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1 1 .. IPython documentation master file, created by sphinx-quickstart.py on Mon Mar 24 17:01:34 2008.
2 2 You can adapt this file completely to your liking, but it should at least
3 3 contain the root 'toctree' directive.
4 4
5 5 Welcome to IPython's documentation!
6 6 ===================================
7 7
8 8 Contents:
9 9
10 10 .. toctree::
11 11 :maxdepth: 2
12 12
13 13 Indices and tables
14 14 ==================
15 15
16 16 * :ref:`genindex`
17 17 * :ref:`modindex`
18 18 * :ref:`search`
19 19
20 20 Overview
21 21 ========
22 22
23 23 One of Python's most useful features is its interactive interpreter.
24 24 This system allows very fast testing of ideas without the overhead of
25 25 creating test files as is typical in most programming languages.
26 26 However, the interpreter supplied with the standard Python distribution
27 27 is somewhat limited for extended interactive use.
28 28
29 29 IPython is a free software project (released under the BSD license)
30 30 which tries to:
31 31
32 32 1. Provide an interactive shell superior to Python's default. IPython
33 33 has many features for object introspection, system shell access,
34 34 and its own special command system for adding functionality when
35 35 working interactively. It tries to be a very efficient environment
36 36 both for Python code development and for exploration of problems
37 37 using Python objects (in situations like data analysis).
38 38 2. Serve as an embeddable, ready to use interpreter for your own
39 39 programs. IPython can be started with a single call from inside
40 40 another program, providing access to the current namespace. This
41 41 can be very useful both for debugging purposes and for situations
42 42 where a blend of batch-processing and interactive exploration are
43 43 needed.
44 44 3. Offer a flexible framework which can be used as the base
45 45 environment for other systems with Python as the underlying
46 46 language. Specifically scientific environments like Mathematica,
47 47 IDL and Matlab inspired its design, but similar ideas can be
48 48 useful in many fields.
49 49 4. Allow interactive testing of threaded graphical toolkits. IPython
50 50 has support for interactive, non-blocking control of GTK, Qt and
51 51 WX applications via special threading flags. The normal Python
52 52 shell can only do this for Tkinter applications.
53 53
54 54
55 55 Main features
56 -------------
56 57
57 58 * Dynamic object introspection. One can access docstrings, function
58 59 definition prototypes, source code, source files and other details
59 60 of any object accessible to the interpreter with a single
60 61 keystroke ('?', and using '??' provides additional detail).
61 62 * Searching through modules and namespaces with '*' wildcards, both
62 63 when using the '?' system and via the %psearch command.
63 64 * Completion in the local namespace, by typing TAB at the prompt.
64 65 This works for keywords, methods, variables and files in the
65 66 current directory. This is supported via the readline library, and
66 67 full access to configuring readline's behavior is provided.
67 68 * Numbered input/output prompts with command history (persistent
68 69 across sessions and tied to each profile), full searching in this
69 70 history and caching of all input and output.
70 71 * User-extensible 'magic' commands. A set of commands prefixed with
71 72 % is available for controlling IPython itself and provides
72 73 directory control, namespace information and many aliases to
73 74 common system shell commands.
74 75 * Alias facility for defining your own system aliases.
75 76 * Complete system shell access. Lines starting with ! are passed
76 77 directly to the system shell, and using !! captures shell output
77 78 into python variables for further use.
78 79 * Background execution of Python commands in a separate thread.
79 80 IPython has an internal job manager called jobs, and a
80 81 conveninence backgrounding magic function called %bg.
81 82 * The ability to expand python variables when calling the system
82 83 shell. In a shell command, any python variable prefixed with $ is
83 84 expanded. A double $$ allows passing a literal $ to the shell (for
84 85 access to shell and environment variables like $PATH).
85 86 * Filesystem navigation, via a magic %cd command, along with a
86 87 persistent bookmark system (using %bookmark) for fast access to
87 88 frequently visited directories.
88 89 * A lightweight persistence framework via the %store command, which
89 90 allows you to save arbitrary Python variables. These get restored
90 91 automatically when your session restarts.
91 92 * Automatic indentation (optional) of code as you type (through the
92 93 readline library).
93 94 * Macro system for quickly re-executing multiple lines of previous
94 95 input with a single name. Macros can be stored persistently via
95 96 %store and edited via %edit.
96 97 * Session logging (you can then later use these logs as code in your
97 98 programs). Logs can optionally timestamp all input, and also store
98 99 session output (marked as comments, so the log remains valid
99 100 Python source code).
100 101 * Session restoring: logs can be replayed to restore a previous
101 102 session to the state where you left it.
102 103 * Verbose and colored exception traceback printouts. Easier to parse
103 104 visually, and in verbose mode they produce a lot of useful
104 105 debugging information (basically a terminal version of the cgitb
105 106 module).
106 107 * Auto-parentheses: callable objects can be executed without
107 108 parentheses: 'sin 3' is automatically converted to 'sin(3)'.
108 109 * Auto-quoting: using ',' or ';' as the first character forces
109 110 auto-quoting of the rest of the line: ',my_function a b' becomes
110 111 automatically 'my_function("a","b")', while ';my_function a b'
111 112 becomes 'my_function("a b")'.
112 113 * Extensible input syntax. You can define filters that pre-process
113 114 user input to simplify input in special situations. This allows
114 115 for example pasting multi-line code fragments which start with
115 116 '>>>' or '...' such as those from other python sessions or the
116 117 standard Python documentation.
117 118 * Flexible configuration system. It uses a configuration file which
118 119 allows permanent setting of all command-line options, module
119 120 loading, code and file execution. The system allows recursive file
120 121 inclusion, so you can have a base file with defaults and layers
121 122 which load other customizations for particular projects.
122 123 * Embeddable. You can call IPython as a python shell inside your own
123 124 python programs. This can be used both for debugging code or for
124 125 providing interactive abilities to your programs with knowledge
125 126 about the local namespaces (very useful in debugging and data
126 127 analysis situations).
127 128 * Easy debugger access. You can set IPython to call up an enhanced
128 129 version of the Python debugger (pdb) every time there is an
129 130 uncaught exception. This drops you inside the code which triggered
130 131 the exception with all the data live and it is possible to
131 132 navigate the stack to rapidly isolate the source of a bug. The
132 133 %run magic command -with the -d option- can run any script under
133 134 pdb's control, automatically setting initial breakpoints for you.
134 135 This version of pdb has IPython-specific improvements, including
135 136 tab-completion and traceback coloring support.
136 137 * Profiler support. You can run single statements (similar to
137 138 profile.run()) or complete programs under the profiler's control.
138 139 While this is possible with standard cProfile or profile modules,
139 140 IPython wraps this functionality with magic commands (see '%prun'
140 141 and '%run -p') convenient for rapid interactive work.
141 142 * Doctest support. The special %doctest_mode command toggles a mode
142 143 that allows you to paste existing doctests (with leading '>>>'
143 144 prompts and whitespace) and uses doctest-compatible prompts and
144 145 output, so you can use IPython sessions as doctest code.
145 146
146 147
147 148 Portability and Python requirements
148 149 -----------------------------------
149 150
150 151 Python requirements: IPython requires with Python version 2.3 or newer.
151 152 If you are still using Python 2.2 and can not upgrade, the last version
152 153 of IPython which worked with Python 2.2 was 0.6.15, so you will have to
153 154 use that.
154 155
155 156 IPython is developed under Linux, but it should work in any reasonable
156 157 Unix-type system (tested OK under Solaris and the BSD family, for which
157 158 a port exists thanks to Dryice Liu).
158 159
159 160 Mac OS X: it works, apparently without any problems (thanks to Jim Boyle
160 161 at Lawrence Livermore for the information). Thanks to Andrea Riciputi,
161 162 Fink support is available.
162 163
163 164 CygWin: it works mostly OK, though some users have reported problems
164 165 with prompt coloring. No satisfactory solution to this has been found so
165 166 far, you may want to disable colors permanently in the ipythonrc
166 167 configuration file if you experience problems. If you have proper color
167 168 support under cygwin, please post to the IPython mailing list so this
168 169 issue can be resolved for all users.
169 170
170 171 Windows: it works well under Windows XP/2k, and I suspect NT should
171 172 behave similarly. Section 2.3 <node2.html#sub:Under-Windows> describes
172 173 installation details for Windows, including some additional tools needed
173 174 on this platform.
174 175
175 176 Windows 9x support is present, and has been reported to work fine (at
176 177 least on WinME).
177 178
178 179 Note, that I have very little access to and experience with Windows
179 180 development. However, an excellent group of Win32 users (led by Ville
180 181 Vainio), consistently contribute bugfixes and platform-specific
181 182 enhancements, so they more than make up for my deficiencies on that
182 183 front. In fact, Win32 users report using IPython as a system shell (see
183 184 Sec. 12 <node12.html#sec:IPython-as-shell> for details), as it offers a
184 185 level of control and features which the default cmd.exe doesn't provide.
185 186
186 187
187 188 Location
188 189 ========
189 190
190 191 IPython is generously hosted at http://ipython.scipy.org by the
191 192 Enthought, Inc and the SciPy project. This site offers downloads,
192 193 subversion access, mailing lists and a bug tracking system. I am very
193 194 grateful to Enthought (http://www.enthought.com) and all of the SciPy
194 195 team for their contribution.
195 196
196 197 Installation
197 198 ============
198 199
199 200 Instant instructions
200 201 --------------------
201 202
202 203 If you are of the impatient kind, under Linux/Unix simply untar/unzip
203 204 the download, then install with 'python setup.py install'. Under
204 205 Windows, double-click on the provided .exe binary installer.
205 206
206 207 Then, take a look at Sections 3 <node3.html#sec:good_config> for
207 208 configuring things optimally and 4 <node4.html#sec:quick_tips> for quick
208 209 tips on efficient use of IPython. You can later refer to the rest of the
209 210 manual for all the gory details.
210 211
211 212 See the notes in sec. 2.4 <#sec:upgrade> for upgrading IPython versions.
212 213
213 214
214 215 Detailed Unix instructions (Linux, Mac OS X, etc.)
215 216
216 217 For RPM based systems, simply install the supplied package in the usual
217 218 manner. If you download the tar archive, the process is:
218 219
219 220 1. Unzip/untar the ipython-XXX.tar.gz file wherever you want (XXX is
220 221 the version number). It will make a directory called ipython-XXX.
221 222 Change into that directory where you will find the files README
222 223 and setup.py. Once you've completed the installation, you can
223 224 safely remove this directory.
224 225 2. If you are installing over a previous installation of version
225 226 0.2.0 or earlier, first remove your $HOME/.ipython directory,
226 227 since the configuration file format has changed somewhat (the '='
227 228 were removed from all option specifications). Or you can call
228 229 ipython with the -upgrade option and it will do this automatically
229 230 for you.
