First, switch to command mode by pressing ESC, then you can press z to recover the deleted cells, works even in Jupyter Lab which doesn't have "Undo Delete Cells" option under "Edit" tab.
if you've already restarted your kernel then %history or _ih[:n] would be empty. You can hope for a recent checkpoint to revert to. You can do this with File > Revert to Checkpoint.
If you want to be sure what's in the checkpoint before you revert - in your working directory (the one your notebook lives in) you'll have a hidden folder that stores your checkpoints. cd .ipynb_checkpoints will get you there. You can look inside the file and see if your lost code is there.
This has just saved me. Found this in an answer here
If the notebook kernel is still running and you executed the cell, you can find the content of all cells, including the deleted ones in _ih. For example, the last five cells:
If you need to undo something deleted inside a cell, press:
CTRL/CMD + Z
If you need to recover an entire deleted cell hit:
ESC + Z.
Especially this second tip might be useful if you delete a lot of cells by mistake.
First, switch to command mode by pressing ESC, then you can press
z
to recover the deleted cells, works even in Jupyter Lab which doesn't have "Undo Delete Cells" option under "Edit" tab.if you've already restarted your kernel then
%history
or_ih[:n]
would be empty. You can hope for a recent checkpoint to revert to. You can do this with File > Revert to Checkpoint.If you want to be sure what's in the checkpoint before you revert - in your working directory (the one your notebook lives in) you'll have a hidden folder that stores your checkpoints.
cd .ipynb_checkpoints
will get you there. You can look inside the file and see if your lost code is there.This has just saved me. Found this in an answer here
If the notebook kernel is still running and you executed the cell, you can find the content of all cells, including the deleted ones in
_ih
. For example, the last five cells:If you go to "Edit", there's an option for "Undo Delete Cells".
If you are familiar with shortcuts, you can do cmd + shift + p and then type in
undo
to recover as well. No need to moving your mouse around.