AI coding assistant for JupyterLab
npm install @notebook-intelligence/notebook-intelligenceNotebook Intelligence (NBI) is an AI coding assistant and extensible AI framework for JupyterLab. It can use GitHub Copilot or AI models from any other LLM Provider, including local models from Ollama. NBI greatly boosts the productivity of JupyterLab users with AI assistance.
Notebook Intelligence provides a dedicated mode for Claude Code integration. In Claude mode, NBI uses Claude Code for AI Agent Chat UI and Claude models for inline chat (in editors) and auto-complete suggestions.
This integration brings the AI tools and features supported by Claude Code such as built-in tools, skills, MCP servers, custom commands and many more to JupyterLab.

#### Claude Configuration
You can configure the Claude settings in the NBI Settings dialog. You can access this dialog by using the gear icon in the NBI Chat UI or from JupyterLab Settings menu -> Notebook Intelligence Settings. Toggle the Enable Claude mode option to enable Claude mode. The other options are as follows:
- Chat model: Select the Claude model to use for Agent Chat UI and inline chat.
- Auto-complete model: Select the Claude model to use for auto-complete suggestions.
- Chat Agent setting sources: Select the setting sources to use for Claude Code. You can choose to use user settings, project settings or both. These settings are the standard Claude Code settings such as tools, skills, MCP servers, custom commands and many more that are saved in the user's home directory and project directory. See Claude Code documentation for more details.
- Chat Agent tools: Select the tools to activate in the Agent Chat UI. Claude Code tools are always activated. Jupyter UI tools are the tools that are provided by NBI to interact with JupyterLab UI (authoring notebooks, running cells, etc.).
- API key: Enter your Claude API key.
- Base URL: Enter your Claude base URL.

In Agent Mode, built-in AI agent creates, edits and executes notebooks for you interactively. It can detect issues in the cells and fix for you.
Use the sparkle icon on cell toolbar or the keyboard shortcuts to show the inline chat popover.
Keyboard shortcuts: Ctrl + G / Cmd + G is the shortcut to show the inline chat popover and Ctrl + Enter / Cmd + Enter is the shortcut to accept the suggestion. Clicking Escape key closes the popover.
Auto-complete suggestions are shown as you type. Clicking Tab key accepts the suggestion. NBI provides auto-complete suggestions in code cells and Python file editors.


See blog posts for more features and usage.
- Introducing Notebook Intelligence!
- Building AI Extensions for JupyterLab
- Building AI Agents for JupyterLab
- Notebook Intelligence now supports any LLM Provider and AI Model!
NBI requires JupyterLab >= 4.0.0. To install the extension, run the command below and restart JupyterLab.
``bash`
pip install notebook-intelligence
You can configure the model provider and model options using the Notebook Intelligence Settings dialog. You can access this dialog from JupyterLab Settings menu -> Notebook Intelligence Settings, using /settings command in NBI Chat or by using the command palette. For more details, see the blog post.

Notebook Intelligence extension for JupyterLab
This extension is composed of a Python package named notebook_intelligence@notebook-intelligence/notebook-intelligence
for the server extension and a NPM package named
for the frontend extension.
Notebook Intelligence can remember your GitHub Copilot login so that you don't need to re-login after a JupyterLab or system restart. Please be aware of the security implications of using this feature.
> [!CAUTION]
> If you configure NBI to remember your GitHub Copilot login, it will encrypt the token and store into a data file at ~/.jupyter/nbi/user-data.json. You should never share this file with others as they can access your tokens.NBI_GH_ACCESS_TOKEN_PASSWORD
> Even though the token is encrypted, it is done so by using a default password and that's why it can be decrypted by others. In order to prevent that you can specify a custom password using the environment variable .
`bash`
NBI_GH_ACCESS_TOKEN_PASSWORD=my_custom_password
To let Notebook Intelligence remember your GitHub access token, go to Notebook Intelligence Settings dialog and check the option Remember my GitHub Copilot access token as shown below.