230 231 3. IPython uses distutils, so you can install it by simply typing at
231 232 the system prompt (don't type the $)::
232 233
233 234 $ python setup.py install
234 235
235 236 Note that this assumes you have root access to your machine. If
236 237 you don't have root access or don't want IPython to go in the
237 238 default python directories, you'll need to use the ``--home`` option
238 239 (or ``--prefix``). For example::
239 240
240 241 $ python setup.py install --home $HOME/local
241 242
242 243 will install IPython into $HOME/local and its subdirectories
243 244 (creating them if necessary).
244 245 You can type::
245 246
246 247 $ python setup.py --help
247 248
248 249 for more details.
249 250
250 251 Note that if you change the default location for ``--home`` at
251 252 installation, IPython may end up installed at a location which is
252 253 not part of your $PYTHONPATH environment variable. In this case,
253 254 you'll need to configure this variable to include the actual
254 255 directory where the IPython/ directory ended (typically the value
255 256 you give to ``--home`` plus /lib/python).
256 257
257 258
258 259 Mac OSX information
259 260 -------------------
260 261
261 262 Under OSX, there is a choice you need to make. Apple ships its own build
262 263 of Python, which lives in the core OSX filesystem hierarchy. You can
263 264 also manually install a separate Python, either purely by hand
264 265 (typically in /usr/local) or by using Fink, which puts everything under
265 266 /sw. Which route to follow is a matter of personal preference, as I've
266 267 seen users who favor each of the approaches. Here I will simply list the
267 268 known installation issues under OSX, along with their solutions.
268 269
269 270 This page: http://geosci.uchicago.edu/~tobis/pylab.html contains
270 271 information on this topic, with additional details on how to make
271 272 IPython and matplotlib play nicely under OSX.
272 273
273 274
274 275 GUI problems
275 276 ------------
276 277
277 278 The following instructions apply to an install of IPython under OSX from
278 279 unpacking the .tar.gz distribution and installing it for the default
279 280 Python interpreter shipped by Apple. If you are using a fink install,
280 281 fink will take care of these details for you, by installing IPython
281 282 against fink's Python.
282 283
283 284 IPython offers various forms of support for interacting with graphical
284 285 applications from the command line, from simple Tk apps (which are in
285 286 principle always supported by Python) to interactive control of WX, Qt
286 287 and GTK apps. Under OSX, however, this requires that ipython is
287 288 installed by calling the special pythonw script at installation time,
288 289 which takes care of coordinating things with Apple's graphical environment.
289 290
290 291 So when installing under OSX, it is best to use the following command::
291 292
292 293 $ sudo pythonw setup.py install --install-scripts=/usr/local/bin
293 294
294 295 or
295 296
296 297 $ sudo pythonw setup.py install --install-scripts=/usr/bin
297 298
298 299 depending on where you like to keep hand-installed executables.
299 300
300 301 The resulting script will have an appropriate shebang line (the first
301 302 line in the script whic begins with #!...) such that the ipython
302 303 interpreter can interact with the OS X GUI. If the installed version
303 304 does not work and has a shebang line that points to, for example, just
304 305 /usr/bin/python, then you might have a stale, cached version in your
305 306 build/scripts-<python-version> directory. Delete that directory and
306 307 rerun the setup.py.
307 308
308 309 It is also a good idea to use the special flag ``--install-scripts`` as
309 310 indicated above, to ensure that the ipython scripts end up in a location
310 311 which is part of your $PATH. Otherwise Apple's Python will put the
311 312 scripts in an internal directory not available by default at the command
312 313 line (if you use /usr/local/bin, you need to make sure this is in your
313 314 $PATH, which may not be true by default).
314 315
315 316
316 317 Readline problems
317 318 -----------------
318 319
319 320 By default, the Python version shipped by Apple does not include the
320 321 readline library, so central to IPython's behavior. If you install
321 322 IPython against Apple's Python, you will not have arrow keys, tab
322 323 completion, etc. For Mac OSX 10.3 (Panther), you can find a prebuilt
323 324 readline library here:
324 325 http://pythonmac.org/packages/readline-5.0-py2.3-macosx10.3.zip
325 326
326 327 If you are using OSX 10.4 (Tiger), after installing this package you
327 328 need to either:
328 329
329 330 1. move readline.so from /Library/Python/2.3 to
330 331 /Library/Python/2.3/site-packages, or
331 332 2. install http://pythonmac.org/packages/TigerPython23Compat.pkg.zip
332 333
333 334 Users installing against Fink's Python or a properly hand-built one
334 335 should not have this problem.
335 336
336 337
337 338 DarwinPorts
338 339 -----------
339 340
340 341 I report here a message from an OSX user, who suggests an alternative
341 342 means of using IPython under this operating system with good results.
342 343 Please let me know of any updates that may be useful for this section.
343 344 His message is reproduced verbatim below:
344 345
345 346 From: Markus Banfi <markus.banfi-AT-mospheira.net>
346 347
347 348 As a MacOS X (10.4.2) user I prefer to install software using
348 349 DawinPorts instead of Fink. I had no problems installing ipython
349 350 with DarwinPorts. It's just:
350 351
351 352 sudo port install py-ipython
352 353
353 354 It automatically resolved all dependencies (python24, readline,
354 355 py-readline). So far I did not encounter any problems with the
355 356 DarwinPorts port of ipython.
356 357
357 358
358 359
359 360 Windows instructions
360 361 --------------------
361 362
362 363 Some of IPython's very useful features are:
363 364
364 365 * Integrated readline support (Tab-based file, object and attribute
365 366 completion, input history across sessions, editable command line,
366 367 etc.)
367 368 * Coloring of prompts, code and tracebacks.
368 369
369 370 These, by default, are only available under Unix-like operating systems.
370 371 However, thanks to Gary Bishop's work, Windows XP/2k users can also
371 372 benefit from them. His readline library originally implemented both GNU
372 373 readline functionality and color support, so that IPython under Windows
373 374 XP/2k can be as friendly and powerful as under Unix-like environments.
374 375
375 376 This library, now named PyReadline, has been absorbed by the IPython
376 377 team (Jörgen Stenarson, in particular), and it continues to be developed
377 378 with new features, as well as being distributed directly from the
378 379 IPython site.
379 380
380 381 The PyReadline extension requires CTypes and the windows IPython
381 382 installer needs PyWin32, so in all you need:
382 383
383 384 1. PyWin32 from http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32.
384 385 2. PyReadline for Windows from
385 386 http://ipython.scipy.org/moin/PyReadline/Intro. That page contains
386 387 further details on using and configuring the system to your liking.
387 388 3. Finally, only if you are using Python 2.3 or 2.4, you need CTypes
388 389 from http://starship.python.net/crew/theller/ctypes(you must use
389 390 version 0.9.1 or newer). This package is included in Python 2.5,
390 391 so you don't need to manually get it if your Python version is 2.5
391 392 or newer.
392 393
393 394 Warning about a broken readline-like library: several users have
394 395 reported problems stemming from using the pseudo-readline library at
395 396 http://newcenturycomputers.net/projects/readline.html. This is a broken
396 397 library which, while called readline, only implements an incomplete
397 398 subset of the readline API. Since it is still called readline, it fools
398 399 IPython's detection mechanisms and causes unpredictable crashes later.
399 400 If you wish to use IPython under Windows, you must NOT use this library,
400 401 which for all purposes is (at least as of version 1.6) terminally broken.
401 402
402 403
403 404 Installation procedure
404 405 ----------------------
405 406
406 407 Once you have the above installed, from the IPython download directory
407 408 grab the ipython-XXX.win32.exe file, where XXX represents the version
408 409 number. This is a regular windows executable installer, which you can
409 410 simply double-click to install. It will add an entry for IPython to your
410 411 Start Menu, as well as registering IPython in the Windows list of
411 412 applications, so you can later uninstall it from the Control Panel.
412 413
413 414 IPython tries to install the configuration information in a directory
414 415 named .ipython (_ipython under Windows) located in your 'home'
415 416 directory. IPython sets this directory by looking for a HOME environment
416 417 variable; if such a variable does not exist, it uses HOMEDRIVE\HOMEPATH
417 418 (these are always defined by Windows). This typically gives something
418 419 like C:\Documents and Settings\YourUserName, but your local details may
419 420 vary. In this directory you will find all the files that configure
420 421 IPython's defaults, and you can put there your profiles and extensions.
421 422 This directory is automatically added by IPython to sys.path, so
422 423 anything you place there can be found by import statements.
423 424
424 425
425 426 Upgrading
426 427 ---------
427 428
428 429 For an IPython upgrade, you should first uninstall the previous version.
429 430 This will ensure that all files and directories (such as the
430 431 documentation) which carry embedded version strings in their names are
431 432 properly removed.
432 433
433 434
434 435 Manual installation under Win32
435 436 -------------------------------
436 437
437 438 In case the automatic installer does not work for some reason, you can
438 439 download the ipython-XXX.tar.gz file, which contains the full IPython
439 440 source distribution (the popular WinZip can read .tar.gz files). After
440 441 uncompressing the archive, you can install it at a command terminal just
441 442 like any other Python module, by using 'python setup.py install'.
442 443
443 444 After the installation, run the supplied win32_manual_post_install.py
444 445 script, which creates the necessary Start Menu shortcuts for you.
445 446
446 447
447 448
448 449 Upgrading from a previous version
449 450 ---------------------------------
450 451
451 452 If you are upgrading from a previous version of IPython, after doing the
452 453 routine installation described above, you should call IPython with the
453 454 -upgrade option the first time you run your new copy. This will
454 455 automatically update your configuration directory while preserving
455 456 copies of your old files. You can then later merge back any personal
456 457 customizations you may have made into the new files. It is a good idea
457 458 to do this as there may be new options available in the new
458 459 configuration files which you will not have.
459 460
460 461 Under Windows, if you don't know how to call python scripts with
461 462 arguments from a command line, simply delete the old config directory
462 463 and IPython will make a new one. Win2k and WinXP users will find it in
463 464 C:\Documents and Settings\YourUserName\_ipython, and Win 9x users under
464 465 C:\Program Files\IPython\_ipython.
465 466
466 467 Initial configuration of your environment
467 468 =========================================
468 469
469 470 This section will help you set various things in your environment for
470 471 your IPython sessions to be as efficient as possible. All of IPython's
471 472 configuration information, along with several example files, is stored
472 473 in a directory named by default $HOME/.ipython. You can change this by
473 474 defining the environment variable IPYTHONDIR, or at runtime with the
474 475 command line option -ipythondir.
