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Brian E Granger
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r1258 | .. _initial config: | ||
Brian Granger
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r2277 | ============================================================= | ||
Outdated configuration information that might still be useful | ||||
============================================================= | ||||
.. warning:: | ||||
All of the information in this file is outdated. Until the new | ||||
configuration system is better documented, this material is being kept. | ||||
Brian E Granger
|
r1258 | |||
This section will help you set various things in your environment for | ||||
your IPython sessions to be as efficient as possible. All of IPython's | ||||
configuration information, along with several example files, is stored | ||||
in a directory named by default $HOME/.ipython. You can change this by | ||||
defining the environment variable IPYTHONDIR, or at runtime with the | ||||
command line option -ipythondir. | ||||
Fernando Perez
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r1695 | If all goes well, the first time you run IPython it should automatically create | ||
a user copy of the config directory for you, based on its builtin defaults. You | ||||
can look at the files it creates to learn more about configuring the | ||||
system. The main file you will modify to configure IPython's behavior is called | ||||
ipythonrc (with a .ini extension under Windows), included for reference | ||||
:ref:`here <ipythonrc>`. This file is very commented and has many variables you | ||||
can change to suit your taste, you can find more details :ref:`here | ||||
<customization>`. Here we discuss the basic things you will want to make sure | ||||
things are working properly from the beginning. | ||||
Brian E Granger
|
r1258 | |||
Color | ||||
===== | ||||
The default IPython configuration has most bells and whistles turned on | ||||
(they're pretty safe). But there's one that may cause problems on some | ||||
systems: the use of color on screen for displaying information. This is | ||||
very useful, since IPython can show prompts and exception tracebacks | ||||
with various colors, display syntax-highlighted source code, and in | ||||
general make it easier to visually parse information. | ||||
The following terminals seem to handle the color sequences fine: | ||||
* Linux main text console, KDE Konsole, Gnome Terminal, E-term, | ||||
rxvt, xterm. | ||||
* CDE terminal (tested under Solaris). This one boldfaces light colors. | ||||
* (X)Emacs buffers. See the emacs_ section for more details on | ||||
using IPython with (X)Emacs. | ||||
* A Windows (XP/2k) command prompt with pyreadline_. | ||||
* A Windows (XP/2k) CygWin shell. Although some users have reported | ||||
problems; it is not clear whether there is an issue for everyone | ||||
or only under specific configurations. If you have full color | ||||
support under cygwin, please post to the IPython mailing list so | ||||
this issue can be resolved for all users. | ||||
Fernando Perez
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r1695 | .. _pyreadline: https://code.launchpad.net/pyreadline | ||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | These have shown problems: | ||
* Windows command prompt in WinXP/2k logged into a Linux machine via | ||||
telnet or ssh. | ||||
* Windows native command prompt in WinXP/2k, without Gary Bishop's | ||||
extensions. Once Gary's readline library is installed, the normal | ||||
WinXP/2k command prompt works perfectly. | ||||
Currently the following color schemes are available: | ||||
* NoColor: uses no color escapes at all (all escapes are empty '' '' | ||||
strings). This 'scheme' is thus fully safe to use in any terminal. | ||||
* Linux: works well in Linux console type environments: dark | ||||
background with light fonts. It uses bright colors for | ||||
information, so it is difficult to read if you have a light | ||||
colored background. | ||||
* LightBG: the basic colors are similar to those in the Linux scheme | ||||
but darker. It is easy to read in terminals with light backgrounds. | ||||
IPython uses colors for two main groups of things: prompts and | ||||
tracebacks which are directly printed to the terminal, and the object | ||||
introspection system which passes large sets of data through a pager. | ||||
Input/Output prompts and exception tracebacks | ||||
============================================= | ||||
You can test whether the colored prompts and tracebacks work on your | ||||
system interactively by typing '%colors Linux' at the prompt (use | ||||
'%colors LightBG' if your terminal has a light background). If the input | ||||
prompt shows garbage like:: | ||||
[0;32mIn [[1;32m1[0;32m]: [0;00m | ||||
Fernando Perez
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r1329 | |||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | instead of (in color) something like:: | ||
Fernando Perez
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r1329 | |||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | In [1]: | ||
Fernando Perez
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r1329 | |||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | this means that your terminal doesn't properly handle color escape | ||
sequences. You can go to a 'no color' mode by typing '%colors NoColor'. | ||||
You can try using a different terminal emulator program (Emacs users, | ||||
