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ChatGPT for Jupyter

Binder

This is a browser extension that brings ChatGPT into your Jupyter notebooks. The way I always describe Jupyter to my friends is that it's a tool that handles the mundane task of writing things down for you. When I saw ChatGPT, I thought that there was no better home for ChatGPT than inside my Jupyter notebooks.

This extension will reuse an existing login session that you must first establish with OpenAI's ChatGPT service. If you aren't signed in already, or your session timed out, it will prompt you to sign in.

It only works with the classic Jupyter notebook user interface. Help is welcome to make it work with JupyterLab. It works with both local Jupyter notebooks that you access via http://localhost or notebooks hosted on the public MyBinder service at https://mybinder.org.

If you want it to work with Jupyter notebooks from a different URL, you'll need to edit the manifest.json file. It works by injecting script from the extension into the Jupyter notebook web page and asking the extension to use the bearer token obtained by logging into the Open AI service to communicate with the service; the browser extension effectively acts as a privileged proxy.

This is the only reliable way that I've found to do this as OpenAI hasn't released an official API for the ChatGPT service.

Sample session

Here's a simple example writing a ChatGPT prompt within a Jupyter notebook. You create a markdown cell and enter your prompt. To distinguish a ChatGPT prompt cell from a regular markdown cell, you must have ##### chat as the first line in your markdown.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

Ordinarily in Jupyter, you press SHIFT+ENTER to render the markdown cell. The ChatGPT Jupyter extension overloads this keystroke to send your prompt to ChatGPT.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

Once ChatGPT has finished sending the response, ChatGPT Jupyter will format the code and extract the code into a separate Jupyter code cell, ready for you to execute.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

After executing the code, you'll get this result:

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

Sometimes ChatGPT doesn't quite get it right. I wanted the first 10 prime numbers, but the Sieve of Eratosthenes algorithm wasn't really designed for this: it wants to compute all the prime numbers up to a limit. Instead let's have it modify the program to count the number of prime numbers that are less than 100.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

This time it adds a counter to count the prime numbers as it goes. But it left the first run in the code. Since ChatGPT Jupyter extracts the code into a cell, you can just edit the code in the cell to delete the first call to the sieve() function.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

Let's run it to make sure.

Screenshot of ChatGPT Jupyter

What did we see?

Jupyter does the mundane task of writing things down for you in a local notebook file. The extension makes it easy to ask ChatGPT to write code for you and quickly try out that code interactively within the same notebook.

We were writing Python code in the chat session, but you can do this for any language that has as Jupyter kernel available for it. For example, if you like C# or F#, you can use the .NET Interactive kernel instead.

Installation

Local Install for Chrome/Edge

  1. Download build.zip from Releases
  2. Unzip the file
  3. In Chrome/Edge go to the extensions page (chrome://extensions or edge://extensions).
  4. Enable Developer Mode.
  5. Drag the unzipped folder anywhere on the page to import it (do not delete the folder afterwards).

Build from source for Chrome/Edge

  1. Clone the repo
  2. Install dependencies with npm
  3. Run ./build.sh for Chrome.
  4. Load the build directory to your browser

Description of Jupyter-ChatGPT written by ... ChatGPT

Welcome to Jupyter-ChatGPT!

Jupyter is a highly productive user interface for ChatGPT, providing a number of benefits to users:

  • Simplicity: Jupyter simplifies the process of working with ChatGPT, allowing you to easily write and execute code without the need for complicated command-line interfaces or other tools.

  • Flexibility: Jupyter provides a powerful and flexible platform for working with ChatGPT, allowing you to easily mix and match code, text, and other media to create custom chatbots and other interactive applications.

  • Collaboration: Jupyter makes it easy to collaborate with others on ChatGPT projects, allowing you to share notebooks and work together in real time.

  • Portability: Jupyter notebooks can be easily shared and run on a variety of platforms, making it easy to access and use ChatGPT from anywhere.

With Jupyter-ChatGPT, you can leverage the power of ChatGPT and Jupyter to quickly and easily create custom chatbots and other interactive applications. Give it a try and see for yourself how Jupyter can make working with ChatGPT a breeze!

Why a browser extension?

At the time that I created this project, ChatGPT was released as a technology preview. That meant no public API.

One of the cool things that you can do with a browser extension is make cross-origin requests without being subject to the security constraints of the browser. In effect, the browser extension runs in a privileged mode.

This lets me reuse the bearer token that is obtained by authenticating with OpenAI. As long as the user can log into OpenAI through the official web site, this extension will be able to reuse that token to communicate to the ChatGPT service from Jupyter.

The extension asks for permission to inject Javascript into localhost web pages.

Interaction Design

Below is a description of the ChatGPT query experience within a Jupyter notebook. It also describes the behavior of the extension.

ChatGPT queries

Users enter ChatGPT queries in a Jupyter markdown cell. For a markdown cell to be a ChatGPT cell, the cell must have ##### chat markdown in the first line of the cell.

##### chat

Write a Python program that implements the quicksort algorithm in a function and uses it to sort a list of 100 random integers. Show the list before and after sorting.

My rationale for choosing this identifier is that users of markdown cells rarely use that level of indentation. It also formats distinctly (boldface italics) when the markdown is rendered. I'm not happy with having to type FIVE

characters before chat, so I'm open to suggestions about how to improve this

experience.

