InterpreterExec.py
259 lines
| 10.0 KiB
| text/x-python
|
PythonLexer
fperez
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r0 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | ||
"""Modified input prompt for executing files. | ||||
We define a special input line filter to allow typing lines which begin with | ||||
'~', '/' or '.'. If one of those strings is encountered, it is automatically | ||||
executed. | ||||
fperez
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r835 | $Id: InterpreterExec.py 2724 2007-09-07 08:05:38Z fperez $""" | ||
fperez
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r0 | |||
#***************************************************************************** | ||||
# Copyright (C) 2004 W.J. van der Laan <gnufnork@hetdigitalegat.nl> | ||||
fperez
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r88 | # Copyright (C) 2004-2006 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu> | ||
fperez
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r0 | # | ||
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in | ||||
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. | ||||
#***************************************************************************** | ||||
from IPython import Release | ||||
__author__ = 'W.J. van der Laan <gnufnork@hetdigitalegat.nl>, '\ | ||||
'%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] | ||||
__license__ = Release.license | ||||
vivainio
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r176 | # TODO: deprecated | ||
fperez
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r0 | def prefilter_shell(self,line,continuation): | ||
"""Alternate prefilter, modified for shell-like functionality. | ||||
- Execute all lines beginning with '~', '/' or '.' | ||||
- $var=cmd <=> %sc var=cmd | ||||
- $$var=cmd <=> %sc -l var=cmd | ||||
""" | ||||
if line: | ||||
l0 = line[0] | ||||
if l0 in '~/.': | ||||
return self._prefilter("!%s"%line,continuation) | ||||
elif l0=='$': | ||||
lrest = line[1:] | ||||
if lrest.startswith('$'): | ||||
# $$var=cmd <=> %sc -l var=cmd | ||||
return self._prefilter("%ssc -l %s" % (self.ESC_MAGIC,lrest[1:]), | ||||
continuation) | ||||
else: | ||||
# $var=cmd <=> %sc var=cmd | ||||
return self._prefilter("%ssc %s" % (self.ESC_MAGIC,lrest), | ||||
continuation) | ||||
else: | ||||
return self._prefilter(line,continuation) | ||||
else: | ||||
return self._prefilter(line,continuation) | ||||
# Rebind this to be the new IPython prefilter: | ||||
from IPython.iplib import InteractiveShell | ||||
InteractiveShell.prefilter = prefilter_shell | ||||
# Clean up the namespace. | ||||
del InteractiveShell,prefilter_shell | ||||
# Provide pysh and further shell-oriented services | ||||
import os,sys,shutil | ||||
from IPython.genutils import system,shell,getoutput,getoutputerror | ||||
# Short aliases for getting shell output as a string and a list | ||||
sout = getoutput | ||||
lout = lambda cmd: getoutput(cmd,split=1) | ||||
# Empty function, meant as a docstring holder so help(pysh) works. | ||||
def pysh(): | ||||
"""Pysh is a set of modules and extensions to IPython which make shell-like | ||||
usage with Python syntax more convenient. Keep in mind that pysh is NOT a | ||||
full-blown shell, so don't try to make it your /etc/passwd entry! | ||||
In particular, it has no job control, so if you type Ctrl-Z (under Unix), | ||||
you'll suspend pysh itself, not the process you just started. | ||||
Since pysh is really nothing but a customized IPython, you should | ||||
familiarize yourself with IPython's features. This brief help mainly | ||||
documents areas in which pysh differs from the normal IPython. | ||||
ALIASES | ||||
------- | ||||
All of your $PATH has been loaded as IPython aliases, so you should be | ||||
able to type any normal system command and have it executed. See %alias? | ||||
and %unalias? for details on the alias facilities. | ||||
SPECIAL SYNTAX | ||||
-------------- | ||||
Any lines which begin with '~', '/' and '.' will be executed as shell | ||||
commands instead of as Python code. The special escapes below are also | ||||
recognized. !cmd is valid in single or multi-line input, all others are | ||||
only valid in single-line input: | ||||
!cmd - pass 'cmd' directly to the shell | ||||
!!cmd - execute 'cmd' and return output as a list (split on '\\n') | ||||
$var=cmd - capture output of cmd into var, as a string | ||||
$$var=cmd - capture output of cmd into var, as a list (split on '\\n') | ||||
The $/$$ syntaxes make Python variables from system output, which you can | ||||
later use for further scripting. The converse is also possible: when | ||||
executing an alias or calling to the system via !/!!, you can expand any | ||||
python variable or expression by prepending it with $. Full details of | ||||
the allowed syntax can be found in Python's PEP 215. | ||||
A few brief examples will illustrate these: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|3> !ls *s.py | ||||
scopes.py strings.py | ||||
ls is an internal alias, so there's no need to use !: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|4> ls *s.py | ||||
scopes.py* strings.py | ||||
!!ls will return the output into a Python variable: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|5> !!ls *s.py | ||||
<5> ['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] | ||||
fperez[~/test]|6> print _5 | ||||
['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] | ||||
$ and $$ allow direct capture to named variables: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|7> $astr = ls *s.py | ||||
fperez[~/test]|8> astr | ||||
<8> 'scopes.py\\nstrings.py' | ||||
fperez[~/test]|9> $$alist = ls *s.py | ||||
fperez[~/test]|10> alist | ||||
<10> ['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] | ||||