If your stored access token fails to login (due to expiration or other reasons), you will be prompted to relogin on the UI.
- Notebook Edit (nbi-notebook-edit): Edit notebook using the JupyterLab notebook editor.
- Notebook Execute (nbi-notebook-execute): Run notebooks in JupyterLab UI.
- Python File Edit (nbi-python-file-edit): Edit Python files using the JupyterLab file editor.
- File Edit (nbi-file-edit): Edit files in the Jupyter root directory.
- File Read (nbi-file-read): Read files in the Jupyter root directory.
- Command Execute (nbi-command-execute): Execute shell commands using embedded terminal in Agent UI or JupyterLab terminal.
All built-in toolas are enabled by default in Agent Mode. However, you can disable them and make them controlled by an environment variable.
In order to disable any built-in tool use the disabled_tools config:
`python`
c.NotebookIntelligence.disabled_tools = ["nbi-notebook-execute","nbi-python-file-edit"]
Valid built-in tool values are nbi-notebook-edit, nbi-notebook-execute, nbi-python-file-edit, nbi-file-edit, nbi-file-read, nbi-command-execute.
In order to disable a built-in tool by default but allow re-enabling using an environment variable use the allow_enabling_tools_with_env config:
`python`
c.NotebookIntelligence.allow_enabling_tools_with_env = True
Then the environment variable NBI_ENABLED_BUILTIN_TOOLS can be used to re-enable specific built-in tools.
`bash`
export NBI_ENABLED_BUILTIN_TOOLS=nbi-notebook-execute,nbi-python-file-edit
NBI saves configuration at ~/.jupyter/nbi/config.json. It also supports environment wide base configuration at . Organizations can ship default configuration at this environment wide config path. User's changes will be stored as overrides at ~/.jupyter/nbi/config.json.
These config files are used for saving LLM provider, model and MCP configuration. Note that API keys you enter for your custom LLM providers will also be stored in these config files.
> [!IMPORTANT]
> Note that updating config.json manually requires restarting JupyterLab to take effect.
NBI seamlessly integrates with MCP servers. It supports servers with both Standard Input/Output (stdio) and Server-Sent Events (SSE) transports. The MCP support is limited to server tools at the moment.
You can easily add MCP servers to NBI by editing the configuration file ~/.jupyter/nbi/mcp.json. Environment wide base configuration is also support using the file at .
> [!NOTE]
> Using MCP servers requires an LLM model with tool calling capabilities. All of the GitHub Copilot models provided in NBI support this feature. If you are using other providers make sure you choose a tool calling capable model.
> [!CAUTION]
> Note that most MCP servers are run on the same computer as your JupyterLab installation and they can make irreversible changes to your computer and/or access private data. Make sure that you only install MCP servers from trusted sources.
`json`
{
"mcpServers": {
"filesystem": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem",
"/Users/mbektas/mcp-test"
]
}
}
}
You can use Agent mode to access tools provided by MCP servers you configured.
For servers with stdio transport, you can also set additional environment variables by using the env key. Environment variables are specified as key value pairs.
`json`
"mcpServers": {
"servername": {
"command": "",
"args": [],
"env": {
"ENV_VAR_NAME": "ENV_VAR_VALUE"
}
},
}
Below is an example of a server configuration with Streamable HTTP transport. For Streamable HTTP transport servers, you can also specify headers to be sent as part of the requests.
`json`
"mcpServers": {
"remoterservername": {
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/mcp",
"headers": {
"Authorization": "Bearer mysecrettoken"
}
},
}
If you have multiple servers configured but you would like to disable some for a while, you can do so by using the disabled key. servername2 will be disabled and not available in @mcp chat participant.
`json`
"mcpServers": {
"servername1": {
"command": "",
"args": [],
},
"servername2": {
"command": "",
"args": [],
"disabled": true
},
}
NBI includes a powerful ruleset system that allows you to define custom guidelines and best practices that are automatically injected into AI prompts. This helps ensure consistent coding standards, project-specific conventions, and domain knowledge across all AI interactions.
#### How It Works
Rules are markdown files with optional YAML frontmatter stored in ~/.jupyter/nbi/rules/. They are automatically discovered and applied based on context (file type, notebook kernel, chat mode).
#### Creating Rules
Global Rules - Apply to all contexts:
Create a file like ~/.jupyter/nbi/rules/01-coding-standards.md:
`markdown
---
priority: 10
---
- Always use type hints in Python functions
- Prefer list comprehensions over loops when appropriate
- Add docstrings to all public functions
`
Mode-Specific Rules - Apply only to specific chat modes:
NBI supports mode-specific rules for three modes:
- ask - Question/answer mode
- agent - Autonomous agent mode with tool access
- inline-chat - Inline code generation and editing
Create a file like ~/.jupyter/nbi/rules/modes/agent/01-testing.md:
`markdown
---
priority: 20
scope:
kernels: ['python3']
---
When writing code in agent mode:
- Always include error handling
- Add logging for debugging
- Test edge cases
`
#### Rule Frontmatter Options
`yaml`
---
apply: always # 'always', 'auto', or 'manual'
active: true # Enable/disable the rule
priority: 10 # Lower numbers = higher priority
scope:
file_patterns: # Apply to specific file patterns
- '*.py'
- 'test_*.ipynb'
kernels: # Apply to specific notebook kernels
- 'python3'
- 'ir'
directories: # Apply to specific directories
- '/projects/ml'
---
#### Configuration
Enable/Disable Rules System:
Edit ~/.jupyter/nbi/config.json:
`json`
{
"rules_enabled": true
}
Auto-Reload Configuration:
Rules are automatically reloaded when changed (enabled by default). This behavior is controlled by the NBI_RULES_AUTO_RELOAD environment variable.
To disable auto-reload:
`bash`
export NBI_RULES_AUTO_RELOAD=false
jupyter lab
Or to enable (default):
`bash`
export NBI_RULES_AUTO_RELOAD=true
jupyter lab
#### Managing Rules
Rules are automatically discovered from:
- Global rules: ~/.jupyter/nbi/rules/*.md~/.jupyter/nbi/rules/modes/{mode}/*.md
- Mode-specific rules: where {mode} can be:ask
- - For question/answer interactionsagent
- - For autonomous agent operationsinline-chat` - For inline code generation
-
Rules are applied in priority order (lower numbers first) and can be toggled on/off without deleting the files.
For building locally and contributing see the developer documentatation.