- π Summary
- β¨ Key Features
- π¦ Installation
- π Update Jupygrader
- π Usage
- π Create an autogradable notebook
- π§ Utility functions
- π License
Jupygrader is a Python package for automated grading of Jupyter notebooks. It provides a framework to:
- Execute and grade Jupyter notebooks containing student work and test cases
- Generate comprehensive reports in multiple formats (JSON, HTML, TXT)
- Extract student code from notebooks into separate Python files
- Verify notebook integrity by computing hashes of test cases and submissions
- Executes notebooks in a controlled, temporary environment
- Preserves the original notebook while creating graded versions
- Adds grader scripts to notebooks to evaluate test cases
- Generates detailed grading results including:
- Individual test case scores
- Overall scores and summaries
- Success/failure status of each test
- Produces multiple output formats for instructors to review:
- Graded notebook (.ipynb)
- HTML report
- JSON result data
- Plaintext summary
- Extracted Python code
- Includes metadata like Python version, platform, and file hashes for verification
Jupygrader is designed for educational settings where instructors need to grade student work in Jupyter notebooks, providing automated feedback while maintaining records of submissions and grading results.
pip install jupygraderpip install --upgrade jupygraderimport jupygrader
notebook_file_path = 'path/to/notebook.ipynb'
jupygrader.grade_notebooks(notebook_file_path)Supplying a pathlib.Path() object is supported.
import jupygrader
from pathlib import Path
notebook_path = Path('path/to/notebook.ipynb')
jupygrader.grade_notebooks(notebook_path)If the output_dir_path is not specified, the output files will be stored to the same directory as the notebook file.
import jupygrader
jupygrader.grade_notebooks([{
"notebook_path": 'path/to/notebook.ipynb',
"output_path": 'path/to/output'
}])The instructor authors only one "solution" notebook, which contains both the solution code and test cases for all graded parts.
Jupygrader provides a simple drag-and-drop interface to generate a student-facing notebook that removes the solution code and obfuscates test cases if required.
Any code between # YOUR CODE BEGINS and # YOUR CODE ENDS are stripped in the student version.
import pandas as pd
# YOUR CODE BEGINS
sample_series = pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20])
# YOUR CODE ENDS
print(sample_series)nbgrader syntax (### BEGIN SOLUTION, ### END SOLUTION) is also supported.
import pandas as pd
### BEGIN SOLUTION
sample_series = pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20])
### END SOLUTION
print(sample_series)In the student-facing notebook, the code cell will look like:
import pandas as pd
# YOUR CODE BEGINS
# YOUR CODE ENDS
print(sample_series)A graded test case requires a test case name and an assigned point value.
- The
_test_casevariable should store the name of the test case. - The
_pointsvariable should store the number of points, either as an integer or a float.
_test_case = 'create-a-pandas-series'
_points = 2
pd.testing.assert_series_equal(sample_series, pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20]))If you want to prevent learners from seeing the test case code, you can optionally set _obfuscate = True to base64-encode the test cases.
Note that this provides only basic obfuscation, and students can easily decode the string to reveal the original code.
We may introduce an encryption method in the future.
Instructor notebook
_test_case = 'create-a-pandas-series'
_points = 2
_obfuscate = True
pd.testing.assert_series_equal(sample_series, pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20]))Student notebook
# DO NOT CHANGE THE CODE IN THIS CELL
_test_case = 'create-a-pandas-series'
_points = 2
_obfuscate = True
import base64 as _b64
_64 = _b64.b64decode('cGQudGVzdGluZy5hc3NlcnRfc2VyaWVzX2VxdWFsKHNhbXBsZV9zZXJpZXMsIHBkLlNlcmllcyhbLT\
IwLCAtMTAsIDEwLCAyMF0pKQ==')
eval(compile(_64, '<string>', 'exec'))Add hidden test cases
Hidden test cases only run while grading.
_test_case = 'create-a-pandas-series'
_points = 2
### BEGIN HIDDEN TESTS
pd.testing.assert_series_equal(sample_series, pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20]))
### END HIDDEN TESTS_test_case = 'create-a-pandas-series'
_points = 2
if 'is_jupygrader_env' in globals():
pd.testing.assert_series_equal(sample_series, pd.Series([-20, -10, 10, 20]))If a test case needs to be updated before grading, use the jupygrader.replace_test_case() function.
This is useful when learners have already submitted their Jupyter notebooks, but the original notebook contains an incorrect test case.
nb = nbformat.read(notebook_path, as_version=4)
jupygrader.replace_test_case(nb, 'q1', '_test_case = "q1"\n_points = 6\n\nassert my_var == 3')Below is a sample code snippet demonstrating how to replace multiple test cases using a dictionary.
nb = nbformat.read(notebook_path, as_version=4)
new_test_cases = {
'test_case_01': '_test_case = "test_case_01"\n_points = 6\n\npass',
'test_case_02': '_test_case = "test_case_02"\n_points = 3\n\npass'
}
for tc_name, new_tc_code in new_test_cases.items():
jupygrader.replace_test_case(nb, tc_name, new_tc_code)jupygrader is distributed under the terms of the MIT license.
