Data science and Jupyter Notebooks development with Python and R. Installs dependencies from your requirements.txt file, and the Python, R, and Jupyter VS Code extensions.
| Metadata | Value |
|---|---|
| Categories | Core, Languages |
| Image type | Dockerfile |
| Published image | ghcr.io/microsoft/datascience-py-r |
| Published image architecture(s) | x86-64 |
| Container host OS support | Linux, macOS, Windows |
| Container OS | Ubuntu |
| Languages, platforms | Python, R, Jupyter |
You can directly reference pre-built versions of .devcontainer/Dockerfile by using the image property in .devcontainer/devcontainer.json.
Refer to this guide for more details.
This container installs all Python development utilities using pipx to avoid impacting the global Python environment. You can use this same utility add additional utilities in an isolated environment. For example:
pipx install prospectorNote that if you change the version of Python from the default, you'll need to run a few commands to update the utilities and pipx. More on that next.
You can install different versions of Python by changing the Python feature version in the devcontainer.json file.
You can install different versions of Python than the one in this image by running the following from a terminal (as covered in the user FAQ for Anaconda):
conda install python=3.6
pip install --no-cache-dir pipx
pipx uninstall pipx
pipx reinstall-allSee the pipx documentation for additional information.
By default, frameworks like Flask only listens to localhost inside the container. As a result, we recommend using the forwardPorts property (available in v0.98.0+) to make these ports available locally.
"forwardPorts": [5000]The appPort property publishes rather than forwards the port, so applications need to listen to * or 0.0.0.0 for the application to be accessible externally. This conflicts with the defaults of some Python frameworks, but fortunately the forwardPorts property does not have this limitation.
This image will automatically install dependencies from the requirements.txt file in the parent folder when the container is built. You can change this behavior by altering the postCreateCommand in the devcontainer.json.
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE