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Merge pull request #2868 from takluyver/import-performance...
Merge pull request #2868 from takluyver/import-performance Import performance Defer various imports for a small reduction in startup time. IPython.lib.__init__ previously loaded IPython.lib.inputhook to export some of its functions. This meant that importing anything from IPython.lib also loaded inputhook. For now, I've just removed that import, but that is an API change, because the functions are no longer accessible as e.g. IPython.lib.enable_qt4 Added a note about the API change. Timing command, borrowed from Openoffice to simulate cold start: $ sync ; echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches; time ipython3 -c pass Results with this branch: 7.68, 7.64, 7.35, 7.38 s 'real' Results with master: 8.17, 8.04, 7.81, 7.77

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r9244:666fdfa8
r9459:ff3032f2 merge
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nested_context.py
50 lines | 1.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
Thomas Kluyver
Backwards compatibility hack to use nested() in Python 3.2
r4751 """Backwards compatibility - we use contextlib.nested to support Python 2.6,
but it's removed in Python 3.2."""
# TODO : Remove this once we drop support for Python 2.6, and use
# "with a, b:" instead.
Thomas Kluyver
Fix for nested()
r4755 import sys
Thomas Kluyver
Backwards compatibility hack to use nested() in Python 3.2
r4751 from contextlib import contextmanager
@contextmanager
def nested(*managers):
"""Combine multiple context managers into a single nested context manager.
This function has been deprecated in favour of the multiple manager form
of the with statement.
The one advantage of this function over the multiple manager form of the
with statement is that argument unpacking allows it to be
Thomas Kluyver
Miscellaneous docs fixes
r9244 used with a variable number of context managers as follows::
Thomas Kluyver
Backwards compatibility hack to use nested() in Python 3.2
r4751
with nested(*managers):
do_something()
"""
exits = []
vars = []
exc = (None, None, None)
try:
for mgr in managers:
exit = mgr.__exit__
enter = mgr.__enter__
vars.append(enter())
exits.append(exit)
yield vars
except:
exc = sys.exc_info()
finally:
while exits:
exit = exits.pop()
try:
if exit(*exc):
exc = (None, None, None)
except:
exc = sys.exc_info()
if exc != (None, None, None):
# Don't rely on sys.exc_info() still containing
# the right information. Another exception may
# have been raised and caught by an exit method
raise exc[0], exc[1], exc[2]