Exporting worksheets is not possible and downloading the raw file gives you something without the plots.
Export to HTML: render a HTML page according to some template and transformation rules, which strip away a lot and make it "self sustained" (e.g. a small CSS file, maybe even embedded). The plots are collected in a subdirectory.
Export to PDF: maybe the best way is to create a latex file with all plots in a new sub-directory. e.g. for basename.sagews -> basename.pdf/basename.tex.
Then, the user can open the basename.tex document, automatically run pdflatex, and aquire the PDF file with everything embedded. The additional benefit is, that it is straight forward to make some additional modifications, tweak a bit around, etc. Unsolved: What happens when the document is exported again? Easy solution would be to always add a sortable timestamp to the new directory, e.g. basename.pdf-yyyymmdd-HHMM to indicate that it was a snapshot at a certain point in time.
Exporting worksheets is not possible and downloading the raw file gives you something without the plots.
basename.sagews
->basename.pdf/basename.tex
. Then, the user can open the basename.tex document, automatically run pdflatex, and aquire the PDF file with everything embedded. The additional benefit is, that it is straight forward to make some additional modifications, tweak a bit around, etc. Unsolved: What happens when the document is exported again? Easy solution would be to always add a sortable timestamp to the new directory, e.g.basename.pdf-yyyymmdd-HHMM
to indicate that it was a snapshot at a certain point in time.