475 476
476 477 If all goes well, the first time you run IPython it should automatically
477 478 create a user copy of the config directory for you, based on its builtin
478 479 defaults. You can look at the files it creates to learn more about
479 480 configuring the system. The main file you will modify to configure
480 481 IPython's behavior is called ipythonrc (with a .ini extension under
481 482 Windows), included for reference in Sec. 7.1
482 483 <node7.html#sec:ipytonrc-sample>. This file is very commented and has
483 484 many variables you can change to suit your taste, you can find more
484 485 details in Sec. 7 <node7.html#sec:customization>. Here we discuss the
485 486 basic things you will want to make sure things are working properly from
486 487 the beginning.
487 488
488 489
489 490
490 491 Access to the Python help system
491 492 --------------------------------
492 493
493 494 This is true for Python in general (not just for IPython): you should
494 495 have an environment variable called PYTHONDOCS pointing to the directory
495 496 where your HTML Python documentation lives. In my system it's
496 497 /usr/share/doc/python-docs-2.3.4/html, check your local details or ask
497 498 your systems administrator.
498 499
499 500 This is the directory which holds the HTML version of the Python
500 501 manuals. Unfortunately it seems that different Linux distributions
501 502 package these files differently, so you may have to look around a bit.
502 503 Below I show the contents of this directory on my system for reference::
503 504
504 505 [html]> ls
505 506 about.dat acks.html dist/ ext/ index.html lib/ modindex.html
506 507 stdabout.dat tut/ about.html api/ doc/ icons/ inst/ mac/ ref/ style.css
507 508
508 509 You should really make sure this variable is correctly set so that
509 510 Python's pydoc-based help system works. It is a powerful and convenient
510 511 system with full access to the Python manuals and all modules accessible
511 512 to you.
512 513
513 514 Under Windows it seems that pydoc finds the documentation automatically,
514 515 so no extra setup appears necessary.
515 516
516 517
517 518 Editor
518 519 ------
519 520
520 521 The %edit command (and its alias %ed) will invoke the editor set in your
521 522 environment as EDITOR. If this variable is not set, it will default to
522 523 vi under Linux/Unix and to notepad under Windows. You may want to set
523 524 this variable properly and to a lightweight editor which doesn't take
524 525 too long to start (that is, something other than a new instance of
525 526 Emacs). This way you can edit multi-line code quickly and with the power
526 527 of a real editor right inside IPython.
527 528
528 529 If you are a dedicated Emacs user, you should set up the Emacs server so
529 530 that new requests are handled by the original process. This means that
530 531 almost no time is spent in handling the request (assuming an Emacs
531 532 process is already running). For this to work, you need to set your
532 533 EDITOR environment variable to 'emacsclient'. The code below, supplied
533 534 by Francois Pinard, can then be used in your .emacs file to enable the
534 535 server::
535 536
536 537 (defvar server-buffer-clients)
537 538 (when (and (fboundp 'server-start) (string-equal (getenv "TERM") 'xterm))
538 539 (server-start)
539 540 (defun fp-kill-server-with-buffer-routine ()
540 541 (and server-buffer-clients (server-done)))
541 542 (add-hook 'kill-buffer-hook 'fp-kill-server-with-buffer-routine))
542 543
543 544 You can also set the value of this editor via the commmand-line option
544 545 '-editor' or in your ipythonrc file. This is useful if you wish to use
545 546 specifically for IPython an editor different from your typical default
546 547 (and for Windows users who tend to use fewer environment variables).
547 548
548 549
549 550 Color
550 551 -----
551 552
552 553 The default IPython configuration has most bells and whistles turned on
553 554 (they're pretty safe). But there's one that may cause problems on some
554 555 systems: the use of color on screen for displaying information. This is
555 556 very useful, since IPython can show prompts and exception tracebacks
556 557 with various colors, display syntax-highlighted source code, and in
557 558 general make it easier to visually parse information.
558 559
559 560 The following terminals seem to handle the color sequences fine:
560 561
561 562 * Linux main text console, KDE Konsole, Gnome Terminal, E-term,
562 563 rxvt, xterm.
563 564 * CDE terminal (tested under Solaris). This one boldfaces light colors.
564 565 * (X)Emacs buffers. See sec.3.4 <#sec:emacs> for more details on
565 566 using IPython with (X)Emacs.
566 567 * A Windows (XP/2k) command prompt with Gary Bishop's support
567 568 extensions. Gary's extensions are discussed in Sec. 2.3
568 569 <node2.html#sub:Under-Windows>.
569 570 * A Windows (XP/2k) CygWin shell. Although some users have reported
570 571 problems; it is not clear whether there is an issue for everyone
571 572 or only under specific configurations. If you have full color
572 573 support under cygwin, please post to the IPython mailing list so
573 574 this issue can be resolved for all users.
574 575
575 576 These have shown problems:
576 577
577 578 * Windows command prompt in WinXP/2k logged into a Linux machine via
578 579 telnet or ssh.
579 580 * Windows native command prompt in WinXP/2k, without Gary Bishop's
580 581 extensions. Once Gary's readline library is installed, the normal
581 582 WinXP/2k command prompt works perfectly.
582 583
583 584 Currently the following color schemes are available:
584 585
585 586 * NoColor: uses no color escapes at all (all escapes are empty '' ''
586 587 strings). This 'scheme' is thus fully safe to use in any terminal.
587 588 * Linux: works well in Linux console type environments: dark
588 589 background with light fonts. It uses bright colors for
589 590 information, so it is difficult to read if you have a light
590 591 colored background.
591 592 * LightBG: the basic colors are similar to those in the Linux scheme
592 593 but darker. It is easy to read in terminals with light backgrounds.
593 594
594 595 IPython uses colors for two main groups of things: prompts and
595 596 tracebacks which are directly printed to the terminal, and the object
596 597 introspection system which passes large sets of data through a pager.
597 598
598 599
599 600 Input/Output prompts and exception tracebacks
600 601 ---------------------------------------------
601 602
602 603 You can test whether the colored prompts and tracebacks work on your
603 604 system interactively by typing '%colors Linux' at the prompt (use
604 605 '%colors LightBG' if your terminal has a light background). If the input
605 prompt shows garbage like:
606 prompt shows garbage like::
607
606 608 [0;32mIn [[1;32m1[0;32m]: [0;00m
607 instead of (in color) something like:
609
610 instead of (in color) something like::
611
608 612 In [1]:
613
609 614 this means that your terminal doesn't properly handle color escape
610 615 sequences. You can go to a 'no color' mode by typing '%colors NoColor'.
611 616
612 617 You can try using a different terminal emulator program (Emacs users,
613 618 see below). To permanently set your color preferences, edit the file
614 619 $HOME/.ipython/ipythonrc and set the colors option to the desired value.
615 620
616 621
617 622 Object details (types, docstrings, source code, etc.)
618 623 -----------------------------------------------------
619 624
620 625 IPython has a set of special functions for studying the objects you are
621 626 working with, discussed in detail in Sec. 6.4
622 627 <node6.html#sec:dyn-object-info>. But this system relies on passing
623 628 information which is longer than your screen through a data pager, such
624 629 as the common Unix less and more programs. In order to be able to see
625 630 this information in color, your pager needs to be properly configured. I
626 631 strongly recommend using less instead of more, as it seems that more
627 632 simply can not understand colored text correctly.
628 633
629 634 In order to configure less as your default pager, do the following:
630 635
631 636 1. Set the environment PAGER variable to less.
632 637 2. Set the environment LESS variable to -r (plus any other options
633 638 you always want to pass to less by default). This tells less to
634 639 properly interpret control sequences, which is how color
635 640 information is given to your terminal.
636 641
637 642 For the csh or tcsh shells, add to your ~/.cshrc file the lines::
638 643
639 644 setenv PAGER less
640 645 setenv LESS -r
641 646
642 647 There is similar syntax for other Unix shells, look at your system
643 648 documentation for details.
644 649
645 650 If you are on a system which lacks proper data pagers (such as Windows),
646 651 IPython will use a very limited builtin pager.
647 652
648 653 (X)Emacs configuration
649 654 ----------------------
650 655
651 656 Thanks to the work of Alexander Schmolck and Prabhu Ramachandran,
652 657 currently (X)Emacs and IPython get along very well.
653 658
654 659 Important note: You will need to use a recent enough version of
655 660 python-mode.el, along with the file ipython.el. You can check that the
656 661 version you have of python-mode.el is new enough by either looking at
657 662 the revision number in the file itself, or asking for it in (X)Emacs via
658 663 M-x py-version. Versions 4.68 and newer contain the necessary fixes for
659 664 proper IPython support.
660 665
661 666 The file ipython.el is included with the IPython distribution, in the
662 667 documentation directory (where this manual resides in PDF and HTML
663 668 formats).
664 669
665 670 Once you put these files in your Emacs path, all you need in your .emacs
666 671 file is::
667 672
668 673 (require 'ipython)
669 674
670 675 This should give you full support for executing code snippets via
671 676 IPython, opening IPython as your Python shell via C-c !, etc.
672 677
673 678 If you happen to get garbage instead of colored prompts as described in
674 679 the previous section, you may need to set also in your .emacs file::
675 680
676 681 (setq ansi-color-for-comint-mode t)
677 682
678 683
679 684 Notes:
680 685
681 686 * There is one caveat you should be aware of: you must start the
682 687 IPython shell before attempting to execute any code regions via
683 688 ``C-c |``. Simply type C-c ! to start IPython before passing any code
684 689 regions to the interpreter, and you shouldn't experience any
685 690 problems.
686 691 This is due to a bug in Python itself, which has been fixed for
687 692 Python 2.3, but exists as of Python 2.2.2 (reported as SF bug [
688 693 737947 ]).
689 694 * The (X)Emacs support is maintained by Alexander Schmolck, so all
690 695 comments/requests should be directed to him through the IPython
691 696 mailing lists.
692 697 * This code is still somewhat experimental so it's a bit rough
693 698 around the edges (although in practice, it works quite well).
694 699 * Be aware that if you customize py-python-command previously, this
695 700 value will override what ipython.el does (because loading the
696 701 customization variables comes later).
697 702
698 703 Quick tips
699 704 ==========
700 705
701 706 IPython can be used as an improved replacement for the Python prompt,
702 707 and for that you don't really need to read any more of this manual. But
703 708 in this section we'll try to summarize a few tips on how to make the
704 709 most effective use of it for everyday Python development, highlighting
705 710 things you might miss in the rest of the manual (which is getting long).
706 711 We'll give references to parts in the manual which provide more detail
707 712 when appropriate.
