ipython_directive.txt
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Skipper Seabold
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r6151 | .. _ipython_directive: | ||
======================== | ||||
Bussonnier Matthias
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r8152 | IPython Sphinx Directive | ||
Skipper Seabold
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r6151 | ======================== | ||
The ipython directive is a stateful ipython shell for embedding in | ||||
sphinx documents. It knows about standard ipython prompts, and | ||||
extracts the input and output lines. These prompts will be renumbered | ||||
starting at ``1``. The inputs will be fed to an embedded ipython | ||||
interpreter and the outputs from that interpreter will be inserted as | ||||
well. For example, code blocks like the following:: | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [136]: x = 2 | ||||
In [137]: x**3 | ||||
Out[137]: 8 | ||||
will be rendered as | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [136]: x = 2 | ||||
In [137]: x**3 | ||||
Out[137]: 8 | ||||
.. note:: | ||||
This tutorial should be read side-by-side with the Sphinx source | ||||
for this document because otherwise you will see only the rendered | ||||
output and not the code that generated it. Excepting the example | ||||
above, we will not in general be showing the literal ReST in this | ||||
document that generates the rendered output. | ||||
The state from previous sessions is stored, and standard error is | ||||
trapped. At doc build time, ipython's output and std err will be | ||||
inserted, and prompts will be renumbered. So the prompt below should | ||||
be renumbered in the rendered docs, and pick up where the block above | ||||
left off. | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [138]: z = x*3 # x is recalled from previous block | ||||
In [139]: z | ||||
Out[139]: 6 | ||||
In [140]: print z | ||||
--------> print(z) | ||||
6 | ||||
In [141]: q = z[) # this is a syntax error -- we trap ipy exceptions | ||||
------------------------------------------------------------ | ||||
File "<ipython console>", line 1 | ||||
q = z[) # this is a syntax error -- we trap ipy exceptions | ||||
^ | ||||
SyntaxError: invalid syntax | ||||
The embedded interpreter supports some limited markup. For example, | ||||
you can put comments in your ipython sessions, which are reported | ||||
verbatim. There are some handy "pseudo-decorators" that let you | ||||
doctest the output. The inputs are fed to an embedded ipython | ||||
session and the outputs from the ipython session are inserted into | ||||
your doc. If the output in your doc and in the ipython session don't | ||||
match on a doctest assertion, an error will be | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [1]: x = 'hello world' | ||||
# this will raise an error if the ipython output is different | ||||
@doctest | ||||
In [2]: x.upper() | ||||
Out[2]: 'HELLO WORLD' | ||||
# some readline features cannot be supported, so we allow | ||||
# "verbatim" blocks, which are dumped in verbatim except prompts | ||||
# are continuously numbered | ||||
@verbatim | ||||
In [3]: x.st<TAB> | ||||
x.startswith x.strip | ||||
Multi-line input is supported. | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [130]: url = 'http://ichart.finance.yahoo.com/table.csv?s=CROX\ | ||||
.....: &d=9&e=22&f=2009&g=d&a=1&br=8&c=2006&ignore=.csv' | ||||
In [131]: print url.split('&') | ||||
--------> print(url.split('&')) | ||||
['http://ichart.finance.yahoo.com/table.csv?s=CROX', 'd=9', 'e=22', | ||||
You can do doctesting on multi-line output as well. Just be careful | ||||
when using non-deterministic inputs like random numbers in the ipython | ||||
directive, because your inputs are ruin through a live interpreter, so | ||||
if you are doctesting random output you will get an error. Here we | ||||
"seed" the random number generator for deterministic output, and we | ||||
suppress the seed line so it doesn't show up in the rendered output | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [133]: import numpy.random | ||||
@suppress | ||||
