[0] https://docs.spyder-ide.org/current/panes/editor.html#code-c...
# %% [markdown] # Another Markdown cell # %% # This is a code cell class A(): def one(): return 1 # %% Optional title [cell type] key="value"
```{code-cell} LANGUAGE :key: value CODE TO BE EXECUTED ```
--- kernelspec: name: javascript display_name: JavaScript --- # Another markdown cell ```{code-cell} javascript // This is a code cell console.log("hello javascript kernel"); ```
The vim plugin I was talking about was vim-slime [0], which seems to date from 2007 and does have regions delimited with #%%.
Slime comes from Emacs originally, but I could not find if the original Emacs slime has regions.
Matlab also has those, which they call code sections [1]. Hard to find when they were introduced. Maybe 2021, but I suspect older.
None of those stores gge output of the command.
[0] https://vimawesome.com/plugin/vim-slime
[1] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/matlab_prog/create-and...
# %% "^# %%"
Org-mode supports code blocks: https://orgmode.org/manual/Structure-of-Code-Blocks.html :
#+BEGIN_SRC <language> and #+END_SRC.
Notebook interface; Markdown + MathTeX: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notebook_interface ;
$ \delta_{2 3 4} = 5 $ $$ \Delta_\text{3 4 5} = 56 $$