708 713
709 714 The following article by Jeremy Jones provides an introductory tutorial
710 715 about IPython:
711 716 http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2005/01/27/ipython.html
712 717
713 718 * The TAB key. TAB-completion, especially for attributes, is a
714 719 convenient way to explore the structure of any object you're
715 720 dealing with. Simply type object_name.<TAB> and a list of the
716 721 object's attributes will be printed (see sec. 6.5
717 722 <node6.html#sec:readline> for more). Tab completion also works on
718 723 file and directory names, which combined with IPython's alias
719 724 system allows you to do from within IPython many of the things you
720 725 normally would need the system shell for.
721 726 * Explore your objects. Typing object_name? will print all sorts of
722 727 details about any object, including docstrings, function
723 728 definition lines (for call arguments) and constructor details for
724 729 classes. The magic commands %pdoc, %pdef, %psource and %pfile will
725 730 respectively print the docstring, function definition line, full
726 731 source code and the complete file for any object (when they can be
727 732 found). If automagic is on (it is by default), you don't need to
728 733 type the '%' explicitly. See sec. 6.4
729 734 <node6.html#sec:dyn-object-info> for more.
730 735 * The %run magic command allows you to run any python script and
731 736 load all of its data directly into the interactive namespace.
732 737 Since the file is re-read from disk each time, changes you make to
733 738 it are reflected immediately (in contrast to the behavior of
734 739 import). I rarely use import for code I am testing, relying on
735 740 %run instead. See sec. 6.2 <node6.html#sec:magic> for more on this
736 741 and other magic commands, or type the name of any magic command
737 742 and ? to get details on it. See also sec. 6.9
738 743 <node6.html#sec:dreload> for a recursive reload command.
739 744 %run also has special flags for timing the execution of your
740 745 scripts (-t) and for executing them under the control of either
741 746 Python's pdb debugger (-d) or profiler (-p). With all of these,
742 747 %run can be used as the main tool for efficient interactive
743 748 development of code which you write in your editor of choice.
744 749 * Use the Python debugger, pdb^2 <footnode.html#foot360>. The %pdb
745 750 command allows you to toggle on and off the automatic invocation
746 751 of an IPython-enhanced pdb debugger (with coloring, tab completion
747 752 and more) at any uncaught exception. The advantage of this is that
748 753 pdb starts inside the function where the exception occurred, with
749 754 all data still available. You can print variables, see code,
750 755 execute statements and even walk up and down the call stack to
751 756 track down the true source of the problem (which often is many
752 757 layers in the stack above where the exception gets triggered).
753 758 Running programs with %run and pdb active can be an efficient to
754 759 develop and debug code, in many cases eliminating the need for
755 760 print statements or external debugging tools. I often simply put a
756 761 1/0 in a place where I want to take a look so that pdb gets
757 762 called, quickly view whatever variables I need to or test various
758 763 pieces of code and then remove the 1/0.
759 764 Note also that '%run -d' activates pdb and automatically sets
760 765 initial breakpoints for you to step through your code, watch
761 766 variables, etc. See Sec. 6.12 <node6.html#sec:cache_output> for
762 767 details.
763 768 * Use the output cache. All output results are automatically stored
764 769 in a global dictionary named Out and variables named _1, _2, etc.
765 770 alias them. For example, the result of input line 4 is available
766 771 either as Out[4] or as _4. Additionally, three variables named _,
767 772 __ and ___ are always kept updated with the for the last three
768 773 results. This allows you to recall any previous result and further
769 774 use it for new calculations. See Sec. 6.12
770 775 <node6.html#sec:cache_output> for more.
771 776 * Put a ';' at the end of a line to supress the printing of output.
772 777 This is useful when doing calculations which generate long output
773 778 you are not interested in seeing. The _* variables and the Out[]
774 779 list do get updated with the contents of the output, even if it is
775 780 not printed. You can thus still access the generated results this
776 781 way for further processing.
777 782 * A similar system exists for caching input. All input is stored in
778 783 a global list called In , so you can re-execute lines 22 through
779 784 28 plus line 34 by typing 'exec In[22:29]+In[34]' (using Python
780 785 slicing notation). If you need to execute the same set of lines
781 786 often, you can assign them to a macro with the %macro function.
782 787 See sec. 6.11 <node6.html#sec:cache_input> for more.
783 788 * Use your input history. The %hist command can show you all
784 789 previous input, without line numbers if desired (option -n) so you
785 790 can directly copy and paste code either back in IPython or in a
786 791 text editor. You can also save all your history by turning on
787 792 logging via %logstart; these logs can later be either reloaded as
788 793 IPython sessions or used as code for your programs.
789 794 * Define your own system aliases. Even though IPython gives you
790 795 access to your system shell via the ! prefix, it is convenient to
791 796 have aliases to the system commands you use most often. This
792 797 allows you to work seamlessly from inside IPython with the same
793 798 commands you are used to in your system shell.
794 799 IPython comes with some pre-defined aliases and a complete system
795 800 for changing directories, both via a stack (see %pushd, %popd and
796 801 %dhist) and via direct %cd. The latter keeps a history of visited
797 802 directories and allows you to go to any previously visited one.
798 803 * Use Python to manipulate the results of system commands. The '!!'
799 804 special syntax, and the %sc and %sx magic commands allow you to
800 805 capture system output into Python variables.
801 806 * Expand python variables when calling the shell (either via '!' and
802 807 '!!' or via aliases) by prepending a $ in front of them. You can
803 808 also expand complete python expressions. See sec. 6.7
804 809 <node6.html#sub:System-shell-access> for more.
805 810 * Use profiles to maintain different configurations (modules to
806 811 load, function definitions, option settings) for particular tasks.
807 812 You can then have customized versions of IPython for specific
808 813 purposes. See sec. 7.3 <node7.html#sec:profiles> for more.
809 814 * Embed IPython in your programs. A few lines of code are enough to
810 815 load a complete IPython inside your own programs, giving you the
811 816 ability to work with your data interactively after automatic
812 817 processing has been completed. See sec. 9 <node9.html#sec:embed>
813 818 for more.
814 819 * Use the Python profiler. When dealing with performance issues, the
815 820 %run command with a -p option allows you to run complete programs
816 821 under the control of the Python profiler. The %prun command does a
817 822 similar job for single Python expressions (like function calls).
818 823 * Use the IPython.demo.Demo class to load any Python script as an
819 824 interactive demo. With a minimal amount of simple markup, you can
820 825 control the execution of the script, stopping as needed. See
821 826 sec. 14 <node14.html#sec:interactive-demos> for more.
822 827 * Run your doctests from within IPython for development and
823 828 debugging. The special %doctest_mode command toggles a mode where
824 829 the prompt, output and exceptions display matches as closely as
825 830 possible that of the default Python interpreter. In addition, this
826 831 mode allows you to directly paste in code that contains leading
827 832 '>>>' prompts, even if they have extra leading whitespace (as is
828 833 common in doctest files). This combined with the '%history -tn'
829 834 call to see your translated history (with these extra prompts
830 835 removed and no line numbers) allows for an easy doctest workflow,
831 836 where you can go from doctest to interactive execution to pasting
832 837 into valid Python code as needed.
833 838
834 839
835 840 Source code handling tips
836 841 -------------------------
837 842
838 843 IPython is a line-oriented program, without full control of the
839 844 terminal. Therefore, it doesn't support true multiline editing. However,
840 845 it has a number of useful tools to help you in dealing effectively with
841 846 more complex editing.
842 847
843 848 The %edit command gives a reasonable approximation of multiline editing,
844 849 by invoking your favorite editor on the spot. IPython will execute the
845 850 code you type in there as if it were typed interactively. Type %edit?
846 851 for the full details on the edit command.
847 852
848 853 If you have typed various commands during a session, which you'd like to
849 854 reuse, IPython provides you with a number of tools. Start by using %hist
850 855 to see your input history, so you can see the line numbers of all input.
851 856 Let us say that you'd like to reuse lines 10 through 20, plus lines 24
852 857 and 28. All the commands below can operate on these with the syntax::
853 858
854 859 %command 10-20 24 28
855 860
856 861 where the command given can be:
857 862
858 863 * %macro <macroname>: this stores the lines into a variable which,
859 864 when called at the prompt, re-executes the input. Macros can be
860 865 edited later using '%edit macroname', and they can be stored
861 866 persistently across sessions with '%store macroname' (the storage
862 867 system is per-profile). The combination of quick macros,
863 868 persistent storage and editing, allows you to easily refine
864 869 quick-and-dirty interactive input into permanent utilities, always
865 870 available both in IPython and as files for general reuse.
866 871 * %edit: this will open a text editor with those lines pre-loaded
867 872 for further modification. It will then execute the resulting
868 873 file's contents as if you had typed it at the prompt.
869 874 * %save <filename>: this saves the lines directly to a named file on
870 875 disk.
871 876
872 877 While %macro saves input lines into memory for interactive re-execution,
873 878 sometimes you'd like to save your input directly to a file. The %save
874 879 magic does this: its input sytnax is the same as %macro, but it saves
875 880 your input directly to a Python file. Note that the %logstart command
876 881 also saves input, but it logs all input to disk (though you can
877 882 temporarily suspend it and reactivate it with %logoff/%logon); %save
878 883 allows you to select which lines of input you need to save.
879 884
880 885
881 886 Lightweight 'version control'
882 887 -----------------------------
883 888
884 889 When you call %edit with no arguments, IPython opens an empty editor
885 890 with a temporary file, and it returns the contents of your editing
886 891 session as a string variable. Thanks to IPython's output caching
887 892 mechanism, this is automatically stored::
888 893
889 894 In [1]: %edit
890 895
891 896 IPython will make a temporary file named: /tmp/ipython_edit_yR-HCN.py
892 897
893 898 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
894 899
895 900 hello - this is a temporary file
896 901
897 902 Out[1]: "print 'hello - this is a temporary file'\n"
898 903
899 904 Now, if you call '%edit -p', IPython tries to open an editor with the
900 905 same data as the last time you used %edit. So if you haven't used %edit
901 906 in the meantime, this same contents will reopen; however, it will be
902 907 done in a new file. This means that if you make changes and you later
903 908 want to find an old version, you can always retrieve it by using its
904 909 output number, via '%edit _NN', where NN is the number of the output
905 910 prompt.
906 911
907 912 Continuing with the example above, this should illustrate this idea::
908 913
909 914 In [2]: edit -p
910 915
911 916 IPython will make a temporary file named: /tmp/ipython_edit_nA09Qk.py
912 917
913 918 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
914 919
915 920 hello - now I made some changes
916 921
917 922 Out[2]: "print 'hello - now I made some changes'\n"
918 923
919 924 In [3]: edit _1
920 925
921 926 IPython will make a temporary file named: /tmp/ipython_edit_gy6-zD.py
922 927
923 928 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
924 929
925 930 hello - this is a temporary file
926 931
927 932 IPython version control at work :)
928 933
929 934 Out[3]: "print 'hello - this is a temporary file'\nprint 'IPython version control at work :)'\n"
930 935
931 936
932 937 This section was written after a contribution by Alexander Belchenko on
933 938 the IPython user list.