In [134]: numpy.random.seed(2358) | ||||
@doctest | ||||
In [135]: numpy.random.rand(10,2) | ||||
Out[135]: | ||||
array([[ 0.64524308, 0.59943846], | ||||
[ 0.47102322, 0.8715456 ], | ||||
[ 0.29370834, 0.74776844], | ||||
[ 0.99539577, 0.1313423 ], | ||||
[ 0.16250302, 0.21103583], | ||||
[ 0.81626524, 0.1312433 ], | ||||
[ 0.67338089, 0.72302393], | ||||
[ 0.7566368 , 0.07033696], | ||||
[ 0.22591016, 0.77731835], | ||||
[ 0.0072729 , 0.34273127]]) | ||||
Another demonstration of multi-line input and output | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [106]: print x | ||||
--------> print(x) | ||||
jdh | ||||
In [109]: for i in range(10): | ||||
.....: print i | ||||
.....: | ||||
.....: | ||||
0 | ||||
1 | ||||
2 | ||||
3 | ||||
4 | ||||
5 | ||||
6 | ||||
7 | ||||
8 | ||||
9 | ||||
Most of the "pseudo-decorators" can be used an options to ipython | ||||
mode. For example, to setup matplotlib pylab but suppress the output, | ||||
you can do. When using the matplotlib ``use`` directive, it should | ||||
occur before any import of pylab. This will not show up in the | ||||
rendered docs, but the commands will be executed in the embedded | ||||
interpreter and subsequent line numbers will be incremented to reflect | ||||
the inputs:: | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
:suppress: | ||||
In [144]: from pylab import * | ||||
In [145]: ion() | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
:suppress: | ||||
In [144]: from pylab import * | ||||
In [145]: ion() | ||||
Likewise, you can set ``:doctest:`` or ``:verbatim:`` to apply these | ||||
settings to the entire block. For example, | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
:verbatim: | ||||
In [9]: cd mpl/examples/ | ||||
/home/jdhunter/mpl/examples | ||||
In [10]: pwd | ||||
Out[10]: '/home/jdhunter/mpl/examples' | ||||
In [14]: cd mpl/examples/<TAB> | ||||
mpl/examples/animation/ mpl/examples/misc/ | ||||
mpl/examples/api/ mpl/examples/mplot3d/ | ||||
mpl/examples/axes_grid/ mpl/examples/pylab_examples/ | ||||
mpl/examples/event_handling/ mpl/examples/widgets | ||||
In [14]: cd mpl/examples/widgets/ | ||||
/home/msierig/mpl/examples/widgets | ||||
In [15]: !wc * | ||||
2 12 77 README.txt | ||||
40 97 884 buttons.py | ||||
26 90 712 check_buttons.py | ||||
19 52 416 cursor.py | ||||
180 404 4882 menu.py | ||||
16 45 337 multicursor.py | ||||
36 106 916 radio_buttons.py | ||||
48 226 2082 rectangle_selector.py | ||||
43 118 1063 slider_demo.py | ||||
40 124 1088 span_selector.py | ||||
450 1274 12457 total | ||||
You can create one or more pyplot plots and insert them with the | ||||
``@savefig`` decorator. | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
@savefig plot_simple.png width=4in | ||||
In [151]: plot([1,2,3]); | ||||
# use a semicolon to suppress the output | ||||
@savefig hist_simple.png width=4in | ||||
In [151]: hist(np.random.randn(10000), 100); | ||||
In a subsequent session, we can update the current figure with some | ||||
text, and then resave | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [151]: ylabel('number') | ||||
In [152]: title('normal distribution') | ||||
@savefig hist_with_text.png width=4in | ||||
In [153]: grid(True) | ||||
You can also have function definitions included in the source. | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [3]: def square(x): | ||||
...: """ | ||||
...: An overcomplicated square function as an example. | ||||
...: """ | ||||
...: if x < 0: | ||||
...: x = abs(x) | ||||
...: y = x * x | ||||
...: return y | ||||
...: | ||||
Then call it from a subsequent section. | ||||
.. ipython:: | ||||
In [4]: square(3) | ||||
Out [4]: 9 | ||||
In [5]: square(-2) | ||||
Out [5]: 4 | ||||
Writing Pure Python Code | ||||
------------------------ | ||||
Pure python code is supported by the optional argument `python`. In this pure | ||||
python syntax you do not include the output from the python interpreter. The | ||||
following markup:: | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
foo = 'bar' | ||||
print foo | ||||
foo = 2 | ||||
foo**2 | ||||
Renders as | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
foo = 'bar' | ||||
