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An event system for Jupyter Applications and extensions.
Jupyter Events enables Jupyter Python Applications (e.g. Jupyter Server, JupyterLab Server, JupyterHub, etc.) to emit events—structured data describing things happening inside the application. Other software (e.g. client applications like JupyterLab) can listen and respond to these events.
Install Jupyter Events directly from PyPI:
pip install jupyter_events
or conda-forge:
conda install -c conda-forge jupyter_events
Documentation is available at jupyter-events.readthedocs.io.
The Jupyter Development Team is the set of all contributors to the Jupyter project. This includes all of the Jupyter subprojects.
The core team that coordinates development on GitHub can be found here: https://github.com/jupyter/.
Jupyter uses a shared copyright model. Each contributor maintains copyright over their contributions to Jupyter. But, it is important to note that these contributions are typically only changes to the repositories. Thus, the Jupyter source code, in its entirety is not the copyright of any single person or institution. Instead, it is the collective copyright of the entire Jupyter Development Team. If individual contributors want to maintain a record of what changes/contributions they have specific copyright on, they should indicate their copyright in the commit message of the change, when they commit the change to one of the Jupyter repositories.
With this in mind, the following banner should be used in any source code file to indicate the copyright and license terms:
# Copyright (c) Jupyter Development Team.
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
FAQs
Jupyter Event System library
We found that jupyter-events demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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