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# [**7.** Tips and Tricks](@id tips-and-tricks) |
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This section lists some tips and tricks that might be useful for using |
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Literate. |
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### [Filesize of generated notebooks](@id notebook-filesize) |
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When Literate executes a notebook the return value, i.e. the result of the |
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last Julia expression in each cell is captured. By default Literate generates |
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multiple renderings of the result in different output formats or |
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[MIME](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME)s, just like |
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[IJulia.jl](https://github.com/JuliaLang/IJulia.jl) does. All of these renderings |
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are embedded in the notebook and it is up to the notebook frontend viewer to select |
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the most appropriate format to show to the user. |
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A common example is images, which can often be displayed in multiple formats, e.g. PNG |
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(`image/png`), SVG (`image/svg+xml`) and HTML (`text/html`). As a result, the filesize of |
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the generated notebook can become large. |
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In order to remedy this you can use the clever Julia package |
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[`DisplayAs`](https://github.com/tkf/DisplayAs.jl) to limit the output capabilities of |
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and object. For example, to "force" and image to be captures as `image/png` only, |
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you can use |
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```julia |
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import DisplayAs |
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img = plot(...) |
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img = DisplayAs.PNG(img) |
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``` |
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This can save some memory, since the image is never captured in e.g. SVG or |
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HTML formats. |
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!!! note |
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It is best to always let the object be showable as `text/plain`. This can be achieved |
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by nested calls to `DisplayAs` output types. For example, to limit an image `img` to |
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be showable as just `image/png` and `text/plain` you can use |
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```julia |
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img = plot(...) |
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img = DisplayAs.Text(DisplayAs.Text(img)) |
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``` |
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