print foo | ||||
foo = 2 | ||||
foo**2 | ||||
We can even plot from python, using the savefig decorator, as well as, suppress | ||||
output with a semicolon | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
@savefig plot_simple_python.png width=4in | ||||
plot([1,2,3]); | ||||
Similarly, std err is inserted | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
foo = 'bar' | ||||
foo[) | ||||
Comments are handled and state is preserved | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
# comments are handled | ||||
print foo | ||||
If you don't see the next code block then the options work. | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
:suppress: | ||||
ioff() | ||||
ion() | ||||
Multi-line input is handled. | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
line = 'Multi\ | ||||
line &\ | ||||
support &\ | ||||
works' | ||||
print line.split('&') | ||||
Functions definitions are correctly parsed | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
def square(x): | ||||
""" | ||||
An overcomplicated square function as an example. | ||||
""" | ||||
if x < 0: | ||||
x = abs(x) | ||||
y = x * x | ||||
return y | ||||
And persist across sessions | ||||
.. ipython:: python | ||||
print square(3) | ||||
print square(-2) | ||||
Pretty much anything you can do with the ipython code, you can do with | ||||
with a simple python script. Obviously, though it doesn't make sense | ||||
to use the doctest option. | ||||
Pseudo-Decorators | ||||
================= | ||||
Here are the supported decorators, and any optional arguments they | ||||
take. Some of the decorators can be used as options to the entire | ||||
block (eg ``verbatim`` and ``suppress``), and some only apply to the | ||||
line just below them (eg ``savefig``). | ||||
@suppress | ||||
execute the ipython input block, but suppress the input and output | ||||
block from the rendered output. Also, can be applied to the entire | ||||
``..ipython`` block as a directive option with ``:suppress:``. | ||||
@verbatim | ||||
insert the input and output block in verbatim, but auto-increment | ||||
the line numbers. Internally, the interpreter will be fed an empty | ||||
string, so it is a no-op that keeps line numbering consistent. | ||||
Also, can be applied to the entire ``..ipython`` block as a | ||||
directive option with ``:verbatim:``. | ||||
@savefig OUTFILE [IMAGE_OPTIONS] | ||||
save the figure to the static directory and insert it into the | ||||
document, possibly binding it into a minipage and/or putting | ||||
code/figure label/references to associate the code and the | ||||
figure. Takes args to pass to the image directive (*scale*, | ||||
*width*, etc can be kwargs); see `image options | ||||
<http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/directives.html#image>`_ | ||||
for details. | ||||
@doctest | ||||
Compare the pasted in output in the ipython block with the output | ||||
generated at doc build time, and raise errors if they don’t | ||||
match. Also, can be applied to the entire ``..ipython`` block as a | ||||
directive option with ``:doctest:``. | ||||
Configuration Options | ||||
===================== | ||||
ipython_savefig_dir | ||||
The directory in which to save the figures. This is relative to the | ||||
Sphinx source directory. The default is `html_static_path`. | ||||
ipython_rgxin | ||||
The compiled regular expression to denote the start of IPython input | ||||
lines. The default is re.compile('In \[(\d+)\]:\s?(.*)\s*'). You | ||||
shouldn't need to change this. | ||||
ipython_rgxout | ||||
The compiled regular expression to denote the start of IPython output | ||||
lines. The default is re.compile('Out\[(\d+)\]:\s?(.*)\s*'). You | ||||
shouldn't need to change this. | ||||
ipython_promptin | ||||
The string to represent the IPython input prompt in the generated ReST. | ||||
The default is 'In [%d]:'. This expects that the line numbers are used | ||||
in the prompt. | ||||
ipython_promptout | ||||
The string to represent the IPython prompt in the generated ReST. The | ||||
default is 'Out [%d]:'. This expects that the line numbers are used | ||||
in the prompt. | ||||