934 939
935 940
936 941 Effective logging
937 942 -----------------
938 943
939 944 A very useful suggestion sent in by Robert Kern follows:
940 945
941 946 I recently happened on a nifty way to keep tidy per-project log files. I
942 947 made a profile for my project (which is called "parkfield").
943 948
944 949 include ipythonrc
945 950
946 951 # cancel earlier logfile invocation:
947 952
948 953 logfile ''
949 954
950 955 execute import time
951 956
952 957 execute __cmd = '/Users/kern/research/logfiles/parkfield-%s.log rotate'
953 958
954 959 execute __IP.magic_logstart(__cmd % time.strftime('%Y-%m-%d'))
955 960
956 961 I also added a shell alias for convenience:
957 962
958 963 alias parkfield="ipython -pylab -profile parkfield"
959 964
960 965 Now I have a nice little directory with everything I ever type in,
961 966 organized by project and date.
962 967
963 968 Contribute your own: If you have your own favorite tip on using IPython
964 969 efficiently for a certain task (especially things which can't be done in
965 970 the normal Python interpreter), don't hesitate to send it!
966 971
967 972 Command-line use
968 973 ================
969 974
970 975 You start IPython with the command::
971 976
972 977 $ ipython [options] files
973 978
974 979 If invoked with no options, it executes all the files listed in sequence
975 980 and drops you into the interpreter while still acknowledging any options
976 981 you may have set in your ipythonrc file. This behavior is different from
977 982 standard Python, which when called as python -i will only execute one
978 983 file and ignore your configuration setup.
979 984
980 985 Please note that some of the configuration options are not available at
981 986 the command line, simply because they are not practical here. Look into
982 987 your ipythonrc configuration file for details on those. This file
983 988 typically installed in the $HOME/.ipython directory. For Windows users,
984 989 $HOME resolves to C:\\Documents and Settings\\YourUserName in most
985 990 instances. In the rest of this text, we will refer to this directory as
986 991 IPYTHONDIR.
987 992
988 993
989 994 Special Threading Options
990 995
991 996 The following special options are ONLY valid at the beginning of the
992 997 command line, and not later. This is because they control the initial-
993 998 ization of ipython itself, before the normal option-handling mechanism
994 999 is active.
995 1000
996 1001 * [-gthread, -qthread, -q4thread, -wthread, -pylab:] Only one of
997 1002 these can be given, and it can only be given as the first option
998 1003 passed to IPython (it will have no effect in any other position).
999 1004 They provide threading support for the GTK, Qt (versions 3 and 4)
1000 1005 and WXPython toolkits, and for the matplotlib library.
1001 1006 * [ ] With any of the first four options, IPython starts running a
1002 1007 separate thread for the graphical toolkit's operation, so that you
1003 1008 can open and control graphical elements from within an IPython
1004 1009 command line, without blocking. All four provide essentially the
1005 1010 same functionality, respectively for GTK, Qt3, Qt4 and WXWidgets
1006 1011 (via their Python interfaces).
1007 1012 * [ ] Note that with -wthread, you can additionally use the
1008 1013 -wxversion option to request a specific version of wx to be used.
1009 1014 This requires that you have the wxversion Python module installed,
1010 1015 which is part of recent wxPython distributions.
1011 1016 * [ ] If -pylab is given, IPython loads special support for the mat
1012 1017 plotlib library (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net), allowing
1013 1018 interactive usage of any of its backends as defined in the user's
1014 1019 ~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc file. It automatically activates GTK,
1015 1020 Qt or WX threading for IPyhton if the choice of matplotlib backend
1016 1021 requires it. It also modifies the %run command to correctly
1017 1022 execute (without blocking) any matplotlib-based script which calls
1018 1023 show() at the end.
1019 1024 * [-tk] The -g/q/q4/wthread options, and -pylab (if matplotlib is
1020 1025 configured to use GTK, Qt3, Qt4 or WX), will normally block Tk
1021 1026 graphical interfaces. This means that when either GTK, Qt or WX
1022 1027 threading is active, any attempt to open a Tk GUI will result in a
1023 1028 dead window, and possibly cause the Python interpreter to crash.
1024 1029 An extra option, -tk, is available to address this issue. It can
1025 1030 only be given as a second option after any of the above (-gthread,
1026 1031 -wthread or -pylab).
1027 1032 * [ ] If -tk is given, IPython will try to coordinate Tk threading
1028 1033 with GTK, Qt or WX. This is however potentially unreliable, and
1029 1034 you will have to test on your platform and Python configuration to
1030 1035 determine whether it works for you. Debian users have reported
1031 1036 success, apparently due to the fact that Debian builds all of Tcl,
1032 1037 Tk, Tkinter and Python with pthreads support. Under other Linux
1033 1038 environments (such as Fedora Core 2/3), this option has caused
1034 1039 random crashes and lockups of the Python interpreter. Under other
1035 1040 operating systems (Mac OSX and Windows), you'll need to try it to
1036 1041 find out, since currently no user reports are available.
1037 1042 * [ ] There is unfortunately no way for IPython to determine at run
1038 1043 time whether -tk will work reliably or not, so you will need to do
1039 1044 some experiments before relying on it for regular work.
1040 1045
1041 1046
1042 1047
1043 1048 Regular Options
1044 1049 ---------------
1045 1050
1046 1051 After the above threading options have been given, regular options can
1047 1052 follow in any order. All options can be abbreviated to their shortest
1048 1053 non-ambiguous form and are case-sensitive. One or two dashes can be
1049 1054 used. Some options have an alternate short form, indicated after a ``|``.
1050 1055
1051 1056 Most options can also be set from your ipythonrc configuration file. See
1052 1057 the provided example for more details on what the options do. Options
1053 1058 given at the command line override the values set in the ipythonrc file.
1054 1059
1055 1060 All options with a [no] prepended can be specified in negated form
1056 1061 (-nooption instead of -option) to turn the feature off.
1057 1062
1058 1063 * [-help:] print a help message and exit.
1059 1064 * [-pylab:] this can only be given as the first option passed to
1060 1065 IPython (it will have no effect in any other position). It adds
1061 1066 special support for the matplotlib library
1062 1067 (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net
1063 1068 http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net), allowing interactive usage of
1064 1069 any of its backends as defined in the user's .matplotlibrc file.
1065 1070 It automatically activates GTK or WX threading for IPyhton if the
1066 1071 choice of matplotlib backend requires it. It also modifies the
1067 1072 %run command to correctly execute (without blocking) any
1068 1073 matplotlib-based script which calls show() at the end. See Sec. 15
1069 1074 <node15.html#sec:matplotlib-support> for more details.
1070 1075 * [-autocall] <val>: Make IPython automatically call any callable
1071 1076 object even if you didn't type explicit parentheses. For example,
1072 1077 'str 43' becomes 'str(43)' automatically. The value can be '0' to
1073 1078 disable the feature, '1' for smart autocall, where it is not
1074 1079 applied if there are no more arguments on the line, and '2' for
1075 1080 full autocall, where all callable objects are automatically called
1076 1081 (even if no arguments are present). The default is '1'.
1077 1082 * [-[no]autoindent:] Turn automatic indentation on/off.
1078 1083 * [-[no]automagic:] make magic commands automatic (without needing
1079 1084 their first character to be %). Type %magic at the IPython prompt
1080 1085 for more information.
1081 1086 * [-[no]autoedit_syntax:] When a syntax error occurs after editing a
1082 1087 file, automatically open the file to the trouble causing line for
1083 1088 convenient fixing.
1084 1089 * [-[no]banner:] Print the initial information banner (default on).
1085 1090 * [-c <command>:] execute the given command string, and set sys.argv
1086 1091 to ['c']. This is similar to the -c option in the normal Python
1087 1092 interpreter.
1088 1093 * [-cache_size|cs <n>:] size of the output cache (maximum number of
1089 1094 entries to hold in memory). The default is 1000, you can change it
1090 1095 permanently in your config file. Setting it to 0 completely
1091 1096 disables the caching system, and the minimum value accepted is 20
1092 1097 (if you provide a value less than 20, it is reset to 0 and a
1093 1098 warning is issued) This limit is defined because otherwise you'll
1094 1099 spend more time re-flushing a too small cache than working.
1095 1100 * [-classic|cl:] Gives IPython a similar feel to the classic Python
1096 1101 prompt.
1097 1102 * [-colors <scheme>:] Color scheme for prompts and exception
1098 1103 reporting. Currently implemented: NoColor, Linux and LightBG.
1099 1104 * [-[no]color_info:] IPython can display information about objects
1100 1105 via a set of functions, and optionally can use colors for this,
1101 1106 syntax highlighting source code and various other elements.
1102 1107 However, because this information is passed through a pager (like
1103 1108 'less') and many pagers get confused with color codes, this option
1104 1109 is off by default. You can test it and turn it on permanently in
1105 1110 your ipythonrc file if it works for you. As a reference, the
1106 1111 'less' pager supplied with Mandrake 8.2 works ok, but that in
1107 1112 RedHat 7.2 doesn't.
1108 1113 * [ ] Test it and turn it on permanently if it works with your
1109 1114 system. The magic function %color_info allows you to toggle this
1110 1115 interactively for testing.
1111 1116 * [-[no]debug:] Show information about the loading process. Very
1112 1117 useful to pin down problems with your configuration files or to
1113 1118 get details about session restores.
1114 1119 * [-[no]deep_reload:] IPython can use the deep_reload module which
1115 1120 reloads changes in modules recursively (it replaces the reload()
1116 1121 function, so you don't need to change anything to use it).
1117 1122 deep_reload() forces a full reload of modules whose code may have
1118 1123 changed, which the default reload() function does not.
1119 1124 * [ ] When deep_reload is off, IPython will use the normal reload(),
1120 1125 but deep_reload will still be available as dreload(). This feature
1121 1126 is off by default [which means that you have both normal reload()
1122 1127 and dreload()].
1123 1128 * [-editor <name>:] Which editor to use with the %edit command. By
1124 1129 default, IPython will honor your EDITOR environment variable (if
1125 1130 not set, vi is the Unix default and notepad the Windows one).
1126 1131 Since this editor is invoked on the fly by IPython and is meant
1127 1132 for editing small code snippets, you may want to use a small,
1128 1133 lightweight editor here (in case your default EDITOR is something
1129 1134 like Emacs).
