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How do I increase the cell width of the Jupyter/ipython notebook in my browser?

I would like to increase the width of the ipython notebook in my browser. I have a high-resolution screen, and I would like to expand the cell width/size to make use of this extra space.

Thanks!

EDIT / ANSWER : 5/2017

I now use jupyterthemes: https://github.com/dunovank/jupyter-themes

and this command:

jt -t oceans16 -f roboto -fs 12 -cellw 100%

which sets the width to 100% with a nice theme.

Is there a way apply the new witdth to the output formatting? If I use print(...) to output a matrix or a list, the line break still occures at the same position and therefor the output is not using the added space.
Try np.set_printoptions(250)
Thanks! np.set_printoptions(linewidth=110) works for me.
@vgoklani Sorry, but 'np' ? Where does that come from?
@Brandt import numpy as np

M
MaxNoe

If you don't want to change your default settings, and you only want to change the width of the current notebook you're working on, you can enter the following into a cell:

from IPython.display import display, HTML
display(HTML("<style>.container { width:100% !important; }</style>"))

Nice. This looks like it only changes the code/markdown cells. Is there a way to also have it do the output cells?
This solution worked for me ! I did not have to install any lib or package to use it.
@becko according to julia discourse this works: display("text/html", "<style>.container { width:100% !important; }</style>")
Holly Molly this has changed my life to a better... Thank you so much!!! Been so tired of looking into that screwed 600px width box while having a 2k 30'' monitor!!
add display(HTML("<style>.output_result { max-width:100% !important; }</style>")) to change the output cells width!
R
Renaud

That div.cell solution didn't actually work on my IPython, however luckily someone suggested a working solution for new IPythons:

Create a file ~/.ipython/profile_default/static/custom/custom.css (iPython) or ~/.jupyter/custom/custom.css (Jupyter) with content

.container { width:100% !important; }

Then restart iPython/Jupyter notebooks. Note that this will affect all notebooks.


These little snippets of information should be posted some place, thanks again!
This was extremely useful
Starting IPython 4.1 custom folder location has changed to ~/.jupyter/custom/.
I had to restart Jupyter notebook (4.1.0) for it to work. I put the above css in ~/.jupyter/custom/custom.css
100% doesn't look very nice, I changed it to 90%
j
jvd10

To get this to work with jupyter (version 4.0.6) I created ~/.jupyter/custom/custom.css containing:

/* Make the notebook cells take almost all available width */
.container {
    width: 99% !important;
}   

/* Prevent the edit cell highlight box from getting clipped;
 * important so that it also works when cell is in edit mode*/
div.cell.selected {
    border-left-width: 1px !important;
}

This works in Linux! But where do I need to save it in Windows?
Try running jupyter --config-dir, then create custom\custom.css in whatever location that command returns.
@jvd10 this did not work for me. Does custom.css have any other code besides the snippet above? Also how does Jupyter know to use it?
On linux and osx at least, by default jupyter looks for a hidden directory called .jupyter for configuration files including customizations like the above. The above should be the only contents of the custom.css. See here for some more info: jupyter.readthedocs.io/en/latest/projects/…
T
Thamme Gowda

It's time to use jupyterlab

Finally, a much-needed upgrade has come to notebooks. Jupyterlab uses the full width of your window like any other full-fledged native IDE by default.

All you have to do is:

pip install jupyterlab
# if you use conda
conda install -c conda-forge jupyterlab
# to run 
jupyter lab    # instead of jupyter notebook

https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1400/1*OneJZOqKqBZ9oN80kRX7kQ.png


JupyterLab is still in beta and has some regressions from the regular notebooks (by design). One notable is is forbidding JS by default and needing extensions for every little JS visualisation
And how can you change the width of a Jupyter Lab cell?
I've struggled for an hour making jupyter lab to work. at first no graphics (pyplot / plotly) was showing. The docs don't mention you must install extensions for that. Tried to install the plotly extension. found out you need nodejs for that. installed both, now I get "Cannot find template: "index.html"" message. At this point I gave up, I'm staying with jupyter notebook.
jupyter lab has responsive UI => to change the width of the cell, simply resize your browser window. I have been using jupyter lab for about 3 years and counting, and I never had an issue. Suggestion: If you have an issue with jupyter lab, you probably have a messy environment with conflicting installations. Use conda or such and keep env cleans.
@CiprianTomoiagă JS execution is no longer forbidden in JupyterLab (for quite a while now actually).
G
Gunay Anach

What I do usually after new installation is to modify the main css file where all visual styles are stored. I use Miniconda but location is similar with others C:\Miniconda3\Lib\site-packages\notebook\static\style\style.min.css

With some screens these resolutions are different and more than 1. To be on the safe side I change all to 98% so if I disconnect from my external screens on my laptop I still have 98% screen width.

