Number¶
marimo.ui.number
¶
number(
start: Optional[float] = None,
stop: Optional[float] = None,
step: Optional[float] = None,
value: Optional[float] = None,
debounce: bool = False,
*,
label: str = "",
on_change: Optional[
Callable[[Optional[Numeric]], None]
] = None,
full_width: bool = False
)
Bases: UIElement[Optional[Numeric], Optional[Numeric]]
A number picker over an interval.
Example.
Or for integer-only values:
Or from a dataframe series:
Attributes.
value
: the value of the number, possiblyNone
start
: the minimum value of the intervalstop
: the maximum value of the intervalstep
: the number increment
Initialization Args.
start
: optional, the minimum value of the intervalstop
: optional, the maximum value of the intervalstep
: the number incrementvalue
: default valuedebounce
: whether to debounce (rate-limit) value updates from the frontendlabel
: markdown label for the elementon_change
: optional callback to run when this element's value changesfull_width
: whether the input should take up the full width of its container
batch
¶
batch(**elements: UIElement[JSONType, object]) -> batch
Convert an HTML object with templated text into a UI element.
This method lets you create custom UI elements that are represented by arbitrary HTML.
Example.
user_info = mo.md(
'''
- What's your name?: {name}
- When were you born?: {birthday}
'''
).batch(name=mo.ui.text(), birthday=mo.ui.date())
In this example, user_info
is a UI Element whose output is markdown
and whose value is a dict with keys 'name'
and 'birthday
'
(and values equal to the values of their corresponding elements).
Args.
- elements: the UI elements to interpolate into the HTML template.
callout
¶
callout(
kind: Literal[
"neutral", "danger", "warn", "success", "info"
] = "neutral"
) -> Html
Create a callout containing this HTML element.
A callout wraps your HTML element in a raised box, emphasizing its
importance. You can style the callout for different situations with the
kind
argument.
Examples.
form
¶
form(
label: str = "",
*,
bordered: bool = True,
loading: bool = False,
submit_button_label: str = "Submit",
submit_button_tooltip: Optional[str] = None,
submit_button_disabled: bool = False,
clear_on_submit: bool = False,
show_clear_button: bool = False,
clear_button_label: str = "Clear",
clear_button_tooltip: Optional[str] = None,
validate: Optional[
Callable[[Optional[JSONType]], Optional[str]]
] = None,
on_change: Optional[
Callable[[Optional[T]], None]
] = None
) -> form[S, T]
Create a submittable form out of this UIElement
.
Use this method to create a form that gates the submission
of a UIElement
s value until a submit button is clicked.
The value of the form
is the value of the underlying
element the last time the form was submitted.
Examples.
Convert any UIElement
into a form:
Combine with HTML.batch
to create a form made out of multiple
UIElements
:
form = (
mo.ui.md(
'''
**Enter your prompt.**
{prompt}
**Choose a random seed.**
{seed}
'''
)
.batch(
prompt=mo.ui.text_area(),
seed=mo.ui.number(),
)
.form()
)
Args.
label
: A text label for the form.bordered
: whether the form should have a borderloading
: whether the form should be in a loading statesubmit_button_label
: the label of the submit buttonsubmit_button_tooltip
: the tooltip of the submit buttonsubmit_button_disabled
: whether the submit button should be disabledclear_on_submit
: whether the form should clear its contents after submittingshow_clear_button
: whether the form should show a clear buttonclear_button_label
: the label of the clear buttonclear_button_tooltip
: the tooltip of the clear buttonvalidate
: a function that takes the form's value and returns an error message if the value is invalid, orNone
if the value is valid
from_series
staticmethod
¶
Create a number picker from a dataframe series.
send_message
¶
Send a message to the element rendered on the frontend from the backend.