alist is now a normal python list you can loop over. Using $ will expand | ||||
back the python values when alias calls are made: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|11> for f in alist: | ||||
|..> print 'file',f, | ||||
|..> wc -l $f | ||||
|..> | ||||
file scopes.py 13 scopes.py | ||||
file strings.py 4 strings.py | ||||
Note that you may need to protect your variables with braces if you want | ||||
to append strings to their names. To copy all files in alist to .bak | ||||
extensions, you must use: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|12> for f in alist: | ||||
|..> cp $f ${f}.bak | ||||
If you try using $f.bak, you'll get an AttributeError exception saying | ||||
that your string object doesn't have a .bak attribute. This is because | ||||
the $ expansion mechanism allows you to expand full Python expressions: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|13> echo "sys.platform is: $sys.platform" | ||||
sys.platform is: linux2 | ||||
IPython's input history handling is still active, which allows you to | ||||
rerun a single block of multi-line input by simply using exec: | ||||
fperez[~/test]|14> $$alist = ls *.eps | ||||
fperez[~/test]|15> exec _i11 | ||||
file image2.eps 921 image2.eps | ||||
file image.eps 921 image.eps | ||||
While these are new special-case syntaxes, they are designed to allow very | ||||
efficient use of the shell with minimal typing. At an interactive shell | ||||
prompt, conciseness of expression wins over readability. | ||||
USEFUL FUNCTIONS AND MODULES | ||||
---------------------------- | ||||
The os, sys and shutil modules from the Python standard library are | ||||
automatically loaded. Some additional functions, useful for shell usage, | ||||
are listed below. You can request more help about them with '?'. | ||||
shell - execute a command in the underlying system shell | ||||
system - like shell(), but return the exit status of the command | ||||
sout - capture the output of a command as a string | ||||
lout - capture the output of a command as a list (split on '\\n') | ||||
getoutputerror - capture (output,error) of a shell command | ||||
sout/lout are the functional equivalents of $/$$. They are provided to | ||||
allow you to capture system output in the middle of true python code, | ||||
function definitions, etc (where $ and $$ are invalid). | ||||
DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT | ||||
-------------------- | ||||
Since each command passed by pysh to the underlying system is executed in | ||||
a subshell which exits immediately, you can NOT use !cd to navigate the | ||||
filesystem. | ||||
Pysh provides its own builtin '%cd' magic command to move in the | ||||
filesystem (the % is not required with automagic on). It also maintains a | ||||
list of visited directories (use %dhist to see it) and allows direct | ||||
switching to any of them. Type 'cd?' for more details. | ||||
%pushd, %popd and %dirs are provided for directory stack handling. | ||||
PROMPT CUSTOMIZATION | ||||
-------------------- | ||||
The supplied ipythonrc-pysh profile comes with an example of a very | ||||
colored and detailed prompt, mainly to serve as an illustration. The | ||||
valid escape sequences, besides color names, are: | ||||
\\# - Prompt number. | ||||
\\D - Dots, as many as there are digits in \\# (so they align). | ||||
\\w - Current working directory (cwd). | ||||
\\W - Basename of current working directory. | ||||
\\XN - Where N=0..5. N terms of the cwd, with $HOME written as ~. | ||||
\\YN - Where N=0..5. Like XN, but if ~ is term N+1 it's also shown. | ||||
\\u - Username. | ||||
\\H - Full hostname. | ||||
\\h - Hostname up to first '.' | ||||
\\$ - Root symbol ($ or #). | ||||
\\t - Current time, in H:M:S format. | ||||
\\v - IPython release version. | ||||
\\n - Newline. | ||||
\\r - Carriage return. | ||||
\\\\ - An explicitly escaped '\\'. | ||||
You can configure your prompt colors using any ANSI color escape. Each | ||||
color escape sets the color for any subsequent text, until another escape | ||||
comes in and changes things. The valid color escapes are: | ||||
\\C_Black | ||||
\\C_Blue | ||||
\\C_Brown | ||||
\\C_Cyan | ||||
\\C_DarkGray | ||||
\\C_Green | ||||
\\C_LightBlue | ||||
\\C_LightCyan | ||||
\\C_LightGray | ||||
\\C_LightGreen | ||||
\\C_LightPurple | ||||
\\C_LightRed | ||||
\\C_Purple | ||||
\\C_Red | ||||
\\C_White | ||||
\\C_Yellow | ||||
\\C_Normal - Stop coloring, defaults to your terminal settings. | ||||
""" | ||||
pass | ||||
# Configure a few things. Much of this is fairly hackish, since IPython | ||||
# doesn't really expose a clean API for it. Be careful if you start making | ||||
# many modifications here. | ||||
# Set the 'cd' command to quiet mode, a more shell-like behavior | ||||
__IPYTHON__.default_option('cd','-q') | ||||
vivainio
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r132 | # This is redundant, ipy_user_conf.py will determine this | ||
fperez
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r0 | # Load all of $PATH as aliases | ||
fperez
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r835 | __IPYTHON__.magic_rehashx() | ||
fperez
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r0 | |||
# Remove %sc,%sx if present as aliases | ||||
__IPYTHON__.magic_unalias('sc') | ||||
__IPYTHON__.magic_unalias('sx') | ||||
# We need different criteria for line-splitting, so that aliases such as | ||||
# 'gnome-terminal' are interpreted as a single alias instead of variable | ||||
# 'gnome' minus variable 'terminal'. | ||||
import re | ||||
fperez
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r5 | __IPYTHON__.line_split = re.compile(r'^([\s*,;/])' | ||
r'([\?\w\.\-\+]+\w*\s*)' | ||||
r'(\(?.*$)') | ||||
fperez
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r0 | |||
# Namespace cleanup | ||||
del re | ||||