# Advanced options ## Metadata filtering The metadata that is included in the text notebooks is governed by the two options `notebook_metadata_filter` and `cell_metadata_filter`. The default value for these options are - `notebook_metadata_filter="kernelspec,jupytext"`, i.e. by default, only the Jupytext and the kernel metadata are included: - `cell_metadata_filter=all,-autoscroll,-collapsed,-scrolled,-trusted,-ExecuteTime`, i.e. by default all the cell metadata are included, except those listed with a negative sign. Suppose you want to keep all the notebook metadata but `widgets` and `varInspector` in the YAML header, and that for cell metadata, you want to allow `ExecuteTime` and `autoscroll`, but not `hide_output`. Then, you could either add ```python notebook_metadata_filter="all,-widgets,-varInspector" cell_metadata_filter="ExecuteTime,autoscroll,-hide_output" ``` to your [`jupytext.toml`](config.md) file, or set these options for one notebook using the [Jupytext CLI](using-cli.md) with ``` jupytext --opt notebook_metadata_filter=all,-widgets,-varInspector --opt cell_metadata_filter=ExecuteTime,autoscroll,-hide_output notebook.py ``` If you wanted no notebook or cell metadata at all in the text notebooks, you could add this to your [`jupytext.toml`](config.md) file: ```python notebook_metadata_filter="-all" cell_metadata_filter="-all" ``` It is possible to filter nested metadata - use a dot to represent the nested fields. For example, if you wanted to include the Jupytext metadata, but not the Jupytext version number, you can use: ```python notebook_metadata_filter="-jupytext.text_representation.jupytext_version" ``` Finally, note that you can _hide_ the notebook metadata in an HTML comment in `.md` files - just set `hide_notebook_metadata=true` either at the command line or in the `jupytext.toml` file. ## Magic commands In the `percent` and `light` script formats, magic commands (Jupyter commands prefixed by `%` or `%%`) are commented out in scripts. You can change this by using the `comment_magics` option, either in the `jupytext.toml` file or at the command line with `jupytext --opt`. ## Active and inactive cells You might want to make some cell active only when the notebook is run in Jupyter, or active only when the `.py` file is interpreted by Python. To do so, add an `active-ipynb` tag to the cells that should only be executed in the `.ipynb` file, and an `active-py` tag to the cells that should be executed only in the Python script. ## More options There are a couple more options available - please have a look at the `JupytextConfiguration` class in [config.py](https://github.com/mwouts/jupytext/blob/main/src/jupytext/config.py).