1130 1135 * [-ipythondir <name>:] name of your IPython configuration directory
1131 1136 IPYTHONDIR. This can also be specified through the environment
1132 1137 variable IPYTHONDIR.
1133 1138 * [-log|l:] generate a log file of all input. The file is named
1134 1139 ipython_log.py in your current directory (which prevents logs from
1135 1140 multiple IPython sessions from trampling each other). You can use
1136 1141 this to later restore a session by loading your logfile as a file
1137 1142 to be executed with option -logplay (see below).
1138 1143 * [-logfile|lf <name>:] specify the name of your logfile.
1139 1144 * [-logplay|lp <name>:] you can replay a previous log. For restoring
1140 1145 a session as close as possible to the state you left it in, use
1141 1146 this option (don't just run the logfile). With -logplay, IPython
1142 1147 will try to reconstruct the previous working environment in full,
1143 1148 not just execute the commands in the logfile.
1144 1149 * [ ] When a session is restored, logging is automatically turned on
1145 1150 again with the name of the logfile it was invoked with (it is read
1146 1151 from the log header). So once you've turned logging on for a
1147 1152 session, you can quit IPython and reload it as many times as you
1148 1153 want and it will continue to log its history and restore from the
1149 1154 beginning every time.
1150 1155 * [ ] Caveats: there are limitations in this option. The history
1151 1156 variables _i*,_* and _dh don't get restored properly. In the
1152 1157 future we will try to implement full session saving by writing and
1153 1158 retrieving a 'snapshot' of the memory state of IPython. But our
1154 1159 first attempts failed because of inherent limitations of Python's
1155 1160 Pickle module, so this may have to wait.
1156 1161 * [-[no]messages:] Print messages which IPython collects about its
1157 1162 startup process (default on).
1158 1163 * [-[no]pdb:] Automatically call the pdb debugger after every
1159 1164 uncaught exception. If you are used to debugging using pdb, this
1160 1165 puts you automatically inside of it after any call (either in
1161 1166 IPython or in code called by it) which triggers an exception which
1162 1167 goes uncaught.
1163 1168 * [-[no]pprint:] ipython can optionally use the pprint (pretty
1164 1169 printer) module for displaying results. pprint tends to give a
1165 1170 nicer display of nested data structures. If you like it, you can
1166 1171 turn it on permanently in your config file (default off).
1167 1172 * [-profile|p] <name>: assume that your config file is
1168 1173 ipythonrc-<name> (looks in current dir first, then in IPYTHONDIR).
1169 1174 This is a quick way to keep and load multiple config files for
1170 1175 different tasks, especially if you use the include option of
1171 1176 config files. You can keep a basic IPYTHONDIR/ipythonrc file and
1172 1177 then have other 'profiles' which include this one and load extra
1173 1178 things for particular tasks. For example:
1174 1179 * [ ] 1. $HOME/.ipython/ipythonrc : load basic things you always want.
1175 1180 * [ ] 2. $HOME/.ipython/ipythonrc-math : load (1) and basic
1176 1181 math-related modules.
1177 1182 * [ ] 3. $HOME/.ipython/ipythonrc-numeric : load (1) and Numeric and
1178 1183 plotting modules.
1179 1184 * [ ] Since it is possible to create an endless loop by having
1180 1185 circular file inclusions, IPython will stop if it reaches 15
1181 1186 recursive inclusions.
1182 1187 * [-prompt_in1|pi1 <string>:] Specify the string used for input
1183 1188 prompts. Note that if you are using numbered prompts, the number
1184 1189 is represented with a '\#' in the string. Don't forget to quote
1185 1190 strings with spaces embedded in them. Default: 'In [\#]:'.
1186 1191 Sec. 7.2 <node7.html#sec:prompts> discusses in detail all the
1187 1192 available escapes to customize your prompts.
1188 1193 * [-prompt_in2|pi2 <string>:] Similar to the previous option, but
1189 1194 used for the continuation prompts. The special sequence '\D' is
1190 1195 similar to '\#', but with all digits replaced dots (so you can
1191 1196 have your continuation prompt aligned with your input prompt).
1192 1197 Default: ' .\D.:' (note three spaces at the start for alignment
1193 1198 with 'In [\#]').
1194 1199 * [-prompt_out|po <string>:] String used for output prompts, also
1195 1200 uses numbers like prompt_in1. Default: 'Out[\#]:'
1196 1201 * [-quick:] start in bare bones mode (no config file loaded).
1197 1202 * [-rcfile <name>:] name of your IPython resource configuration
1198 1203 file. Normally IPython loads ipythonrc (from current directory) or
1199 1204 IPYTHONDIR/ipythonrc.
1200 1205 * [ ] If the loading of your config file fails, IPython starts with
1201 1206 a bare bones configuration (no modules loaded at all).
1202 1207 * [-[no]readline:] use the readline library, which is needed to
1203 1208 support name completion and command history, among other things.
1204 1209 It is enabled by default, but may cause problems for users of
1205 1210 X/Emacs in Python comint or shell buffers.
1206 1211 * [ ] Note that X/Emacs 'eterm' buffers (opened with M-x term)
1207 1212 support IPython's readline and syntax coloring fine, only 'emacs'
1208 1213 (M-x shell and C-c !) buffers do not.
1209 1214 * [-screen_length|sl <n>:] number of lines of your screen. This is
1210 1215 used to control printing of very long strings. Strings longer than
1211 1216 this number of lines will be sent through a pager instead of
1212 1217 directly printed.
1213 1218 * [ ] The default value for this is 0, which means IPython will
1214 1219 auto-detect your screen size every time it needs to print certain
1215 1220 potentially long strings (this doesn't change the behavior of the
1216 1221 'print' keyword, it's only triggered internally). If for some
1217 1222 reason this isn't working well (it needs curses support), specify
1218 1223 it yourself. Otherwise don't change the default.
1219 1224 * [-separate_in|si <string>:] separator before input prompts.
1220 1225 Default: '\n'
1221 1226 * [-separate_out|so <string>:] separator before output prompts.
1222 1227 Default: nothing.
1223 1228 * [-separate_out2|so2 <string>:] separator after output prompts.
1224 1229 Default: nothing.
1225 1230 * [ ] For these three options, use the value 0 to specify no separator.
1226 1231 * [-nosep:] shorthand for '-SeparateIn 0 -SeparateOut 0
1227 1232 -SeparateOut2 0'. Simply removes all input/output separators.
1228 1233 * [-upgrade:] allows you to upgrade your IPYTHONDIR configuration
1229 1234 when you install a new version of IPython. Since new versions may
1230 1235 include new command line options or example files, this copies
1231 1236 updated ipythonrc-type files. However, it backs up (with a .old
1232 1237 extension) all files which it overwrites so that you can merge
1233 1238 back any customizations you might have in your personal files.
1234 1239 * [-Version:] print version information and exit.
1235 1240 * [-wxversion <string>:] Select a specific version of wxPython (used
1236 1241 in conjunction with -wthread). Requires the wxversion module, part
1237 1242 of recent wxPython distributions
1238 1243 * [-xmode <modename>:] Mode for exception reporting.
1239 1244 * [ ] Valid modes: Plain, Context and Verbose.
1240 1245 * [ ] Plain: similar to python's normal traceback printing.
1241 1246 * [ ] Context: prints 5 lines of context source code around each
1242 1247 line in the traceback.
1243 1248 * [ ] Verbose: similar to Context, but additionally prints the
1244 1249 variables currently visible where the exception happened
1245 1250 (shortening their strings if too long). This can potentially be
1246 1251 very slow, if you happen to have a huge data structure whose
1247 1252 string representation is complex to compute. Your computer may
1248 1253 appear to freeze for a while with cpu usage at 100%. If this
1249 1254 occurs, you can cancel the traceback with Ctrl-C (maybe hitting it
1250 1255 more than once).
1251 1256
1252 1257 Interactive use
1253 1258 ===============
1254 1259
1255 1260 Warning: IPython relies on the existence of a global variable called
1256 1261 __IP which controls the shell itself. If you redefine __IP to anything,
1257 1262 bizarre behavior will quickly occur.
1258 1263
1259 1264 Other than the above warning, IPython is meant to work as a drop-in
1260 1265 replacement for the standard interactive interpreter. As such, any code
1261 1266 which is valid python should execute normally under IPython (cases where
1262 1267 this is not true should be reported as bugs). It does, however, offer
1263 1268 many features which are not available at a standard python prompt. What
1264 1269 follows is a list of these.
1265 1270
1266 1271
1267 1272 Caution for Windows users
1268 1273 -------------------------
1269 1274
1270 1275 Windows, unfortunately, uses the '\' character as a path separator. This
1271 1276 is a terrible choice, because '\' also represents the escape character
1272 1277 in most modern programming languages, including Python. For this reason,
1273 1278 issuing many of the commands discussed below (especially magics which
1274 1279 affect the filesystem) with '\' in them will cause strange errors.
1275 1280
1276 1281 A partial solution is to use instead the '/' character as a path
1277 1282 separator, which Windows recognizes in most situations. However, in
1278 1283 Windows commands '/' flags options, so you can not use it for the root
1279 1284 directory. This means that paths beginning at the root must be typed in
1280 1285 a contrived manner like:
1281 1286 %copy \opt/foo/bar.txt \tmp
1282 1287
1283 1288 There is no sensible thing IPython can do to truly work around this flaw
1284 1289 in Windows^3 <footnode.html#foot878>.
1285 1290
1286 1291
1287 1292
1288 1293 Magic command system
1289 1294 --------------------
1290 1295
1291 1296 IPython will treat any line whose first character is a % as a special
1292 1297 call to a 'magic' function. These allow you to control the behavior of
1293 1298 IPython itself, plus a lot of system-type features. They are all
1294 1299 prefixed with a % character, but parameters are given without
1295 1300 parentheses or quotes.
1296 1301
1297 1302 Example: typing '%cd mydir' (without the quotes) changes you working
1298 1303 directory to 'mydir', if it exists.
1299 1304
1300 1305 If you have 'automagic' enabled (in your ipythonrc file, via the command
1301 1306 line option -automagic or with the %automagic function), you don't need
1302 1307 to type in the % explicitly. IPython will scan its internal list of
1303 1308 magic functions and call one if it exists. With automagic on you can
1304 1309 then just type 'cd mydir' to go to directory 'mydir'. The automagic
1305 1310 system has the lowest possible precedence in name searches, so defining
1306 1311 an identifier with the same name as an existing magic function will
1307 1312 shadow it for automagic use. You can still access the shadowed magic
1308 1313 function by explicitly using the % character at the beginning of the line.
