| --- |
| title: Thoughts |
| emoji: ๐ |
| colorFrom: green |
| colorTo: pink |
| sdk: docker |
| pinned: false |
| short_description: I have a lot of thoughts. I'm going to dispose of them here. |
| --- |
| |
| To get started working with quarto we recommend you first [install quarto](https://quarto.org/docs/get-started/) locally so that you can render the site without Docker. |
| We also recommend the [Quarto VS Code Extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=quarto.quarto) which provides syntax highlighting, code completion, a preview button and more. |
|
|
| The quarto source is located in `src` and you can preview the site with: |
|
|
| ``` |
| quarto preview src |
| ``` |
|
|
| A web browser should open up with a live preview of the site. |
|
|
| ## Making changes |
|
|
| The `src/_quarto.yml` contains the site-level configuration for the quarto website and tells quarto which files to render, and how they should be organized. |
| For example if you wanted to modify the [site navigation](https://quarto.org/docs/reference/site-navigation.html) you should modify this file. |
|
|
| Quarto can render markdown, ipynb, and .qmd files, and you can mix formats in a single document. |
|
|
| ## Executing code |
|
|
| One of the main virtues of Quarto is that it lets you combine code and text in a single document. |
| By default if you include a code chunk in your document, Quarto will execute that code and include the output in the rendered document. |
| This is great for reproducibility and for creating documents that are always up-to-date. |
|
|
| ```{python} |
| import seaborn as sns |
| import matplotlib.pyplot as plt |
| |
| # Sample data |
| tips = sns.load_dataset("tips") |
| |
| # Create a seaborn plot |
| sns.set_style("whitegrid") |
| g = sns.lmplot(x="total_bill", y="tip", data=tips, aspect=2) |
| g = (g.set_axis_labels("Total bill (USD)", "Tip").set(xlim=(0, 60), ylim=(0, 12))) |
| |
| plt.title("Tip by Total Bill") |
| plt.show() |
| ``` |
|
|