Then just replace 1140px with 98% of the screen width.

@media (min-width: 1200px) {
  .container {
    width: 1140px;
  }
}

https://i.stack.imgur.com/6adwp.png

After editing

@media (min-width: 1200px) {
  .container {
    width: 98%;
  }
}

https://i.stack.imgur.com/GJlZ4.png

Update

Recently had to wider Jupyter cells on an environment it is installed, which led me to come back here and remind myself.

If you need to do it in virtual env you installed jupyter on. You can find the css file in this subdir

env/lib/python3.6/site-packages/notebook/static/style/stye.min.css

This is awesome! It's simple and accomplishes exactly what is needed.
@Gunay /notebook does not exist in the directory for me.
Do you know the version of your python (python -V when you activate your environment) and how did you create the virtual env? Did you use venv module on Python/Conda?
If I could give you 10 likes, I would. Brilliant!
S
Student

You can set the CSS of a notebook by calling a stylesheet from any cell. As an example, take a look at the 12 Steps to Navier Stokes course.

In particular, creating a file containing

<style>
    div.cell{
        width:100%;
        margin-left:1%;
        margin-right:auto;
    }
</style>

should give you a starting point. However, it may be necessary to also adjust e.g div.text_cell_render to deal with markdown as well as code cells.

If that file is custom.css then add a cell containing:

from IPython.core.display import HTML
def css_styling():
    styles = open("custom.css", "r").read()
    return HTML(styles)
css_styling()

This will apply all the stylings, and, in particular, change the cell width.


This doens't work in the latest IPython (version > 2). Check this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/24207353/2108548
Or if you just want to change it for the current notebook in recent ipythons and jupyter, see @jjinking's answer :)
A
AaronDT

This is the code I ended up using. It stretches input & output cells to the left and right. Note that the input/output number indication will be gone:

from IPython.core.display import display, HTML
display(HTML("<style>.container { width:100% !important; }</style>"))
display(HTML("<style>.output_result { max-width:100% !important; }</style>"))
display(HTML("<style>.prompt { display:none !important; }</style>"))

cool! I would only exclude the last line since it makes the cells execution information go away(cells left part, that shows the excecution order and an * when execution is not finished yet)
v
volodymyr

(As of 2018, I would advise trying out JupyterHub/JupyterLab. It uses the full width of the monitor. If this is not an option, maybe since you are using one of the cloud-based Jupyter-as-a-service providers, keep reading)

(Stylish is accused of stealing user data, I have moved on to using Stylus plugin instead)

I recommend using Stylish Browser Plugin. This way you can override css for all notebooks, without adding any code to notebooks. We don't like to change configuration in .ipython/profile_default, since we are running a shared Jupyter server for the whole team and width is a user preference.

I made a style specifically for vertically-oriented high-res screens, that makes cells wider and adds a bit of empty-space in the bottom, so you can position the last cell in the centre of the screen. https://userstyles.org/styles/131230/jupyter-wide You can, of course, modify my css to your liking, if you have a different layout, or you don't want extra empty-space in the end.

Last but not least, Stylish is a great tool to have in your toolset, since you can easily customise other sites/tools to your liking (e.g. Jira, Podio, Slack, etc.)

@media (min-width: 1140px) {
  .container {
    width: 1130px;
  }
}

.end_space {
  height: 800px;
}

yes, Stylish is great! Can you please add the code needed for the extra space at the bottom ? I always have an empty cell with lots of blank lines in order to have the real last cell centred -_- .
Stylish was taken down yesterday for stealing users' browsing history: gadgets.ndtv.com/internet/news/…
b
bizi

For Chrome users, I recommend Stylebot, which will let you override any CSS on any page, also let you search and install other share custom CSS. However, for our purpose we don't need any advance theme. Open Stylebot, change to Edit CSS. Jupyter captures some keystrokes, so you will not be able to type the code below in. Just copy and paste, or just your editor:

#notebook-container.container {
    width: 90%;
}

Change the width as you like, I find 90% looks nicer than 100%. But it is totally up to your eye.