1309 1314
1310 1315 An example (with automagic on) should clarify all this::
1311 1316
1312 1317 In [1]: cd ipython # %cd is called by automagic
1313 1318
1314 1319 /home/fperez/ipython
1315 1320
1316 1321 In [2]: cd=1 # now cd is just a variable
1317 1322
1318 1323 In [3]: cd .. # and doesn't work as a function anymore
1319 1324
1320 1325 ------------------------------
1321 1326
1322 1327 File "<console>", line 1
1323 1328
1324 1329 cd ..
1325 1330
1326 1331 ^
1327 1332
1328 1333 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
1329 1334
1330 1335 In [4]: %cd .. # but %cd always works
1331 1336
1332 1337 /home/fperez
1333 1338
1334 1339 In [5]: del cd # if you remove the cd variable
1335 1340
1336 1341 In [6]: cd ipython # automagic can work again
1337 1342
1338 1343 /home/fperez/ipython
1339 1344
1340 1345 You can define your own magic functions to extend the system. The
1341 1346 following example defines a new magic command, %impall::
1342 1347
1343 1348 import IPython.ipapi
1344 1349
1345 1350 ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
1346 1351
1347 1352 def doimp(self, arg):
1348 1353
1349 1354 ip = self.api
1350 1355
1351 1356 ip.ex("import %s; reload(%s); from %s import *" % (
1352 1357
1353 1358 arg,arg,arg)
1354 1359
1355 1360 )
1356 1361
1357 1362 ip.expose_magic('impall', doimp)
1358 1363
1359 1364 You can also define your own aliased names for magic functions. In your
1360 1365 ipythonrc file, placing a line like:
1361 1366
1362 1367 execute __IP.magic_cl = __IP.magic_clear
1363 1368
1364 1369 will define %cl as a new name for %clear.
1365 1370
1366 1371 Type %magic for more information, including a list of all available
1367 1372 magic functions at any time and their docstrings. You can also type
1368 1373 %magic_function_name? (see sec. 6.4 <#sec:dyn-object-info> for
1369 1374 information on the '?' system) to get information about any particular
1370 1375 magic function you are interested in.
1371 1376
1372 1377
1373 1378 Magic commands
1374 1379 --------------
1375 1380
1376 1381 The rest of this section is automatically generated for each release
1377 1382 from the docstrings in the IPython code. Therefore the formatting is
1378 1383 somewhat minimal, but this method has the advantage of having
1379 1384 information always in sync with the code.
1380 1385
1381 1386 A list of all the magic commands available in IPython's default
1382 1387 installation follows. This is similar to what you'll see by simply
1383 1388 typing %magic at the prompt, but that will also give you information
1384 1389 about magic commands you may have added as part of your personal
1385 1390 customizations.
1386 1391
1387 1392 ::
1388 1393
1389 1394 %Exit: Exit IPython without confirmation.
1390 1395
1391 1396
1392 1397 %Pprint: Toggle pretty printing on/off.
1393 1398
1394 1399
1395 1400 %alias: Define an alias for a system command.
1396 1401
1397 1402 '%alias alias_name cmd' defines 'alias_name' as an alias for 'cmd'
1398 1403
1399 1404 Then, typing 'alias_name params' will execute the system command 'cmd
1400 1405 params' (from your underlying operating system).
1401 1406
1402 1407 Aliases have lower precedence than magic functions and Python normal
1403 1408 variables, so if 'foo' is both a Python variable and an alias, the alias
1404 1409 can not be executed until 'del foo' removes the Python variable.
1405 1410
1406 1411 You can use the %l specifier in an alias definition to represent the
1407 1412 whole line when the alias is called. For example:
1408 1413
1409 1414 In [2]: alias all echo "Input in brackets: <%l>"
1410 1415 In [3]: all hello world
1411 1416 Input in brackets: <hello world>
1412 1417
1413 1418 You can also define aliases with parameters using %s specifiers (one per
1414 1419 parameter):
1415 1420
1416 1421 In [1]: alias parts echo first %s second %s
1417 1422 In [2]: %parts A B
1418 1423 first A second B
1419 1424 In [3]: %parts A
1420 1425 Incorrect number of arguments: 2 expected.
1421 1426 parts is an alias to: 'echo first %s second %s'
1422 1427
1423 1428 Note that %l and %s are mutually exclusive. You can only use one or the
1424 1429 other in your aliases.
1425 1430
1426 1431 Aliases expand Python variables just like system calls using ! or !! do:
1427 1432 all expressions prefixed with '$' get expanded. For details of the
1428 1433 semantic rules, see PEP-215: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0215.html.
1429 1434 This is the library used by IPython for variable expansion. If you want
1430 1435 to access a true shell variable, an extra $ is necessary to prevent its
1431 1436 expansion by IPython:
1432 1437
1433 1438 In [6]: alias show echo
1434 1439 In [7]: PATH='A Python string'
1435 1440 In [8]: show $PATH
1436 1441 A Python string
1437 1442 In [9]: show $$PATH
1438 1443 /usr/local/lf9560/bin:/usr/local/intel/compiler70/ia32/bin:...
1439 1444
1440 1445 You can use the alias facility to acess all of $PATH. See the %rehash
1441 1446 and %rehashx functions, which automatically create aliases for the
1442 1447 contents of your $PATH.
1443 1448
1444 1449 If called with no parameters, %alias prints the current alias table.
1445 1450
1446 1451
1447 1452 %autocall: Make functions callable without having to type parentheses.
1448 1453
1449 1454 Usage:
1450 1455
1451 1456 %autocall [mode]
1452 1457
1453 1458 The mode can be one of: 0->Off, 1->Smart, 2->Full. If not given, the
1454 1459 value is toggled on and off (remembering the previous state).
1455 1460
1456 1461 In more detail, these values mean:
1457 1462
1458 1463 0 -> fully disabled
1459 1464
1460 1465 1 -> active, but do not apply if there are no arguments on the line.
1461 1466
1462 1467 In this mode, you get:
1463 1468
1464 1469 In [1]: callable Out[1]: <built-in function callable>
1465 1470
1466 1471 In [2]: callable 'hello' ---> callable('hello') Out[2]: False
1467 1472
1468 1473 2 -> Active always. Even if no arguments are present, the callable
1469 1474 object is called:
1470 1475
1471 1476 In [4]: callable ---> callable()
1472 1477
1473 1478 Note that even with autocall off, you can still use '/' at the start of
1474 1479 a line to treat the first argument on the command line as a function and
1475 1480 add parentheses to it:
1476 1481
1477 1482 In [8]: /str 43 ---> str(43) Out[8]: '43'
1478 1483
1479 1484
1480 1485 %autoindent: Toggle autoindent on/off (if available).
1481 1486
1482 1487
1483 1488 %automagic: Make magic functions callable without having to type the
1484 1489 initial %.
1485 1490
1486 1491 Without argumentsl toggles on/off (when off, you must call it as
1487 1492 %automagic, of course). With arguments it sets the value, and you can
1488 1493 use any of (case insensitive):
1489 1494
1490 1495 - on,1,True: to activate
1491 1496
1492 1497 - off,0,False: to deactivate.
1493 1498
1494 1499 Note that magic functions have lowest priority, so if there's a variable
1495 1500 whose name collides with that of a magic fn, automagic won't work for
1496 1501 that function (you get the variable instead). However, if you delete the
1497 1502 variable (del var), the previously shadowed magic function becomes
1498 1503 visible to automagic again.
1499 1504
1500 1505
1501 1506 %bg: Run a job in the background, in a separate thread.
1502 1507
1503 1508 For example,
1504 1509
1505 1510 %bg myfunc(x,y,z=1)
1506 1511
1507 1512 will execute 'myfunc(x,y,z=1)' in a background thread. As soon as the
1508 1513 execution starts, a message will be printed indicating the job number.
1509 1514 If your job number is 5, you can use
1510 1515
1511 1516 myvar = jobs.result(5) or myvar = jobs[5].result
1512 1517
1513 1518 to assign this result to variable 'myvar'.
1514 1519
1515 1520 IPython has a job manager, accessible via the 'jobs' object. You can
1516 1521 type jobs? to get more information about it, and use jobs.<TAB> to see
1517 1522 its attributes. All attributes not starting with an underscore are meant
1518 1523 for public use.
1519 1524
1520 1525 In particular, look at the jobs.new() method, which is used to create
1521 1526 new jobs. This magic %bg function is just a convenience wrapper around
1522 1527 jobs.new(), for expression-based jobs. If you want to create a new job
1523 1528 with an explicit function object and arguments, you must call jobs.new()
1524 1529 directly.
1525 1530
1526 1531 The jobs.new docstring also describes in detail several important
1527 1532 caveats associated with a thread-based model for background job
1528 1533 execution. Type jobs.new? for details.
1529 1534
1530 1535 You can check the status of all jobs with jobs.status().
1531 1536
1532 1537 The jobs variable is set by IPython into the Python builtin namespace.
1533 1538 If you ever declare a variable named 'jobs', you will shadow this name.
1534 1539 You can either delete your global jobs variable to regain access to the
1535 1540 job manager, or make a new name and assign it manually to the manager
1536 1541 (stored in IPython's namespace). For example, to assign the job manager
1537 1542 to the Jobs name, use:
1538 1543
1539 1544 Jobs = __builtins__.jobs
1540 1545
1541 1546
1542 1547 %bookmark: Manage IPython's bookmark system.
1543 1548
1544 1549 %bookmark <name> - set bookmark to current dir %bookmark <name> <dir> -
1545 1550 set bookmark to <dir> %bookmark -l - list all bookmarks %bookmark -d
1546 1551 <name> - remove bookmark %bookmark -r - remove all bookmarks
1547 1552
1548 1553 You can later on access a bookmarked folder with: %cd -b <name> or
1549 1554 simply '%cd <name>' if there is no directory called <name> AND there is
1550 1555 such a bookmark defined.
1551 1556
1552 1557 Your bookmarks persist through IPython sessions, but they are associated
1553 1558 with each profile.
1554 1559
1555 1560
1556 1561 %cd: Change the current working directory.
1557 1562
1558 1563 This command automatically maintains an internal list of directories you
1559 1564 visit during your IPython session, in the variable _dh. The command
1560 1565 %dhist shows this history nicely formatted. You can also do 'cd -<tab>'
1561 1566 to see directory history conveniently.
1562 1567
1563 1568 Usage:
1564 1569
1565 1570 cd 'dir': changes to directory 'dir'.
1566 1571
1567 1572 cd -: changes to the last visited directory.
1568 1573
1569 1574 cd -<n>: changes to the n-th directory in the directory history.
