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add broad description of 3.0
add broad description of 3.0

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Thomas Kluyver
Remove outdated config information
r13490 =======================
Specific config details
=======================
Prompts
=======
In the terminal, the format of the input and output prompts can be
customised. This does not currently affect other frontends.
The following codes in the prompt string will be substituted into the
prompt string:
====== =================================== =====================================================
Thomas Kluyver
Fix some whitespace, and use lisp highlightling for emacs code
r13533 Short Long Notes
Thomas Kluyver
Remove outdated config information
r13490 ====== =================================== =====================================================
Thomas Kluyver
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r13533 %n,\\# {color.number}{count}{color.prompt} history counter with bolding
\\N {count} history counter without bolding
\\D {dots} series of dots the same width as the history counter
\\T {time} current time
\\w {cwd} current working directory
\\W {cwd_last} basename of CWD
\\Xn {cwd_x[n]} Show the last n terms of the CWD. n=0 means show all.
\\Yn {cwd_y[n]} Like \Xn, but show '~' for $HOME
\\h hostname, up to the first '.'
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r13490 \\H full hostname
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r13533 \\u username (from the $USER environment variable)
\\v IPython version
\\$ root symbol ("$" for normal user or "#" for root)
``\\`` escaped '\\'
\\n newline
\\r carriage return
Thomas Kluyver
Remove outdated config information
r13490 n/a {color.<Name>} set terminal colour - see below for list of names
====== =================================== =====================================================
Available colour names are: Black, BlinkBlack, BlinkBlue, BlinkCyan,
BlinkGreen, BlinkLightGray, BlinkPurple, BlinkRed, BlinkYellow, Blue,
Brown, Cyan, DarkGray, Green, LightBlue, LightCyan, LightGray, LightGreen,
LightPurple, LightRed, Purple, Red, White, Yellow. The selected colour
scheme also defines the names *prompt* and *number*. Finally, the name
*normal* resets the terminal to its default colour.
So, this config::
c.PromptManager.in_template = "{color.LightGreen}{time}{color.Yellow} \u{color.normal}>>>"
will produce input prompts with the time in light green, your username
in yellow, and a ``>>>`` prompt in the default terminal colour.
.. _termcolour:
Terminal Colors
===============
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 :ref:`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.
.. _pyreadline: https://code.launchpad.net/pyreadline
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.
If you are seeing garbage sequences in your terminal and no colour, you
may need to disable colours: run ``%colors NoColor`` inside IPython, or
add this to a config file::
c.InteractiveShell.colors = 'NoColor'
Colors in the pager
-------------------
On some systems, the default pager has problems with ANSI colour codes.
To configure your default pager to allow these:
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.
Thomas Kluyver
Move editor config info into details.rst
r13495
.. _editors:
Editor configuration
====================
IPython can integrate with text editors in a number of different ways:
* Editors (such as `(X)Emacs`_, vim_ and TextMate_) can
send code to IPython for execution.
* IPython's ``%edit`` magic command can open an editor of choice to edit
a code block.
The %edit command (and its alias %ed) will invoke the editor set in your
environment as :envvar:`EDITOR`. If this variable is not set, it will default
to vi under Linux/Unix and to notepad under Windows. You may want to set this
variable properly and to a lightweight editor which doesn't take too long to
start (that is, something other than a new instance of Emacs). This way you
can edit multi-line code quickly and with the power of a real editor right
inside IPython.
You can also control the editor by setting :attr:`TerminalInteractiveShell.editor`
in :file:`ipython_config.py`.
Vim
---
Paul Ivanov's `vim-ipython <https://github.com/ivanov/vim-ipython>`_ provides
powerful IPython integration for vim.
.. _emacs:
(X)Emacs
--------
If you are a dedicated Emacs user, and want to use Emacs when IPython's
``%edit`` magic command is called you should set up the Emacs server so that
new requests are handled by the original process. This means that almost no
time is spent in handling the request (assuming an Emacs process is already
running). For this to work, you need to set your EDITOR environment variable
to 'emacsclient'. The code below, supplied by Francois Pinard, can then be
Thomas Kluyver
Fix some whitespace, and use lisp highlightling for emacs code
r13533 used in your :file:`.emacs` file to enable the server:
.. code-block:: common-lisp
Thomas Kluyver
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(defvar server-buffer-clients)
(when (and (fboundp 'server-start) (string-equal (getenv "TERM") 'xterm))
(server-start)
(defun fp-kill-server-with-buffer-routine ()
(and server-buffer-clients (server-done)))
(add-hook 'kill-buffer-hook 'fp-kill-server-with-buffer-routine))
Thanks to the work of Alexander Schmolck and Prabhu Ramachandran,
currently (X)Emacs and IPython get along very well in other ways.
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r19927 With (X)EMacs >= 24, You can enable IPython in python-mode with:
Thomas Kluyver
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r13533
.. code-block:: common-lisp
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r13495
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r19927 (require 'python)
(setq python-shell-interpreter "ipython")
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.. _`(X)Emacs`: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/
.. _TextMate: http://macromates.com/
.. _vim: http://www.vim.org/