Awesome suggestion for jupyter notebook but does so much more!
@bizi, do I click inside a code cell and then right click, select Stylebot, edit CSS and copy and paste what you have? If so, it did not work for me. I just got fatter margins on both sides.
m
mongmong

I made some modification to @jvd10's solution. The '!important' seems too strong that the container doesn't adapt well when TOC sidebar is displayed. I removed it and added 'min-width' to limit the minimal width.

Here is my .juyputer/custom/custom.css:

/* Make the notebook cells take almost all available width and limit minimal width to 1110px */
.container {
    width: 99%;
    min-width: 1110px;
}   

/* Prevent the edit cell highlight box from getting clipped;
 * important so that it also works when cell is in edit mode*/
div.cell.selected {
    border-left-width: 1px;
}

s
szeitlin

Note that if you do this the old way, you'll now get a deprecation warning. This uses the newer submodule naming:

from IPython.display import HTML

HTML("<style>.container { width:100% !important; }</style>")

s
smishra

I tried everything and nothing worked for me, I ended up using displaying my data frame as HTML as follows

from IPython.display import HTML    
HTML (pd.to_html())

M
Maksim

For Firefox/Chrome users, a nice way to achieve 100% width is to use a custom TamperMonkey script.

The benefits are

configure this once in your browser, no need to modify the server configuration. works with multiple jupyter servers. TamperMonkey is trusted, maintained, and stable. Lots of additional customization is possible via javascript.

This script works for me https://gist.githubusercontent.com/mrk-andreev/2a9c2538fad0b687c27e192d5948834f/raw/6aa1148573dc20a22fca126e56e3b03f4abf281b/jpn_tmonkey.js


D
Debajyoti Dutta

adding to answers by @jdv10 and @gerenuk

The best option is to add and tweak the custom.css file. Below I am sharing my CSS file contents which I use to squeeze out the maximum screen area in a Jupyter Notebook.

Since it targets the vanilla CSS codes of the rendered page, it is supposed to work for all types of language used for coding on the Notebook.

/* Notebook styling */ body, p, div.rendered_html { color: #93a1a1; font-family: 'PT Serif', Georgia, Times, 'Times New Roman', serif; font-size: 11pt; } body { background-color: #eee8d5 !important; } /* the following controls aspects which are around the cells */ #notebook { background-color: #073642 !important; box-shadow: inset 20px 36px 20px -35px black !important; margin: 1px !important; padding: 1px !important; } #notebook-container { padding: 2px !important; } /* Make the notebook cells take almost all available width */ .container { width:99.5% !important; /*margin:.5% !important;*/ /*color: #93a1a1 !important;*/ color: black !important; background-color: lightblue !important; } /* Cell output */ .rendered_html pre, .rendered_html code { color: inherit !important; background-color: inherit !important; } .rendered_html table, .rendered_html td, .rendered_html th { border: 1px solid #586e75 !important; } div.cell { width:100% !important; margin: 5px !important; /* margin-left:2px !important; */ /* margin-right:2px !important; */ padding: 2px !important; /* the following overrides the background color of the input area */ /* background-color: yellow !important; */ /* border-color: black !important; */ } /* Prevent the edit cell highlight box from getting clipped; * important so that it also works when cell is in edit mode*/ div.cell.selected { border-left-width: 5px !important; border-right-width: 1px !important; border-top-width: 2px !important; border-bottom-width: 2px !important; border-color: red !important; } /*this is for the area to the left of the editor or input area*/ div.run_this_cell { width: auto !important; color: green !important; padding: 0 !important; padding-top: 5px !important; padding-left: 5px !important; font-weight: bold !important; font: 2em sans-serif; } div.input_area { border-color: green !important; background-color: #ffffdd !important; } .prompt { line-height: 1em !important; } div.prompt { min-width: auto; background-color: white; } div.input_prompt { color: #268bd2 !important; color: #000000 !important; font-weight: bold !important; border: 1px solid #ff9900 !important; background-color: greenyellow; padding-right: 0px !important; text-align: center !important; width: auto !important; font-size: 10px !important; } div.output_area { color: #000000 !important; background-color: #e2e2ff !important; font-size: 0.9em !important; } /* Syntax highlighting */ .cm-s-ipython span.cm-comment { /*color: #6c71c4 !important;*/ color: midnightblue !important; color: rgb(100, 100, 170) !important; font-style: italic !important; } .cm-s-ipython span.cm-string { color: rgb(100, 20, 29) !important; }