Jupyter is an open community of data enthusiasts who believe in the power of open tools and standards for education, research, and data analytics.

Where to learn

We welcome contributions and contributors of all kinds - whether they come as contributions to code, participation in the community, opening issues and pointing out bugs, or simply sharing your work with your colleagues and friends.

To learn more about contributing, see the Jupyter Contributing guide.

Jupyter is organized into sub-projects, each of which has their own goals, practices, and spaces for communication. To get started, see this list of Jupyter Subprojects.

Where to talk

Jupyter has a number of online communication channels to help keep in touch. Here are several of the most-prominent ones.

Remember that we have a strong commitment to being an open, inclusive, and positive community. Please read the Jupyter Code of Conduct for guidance on how to interact with others.

Jupyter Forum

A forum for asynchronous communication across the Jupyter community and many of its subprojects.

Jupyter Chatroom

For real-time discussion project-wide. Also used by several sub-projects for their team conversation.

Jupyter General Mailing List

A Google Group for general discussions of Jupyter's use.

Jupyter GitHub

A place where the community collaborates on the development of Jupyter software.

Jupyter in Education Mailing List

A Google Group for general discussions of Jupyter's use in education.

Jupyter for Research Facilities

A Google Group for discussions of Jupyter's use at scientific research facilities (such as X-ray light sources, observatories, supercomputers, etc.).

Jupyter on Stack Overflow

A popular third party site for programmers to ask and answer questions about Jupyter.

Jupyter Community Guides

Information about community, communication and governance.

Jupyter Contributor Guides

Contribution guidelines.

Live events

Project Jupyter events provide a forum for community members to come together in person or virtually to share and learn from each other.

This page is for in-person, one-of-a-kind events; for community engagement, see the community page.

Calendar

This is a calendar of regular online events. It might not be exhaustive.

See this page for more information.

JupyterCon

Global JupyterCon conferences provide opportunities for the Jupyter community to come together to learn and share.

Jupyter Community Workshops

Jupyter Community Workshops bring together small groups (approximately 12 to 24 people) of Jupyter community members and core contributors for high-impact strategic work and community engagement on focused topics.

Much of Jupyter’s work is accomplished through remote, online collaboration; yet, over the years, we have found deep value in focused in-person work over a few days. These in-person events are particularly useful for tackling challenging development and design projects, growing the community of contributors, and strengthening collaborations.

Round 1: 2018

Round 2: 2019

Round 3: 2020-2022

Round 4: 2022-2023

Jupyter Community Calls

Jupyter Community Calls provide a regular virtual forum for community-wide discussion and sharing.