The markdown cell's metadata is tagged as follows:

cell.metadata.chatgpt_cell="query";

Detecting the programming language

In the sample chat query cell above, I indicate that I would like ChatGPT to write a Python program.

The extension examines the contents of the query to look for mentions of a programming language. This information is used later to ensure that the code blocks returned from ChatGPT are formatted correctly. Modern syntax coloring libraries like highlight.js can auto-detect the programming language, but unfortunately Jupyter doesn't use highlight.js AFAIK, so I need to examine the query text to infer the programming language.

The function detectProgrammingLanguage(query) will inspect the query string to see if there are any mentions of the programming languages listed as keys in the keywordToProgrammingLanguage dictionary. The first one is found is the programming language tagged against the code blocks returned from ChatGPT. If none is found the returned language is unknown.

The keywordToProgrammingLanguage dictionary maps strings to markdown programming language identifiers. For example, there are entries for c# and csharp in the dictionary, both of which map to csharp as the identifier for the programming language. This identifier is used to to decorate the code blocks to ensure correct syntax coloring.

The result of this analysis is saved in the cell metadata for that query cell for future use. This is the Javascript code that saves these values:

cell.metadata.chatgpt_language="<programming language>";

ChatGPT threads

A Jupyter notebook can contain multiple ChatGPT threads. Each thread is identified by a thread name:

##### chat:<thread name>

When the query is processed, the thread name is added to the cell metadata:

cell.metadata.chatgpt_thread="<thread name>";

The thread name propagates to all result cells from that query. If thread name is not present in a chat cell, e.g., it's an unadorned chat then the chatgpt_thread value is an empty string.

User interaction

When the user wants to send a query to ChatGPT, they hit SHIFT+ENTER within the markdown cell.

This keyboard shortcut is the same keyboard shortcut that is used to render markdown, so it should be familiar to most Jupyter users.

Build query string using existing context

When the query cell is processed the programming language (if any) and the thread name are extracted from the user input.

The thread name is used to build the query context. The query context is how ChatGPT maintains the "state" of the chat. There is no state (to my knowledge) maintained on the ChatGPT server; all context must be passed from the client.

The set of Jupyter cells that form the query context is filtered by the thread name if present.

As mentioned later, the ChatGPT response typically contains code and that code is extracted into independent code cells. The cell metadata in those code cells are tagged with the thread name. So when constructing the query context, code cells tagged with the thread name are included.

One benefit of this design is that the user can edit the code in those cells directly and those changes are sent back to ChatGPT. So the user now has a choice between editing the code directly in the cell vs. instructing ChatGPT to do the editing as part of the next query.

For now the original raw response is not included as part of the context. This is experimental. If I find that ChatGPT performs poorly without that context I will endeavour to reconstruct any changes made to the code cells and merge those changes back into the original raw response and send that as part of the context.

There is a limit to the number of tokens that can be part of the query context. I haven't empirically determined the maximum size of the query context. Once I have, I'll add a limit constraint.

The user in a chat may start referring to previous code as "the program" instead of saying "the python program". So in the event that we don't detect a programming language reference in the query cell, we start going backwards through the query context until we find the first cell that contains a non-blank chatgpt_language field in its cell metadata and use that as the language.

Parsing the ChatGPT response

A ChatGPT response can contain a mixture of explanatory text and code blocks. The response is streamed into a markdown cell which is created when the query is sent to ChatGPT. That cell's metadata is tagged:

cell.metadata.chatgpt_cell="raw_response";
cell.metadata.chatgpt_thread="<thread name>"; // or ""
cell.metadata.chatgpt_language="<programming language>";

The incremental nature of how the response is streamed back from the ChatGPT server makes it resemble someone typing in the response. Since the ChatGPT server is often under severe load, we initialize the raw_response markdown cell with a waiting for a response message:

##### waiting for a response from ChatGPT...

Once the ChatGPT server has started streaming a response, the incremental response is streamed into the markdown cell. At the top of the markdown cell, we maintain a timer that shows how long the response has been streaming from the server:

##### receiving response from ChatGPT. Elapsed time zz seconds

<response streamed here>...

Once the ChatGPT response has completed streaming, we parse the response to extract the code blocks from the response. We generate separate Jupyter notebook code cells for each code block in the raw response. Those code cells' cell metadata is tagged:

cell.metadata.chatgpt_cell="code";
cell.metadata.chatgpt_thread="<thread name>";
cell.metadata.chatgpt_language="<programming language>";

Users are free to execute or delete as oftentimes necessary because ChatGPT tends to want to return additional explanatory information like how to run the program or how to install a library unless you explicitly tell it not to.

If a cell is modified, the modified code is sent back to ChatGPT in subsequent queries.

Credit

This project is inspired by and originally forked from Wang Dàpéng/chat-gpt-google-extension. I removed the fork (by talking to a GitHub chatbot no less!) because it was distracting; this project really doesn't have much in common with the Google extension outside of the mechanics of calling ChatGPT which is pretty stable.

This project is inspired by ZohaibAhmed/ChatGPT-Google

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A browser extension that lets you chat with ChatGPT from any local Jupyter notebook.

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