may preview the documentation by opening any of the .html files inside.