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Added GTK support to ZeroMQ kernel....
Added GTK support to ZeroMQ kernel. We use an approach which is a combination of an gtk timer callback into our execution loop, like we do for Qt and Wx, I've run as tests several GTK examples found on the net, as well as multiple matplotlib scripts, and so far everything works as expected. The only catch is that we silently trap gtk.main_quit(), so examples that call it with a 'close' button or similar seem to not do anything. But their windows close normally and no other problems have been found. This solution uses code taken from an old bug report of ours: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/270856 specifically the attachment in this comment: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/270856/comments/6 along with the changes suggested by Michiel de Hoon there. Thanks to Ville and Michiel for that old discussion, which put me on the right track to figure out the details of the logic needed for GTK.

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dtutils.py
137 lines | 3.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
fperez
- New dtutils module for running doctests interactively with more...
r909 """Doctest-related utilities for IPython.
For most common uses, all you should need to run is::
from IPython.dtutils import idoctest
See the idoctest docstring below for usage details.
"""
import doctest
import sys
Brian Granger
ipapi.py => core/ipapi.py and imports updated.
r2027 from IPython.core import ipapi
ip = ipapi.get()
fperez
- New dtutils module for running doctests interactively with more...
r909
def rundoctest(text,ns=None,eraise=False):
"""Run a the input source as a doctest, in the caller's namespace.
:Parameters:
text : str
Source to execute.
:Keywords:
ns : dict (None)
Namespace where the code should be executed. If not given, the
caller's locals and globals are used.
eraise : bool (False)
If true, immediately raise any exceptions instead of reporting them at
the end. This allows you to then do interactive debugging via
IPython's facilities (use %debug after the fact, or with %pdb for
automatic activation).
"""
name = 'interactive doctest'
filename = '<IPython console>'
if eraise:
runner = doctest.DebugRunner()
else:
runner = doctest.DocTestRunner()
parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
if ns is None:
f = sys._getframe(1)
ns = f.f_globals.copy()
ns.update(f.f_locals)
test = parser.get_doctest(text,ns,name,filename,0)
runner.run(test)
runner.summarize(True)
def idoctest(ns=None,eraise=False):
"""Interactively prompt for input and run it as a doctest.
To finish entering input, enter two blank lines or Ctrl-D (EOF). If you
use Ctrl-C, the example is aborted and all input discarded.
:Keywords:
ns : dict (None)
Namespace where the code should be executed. If not given, the IPython
interactive namespace is used.
eraise : bool (False)
If true, immediately raise any exceptions instead of reporting them at
the end. This allows you to then do interactive debugging via
IPython's facilities (use %debug after the fact, or with %pdb for
automatic activation).
end_mark : str ('--')
String to explicitly indicate the end of input.
"""
inlines = []
empty_lines = 0 # count consecutive empty lines
run_test = True
if ns is None:
ns = ip.user_ns
Brian Granger
Continuing a massive refactor of everything.
r2205 ip.savehist()
fperez
- New dtutils module for running doctests interactively with more...
r909 try:
while True:
line = raw_input()
if not line or line.isspace():
empty_lines += 1
else:
empty_lines = 0
if empty_lines>=2:
break
inlines.append(line)
except EOFError:
pass
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print "KeyboardInterrupt - Discarding input."
run_test = False
Brian Granger
Continuing a massive refactor of everything.
r2205 ip.reloadhist()
fperez
- New dtutils module for running doctests interactively with more...
r909
if run_test:
# Extra blank line at the end to ensure that the final docstring has a
# closing newline
inlines.append('')
rundoctest('\n'.join(inlines),ns,eraise)
# For debugging of this module itself.
if __name__ == "__main__":
t = """
>>> for i in range(10):
... print i,
...
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
"""
t2 = """
A simple example::
>>> for i in range(10):
... print i,
...
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Some more details::
>>> print "hello"
hello
"""
t3 = """
A failing example::
>>> x=1
>>> x+1
3
"""