see below). To permanently set your color preferences, edit the file | ||||
$HOME/.ipython/ipythonrc and set the colors option to the desired value. | ||||
Object details (types, docstrings, source code, etc.) | ||||
===================================================== | ||||
Fernando Perez
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r1695 | IPython has a set of special functions for studying the objects you are working | ||
with, discussed in detail :ref:`here <dynamic_object_info>`. But this system | ||||
relies on passing information which is longer than your screen through a data | ||||
pager, such as the common Unix less and more programs. In order to be able to | ||||
see this information in color, your pager needs to be properly configured. I | ||||
strongly recommend using less instead of more, as it seems that more simply can | ||||
Brian E Granger
|
r1258 | not understand colored text correctly. | ||
In order to configure less as your default pager, do the following: | ||||
1. Set the environment PAGER variable to less. | ||||
2. Set the environment LESS variable to -r (plus any other options | ||||
you always want to pass to less by default). This tells less to | ||||
properly interpret control sequences, which is how color | ||||
information is given to your terminal. | ||||
Fernando Perez
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r2113 | For the bash shell, add to your ~/.bashrc file the lines:: | ||
export PAGER=less | ||||
export LESS=-r | ||||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | For the csh or tcsh shells, add to your ~/.cshrc file the lines:: | ||
Fernando Perez
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r1329 | setenv PAGER less | ||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | setenv LESS -r | ||
Fernando Perez
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r2113 | |||
Brian E Granger
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r1258 | There is similar syntax for other Unix shells, look at your system | ||
documentation for details. | ||||
If you are on a system which lacks proper data pagers (such as Windows), | ||||
IPython will use a very limited builtin pager. | ||||
Brian Granger
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r2277 | .. _Prompts: | ||
Fine-tuning your prompt | ||||
======================= | ||||
IPython's prompts can be customized using a syntax similar to that of | ||||
the bash shell. Many of bash's escapes are supported, as well as a few | ||||
additional ones. We list them below:: | ||||
\# | ||||
the prompt/history count number. This escape is automatically | ||||
wrapped in the coloring codes for the currently active color scheme. | ||||
\N | ||||
the 'naked' prompt/history count number: this is just the number | ||||
itself, without any coloring applied to it. This lets you produce | ||||
numbered prompts with your own colors. | ||||
\D | ||||
the prompt/history count, with the actual digits replaced by dots. | ||||
Used mainly in continuation prompts (prompt_in2) | ||||
\w | ||||
the current working directory | ||||
\W | ||||
the basename of current working directory | ||||
\Xn | ||||
where $n=0\ldots5.$ The current working directory, with $HOME | ||||
replaced by ~, and filtered out to contain only $n$ path elements | ||||
\Yn | ||||
Similar to \Xn, but with the $n+1$ element included if it is ~ (this | ||||
is similar to the behavior of the %cn escapes in tcsh) | ||||
\u | ||||
the username of the current user | ||||
\$ | ||||
if the effective UID is 0, a #, otherwise a $ | ||||
\h | ||||
the hostname up to the first '.' | ||||
\H | ||||
the hostname | ||||
\n | ||||
a newline | ||||
\r | ||||
a carriage return | ||||
\v | ||||
IPython version string | ||||
In addition to these, ANSI color escapes can be insterted into the | ||||
prompts, as \C_ColorName. The list of valid color names is: Black, Blue, | ||||
Brown, Cyan, DarkGray, Green, LightBlue, LightCyan, LightGray, | ||||
LightGreen, LightPurple, LightRed, NoColor, Normal, Purple, Red, White, | ||||
Yellow. | ||||
Finally, IPython supports the evaluation of arbitrary expressions in | ||||
your prompt string. The prompt strings are evaluated through the syntax | ||||
of PEP 215, but basically you can use $x.y to expand the value of x.y, | ||||
and for more complicated expressions you can use braces: ${foo()+x} will | ||||
call function foo and add to it the value of x, before putting the | ||||
result into your prompt. For example, using | ||||
prompt_in1 '${commands.getoutput("uptime")}\nIn [\#]: ' | ||||
will print the result of the uptime command on each prompt (assuming the | ||||
commands module has been imported in your ipythonrc file). | ||||
Prompt examples | ||||
The following options in an ipythonrc file will give you IPython's | ||||
default prompts:: | ||||
prompt_in1 'In [\#]:' | ||||
prompt_in2 ' .\D.:' | ||||
prompt_out 'Out[\#]:' | ||||
which look like this:: | ||||
In [1]: 1+2 | ||||
Out[1]: 3 | ||||
In [2]: for i in (1,2,3): | ||||
...: print i, | ||||
...: | ||||
1 2 3 | ||||
These will give you a very colorful prompt with path information:: | ||||
#prompt_in1 '\C_Red\u\C_Blue[\C_Cyan\Y1\C_Blue]\C_LightGreen\#>' | ||||
prompt_in2 ' ..\D>' | ||||
prompt_out '<\#>' | ||||
which look like this:: | ||||
fperez[~/ipython]1> 1+2 | ||||
<1> 3 | ||||
fperez[~/ipython]2> for i in (1,2,3): | ||||
...> print i, | ||||
...> | ||||
1 2 3 | ||||
Brian E Granger
|
r1258 | |||
Brian Granger
|
r2275 | |||