1570 1575
1571 1576 cd -b <bookmark_name>: jump to a bookmark set by %bookmark (note: cd
1572 1577 <bookmark_name> is enough if there is no directory <bookmark_name>, but
1573 1578 a bookmark with the name exists.) 'cd -b <tab>' allows you to
1574 1579 tab-complete bookmark names.
1575 1580
1576 1581 Options:
1577 1582
1578 1583 -q: quiet. Do not print the working directory after the cd command is
1579 1584 executed. By default IPython's cd command does print this directory,
1580 1585 since the default prompts do not display path information.
1581 1586
1582 1587 Note that !cd doesn't work for this purpose because the shell where
1583 1588 !command runs is immediately discarded after executing 'command'.
1584 1589
1585 1590
1586 1591 %color_info: Toggle color_info.
1587 1592
1588 1593 The color_info configuration parameter controls whether colors are used
1589 1594 for displaying object details (by things like %psource, %pfile or the
1590 1595 '?' system). This function toggles this value with each call.
1591 1596
1592 1597 Note that unless you have a fairly recent pager (less works better than
1593 1598 more) in your system, using colored object information displays will not
1594 1599 work properly. Test it and see.
1595 1600
1596 1601
1597 1602 %colors: Switch color scheme for prompts, info system and exception
1598 1603 handlers.
1599 1604
1600 1605 Currently implemented schemes: NoColor, Linux, LightBG.
1601 1606
1602 1607 Color scheme names are not case-sensitive.
1603 1608
1604 1609
1605 1610 %cpaste: Allows you to paste & execute a pre-formatted code block from
1606 1611 clipboard
1607 1612
1608 1613 You must terminate the block with '-' (two minus-signs) alone on the
1609 1614 line. You can also provide your own sentinel with '%paste -s %%' ('%%'
1610 1615 is the new sentinel for this operation)
1611 1616
1612 1617 The block is dedented prior to execution to enable execution of method
1613 1618 definitions. '>' and '+' characters at the beginning of a line are
1614 1619 ignored, to allow pasting directly from e-mails or diff files. The
1615 1620 executed block is also assigned to variable named 'pasted_block' for
1616 1621 later editing with '%edit pasted_block'.
1617 1622
1618 1623 You can also pass a variable name as an argument, e.g. '%cpaste foo'.
1619 1624 This assigns the pasted block to variable 'foo' as string, without
1620 1625 dedenting or executing it.
1621 1626
1622 1627 Do not be alarmed by garbled output on Windows (it's a readline bug).
1623 1628 Just press enter and type - (and press enter again) and the block will
1624 1629 be what was just pasted.
1625 1630
1626 1631 IPython statements (magics, shell escapes) are not supported (yet).
1627 1632
1628 1633
1629 1634 %debug: Activate the interactive debugger in post-mortem mode.
1630 1635
1631 1636 If an exception has just occurred, this lets you inspect its stack
1632 1637 frames interactively. Note that this will always work only on the last
1633 1638 traceback that occurred, so you must call this quickly after an
1634 1639 exception that you wish to inspect has fired, because if another one
1635 1640 occurs, it clobbers the previous one.
1636 1641
1637 1642 If you want IPython to automatically do this on every exception, see the
1638 1643 %pdb magic for more details.
1639 1644
1640 1645
1641 1646 %dhist: Print your history of visited directories.
1642 1647
1643 1648 %dhist -> print full history
1644 1649 %dhist n -> print last n entries only
1645 1650 %dhist n1 n2 -> print entries between n1 and n2 (n1 not included)
1646 1651
1647 1652 This history is automatically maintained by the %cd command, and always
1648 1653 available as the global list variable _dh. You can use %cd -<n> to go to
1649 1654 directory number <n>.
1650 1655
1651 1656 Note that most of time, you should view directory history by entering cd
1652 1657 -<TAB>.
1653 1658
1654 1659
1655 1660 %dirs: Return the current directory stack.
1656 1661
1657 1662
1658 1663 %doctest_mode: Toggle doctest mode on and off.
1659 1664
1660 1665 This mode allows you to toggle the prompt behavior between normal
1661 1666 IPython prompts and ones that are as similar to the default IPython
1662 1667 interpreter as possible.
1663 1668
1664 1669 It also supports the pasting of code snippets that have leading '»>' and
1665 1670 '...' prompts in them. This means that you can paste doctests from files
1666 1671 or docstrings (even if they have leading whitespace), and the code will
1667 1672 execute correctly. You can then use '%history -tn' to see the translated
1668 1673 history without line numbers; this will give you the input after removal
1669 1674 of all the leading prompts and whitespace, which can be pasted back into
1670 1675 an editor.
1671 1676
1672 1677 With these features, you can switch into this mode easily whenever you
1673 1678 need to do testing and changes to doctests, without having to leave your
1674 1679 existing IPython session.
1675 1680
1676 1681
1677 1682 %ed: Alias to %edit.
1678 1683
1679 1684
1680 1685 %edit: Bring up an editor and execute the resulting code.
1681 1686
1682 1687 Usage: %edit [options] [args]
1683 1688
1684 1689 %edit runs IPython's editor hook. The default version of this hook is
1685 1690 set to call the __IPYTHON__.rc.editor command. This is read from your
1686 1691 environment variable $EDITOR. If this isn't found, it will default to vi
1687 1692 under Linux/Unix and to notepad under Windows. See the end of this
1688 1693 docstring for how to change the editor hook.
1689 1694
1690 1695 You can also set the value of this editor via the command line option
1691 1696 '-editor' or in your ipythonrc file. This is useful if you wish to use
1692 1697 specifically for IPython an editor different from your typical default
1693 1698 (and for Windows users who typically don't set environment variables).
1694 1699
1695 1700 This command allows you to conveniently edit multi-line code right in
1696 1701 your IPython session.
1697 1702
1698 1703 If called without arguments, %edit opens up an empty editor with a
1699 1704 temporary file and will execute the contents of this file when you close
1700 1705 it (don't forget to save it!).
1701 1706
1702 1707 Options:
1703 1708
1704 1709 -n <number>: open the editor at a specified line number. By default, the
1705 1710 IPython editor hook uses the unix syntax 'editor +N filename', but you
1706 1711 can configure this by providing your own modified hook if your favorite
1707 1712 editor supports line-number specifications with a different syntax.
1708 1713
1709 1714 -p: this will call the editor with the same data as the previous time it
1710 1715 was used, regardless of how long ago (in your current session) it was.
1711 1716
1712 1717 -r: use 'raw' input. This option only applies to input taken from the
1713 1718 user's history. By default, the 'processed' history is used, so that
1714 1719 magics are loaded in their transformed version to valid Python. If this
1715 1720 option is given, the raw input as typed as the command line is used
1716 1721 instead. When you exit the editor, it will be executed by IPython's own
1717 1722 processor.
1718 1723
1719 1724 -x: do not execute the edited code immediately upon exit. This is mainly
1720 1725 useful if you are editing programs which need to be called with command
1721 1726 line arguments, which you can then do using %run.
1722 1727
1723 1728 Arguments:
1724 1729
1725 1730 If arguments are given, the following possibilites exist:
1726 1731
1727 1732 - The arguments are numbers or pairs of dash-separated numbers (like 1
1728 1733 4-8 9). These are interpreted as lines of previous input to be loaded
1729 1734 into the editor. The syntax is the same of the %macro command.
1730 1735
1731 1736 - If the argument doesn't start with a number, it is evaluated as a
1732 1737 variable and its contents loaded into the editor. You can thus edit any
1733 1738 string which contains python code (including the result of previous edits).
1734 1739
1735 1740 - If the argument is the name of an object (other than a string),
1736 1741 IPython will try to locate the file where it was defined and open the
1737 1742 editor at the point where it is defined. You can use '%edit function' to
1738 1743 load an editor exactly at the point where 'function' is defined, edit it
1739 1744 and have the file be executed automatically.
1740 1745
1741 1746 If the object is a macro (see %macro for details), this opens up your
1742 1747 specified editor with a temporary file containing the macro's data. Upon
1743 1748 exit, the macro is reloaded with the contents of the file.
1744 1749
1745 1750 Note: opening at an exact line is only supported under Unix, and some
1746 1751 editors (like kedit and gedit up to Gnome 2.8) do not understand the
1747 1752 '+NUMBER' parameter necessary for this feature. Good editors like
1748 1753 (X)Emacs, vi, jed, pico and joe all do.
1749 1754
1750 1755 If the argument is not found as a variable, IPython will look for a
1751 1756 file with that name (adding .py if necessary) and load it into the
1752 1757 editor. It will execute its contents with execfile() when you exit,
1753 1758 loading any code in the file into your interactive namespace.
1754 1759
1755 1760 After executing your code, %edit will return as output the code you
1756 1761 typed in the editor (except when it was an existing file). This way you
1757 1762 can reload the code in further invocations of %edit as a variable, via
1758 1763 _<NUMBER> or Out[<NUMBER>], where <NUMBER> is the prompt number of the
1759 1764 output.
1760 1765
1761 1766 Note that %edit is also available through the alias %ed.
1762 1767
1763 1768 This is an example of creating a simple function inside the editor and
1764 1769 then modifying it. First, start up the editor::
1765 1770
1766 1771 In [1]: ed
1767 1772 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
1768 1773 Out[1]: 'def foo():\n print "foo() was defined in an editing session"\n'
1769 1774
1770 1775 We can then call the function foo():
1771 1776
1772 1777 In [2]: foo()
1773 1778 foo() was defined in an editing session
1774 1779
1775 1780 Now we edit foo. IPython automatically loads the editor with the
1776 1781 (temporary) file where foo() was previously defined:
1777 1782
1778 1783 In [3]: ed foo
1779 1784 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
1780 1785
1781 1786 And if we call foo() again we get the modified version:
1782 1787
1783 1788 In [4]: foo()
1784 1789 foo() has now been changed!
1785 1790
1786 1791 Here is an example of how to edit a code snippet successive times. First
1787 1792 we call the editor:
1788 1793
1789 1794 In [8]: ed
1790 1795 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
1791 1796 hello
1792 1797 Out[8]: "print 'hello'\n"
1793 1798
1794 1799 Now we call it again with the previous output (stored in _):
1795 1800
1796 1801 In [9]: ed _
1797 1802 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
1798 1803 hello world
1799 1804 Out[9]: "print 'hello world'\n"
1800 1805
1801 1806 Now we call it with the output #8 (stored in _8, also as Out[8]):
1802 1807
1803 1808 In [10]: ed _8
1804 1809 Editing... done. Executing edited code...
1805 1810 hello again
1806 1811 Out[10]: "print 'hello again'\n"
1807 1812
1808 1813 Changing the default editor hook:
1809 1814
1810 1815 If you wish to write your own editor hook, you can put it in a
1811 1816 configuration file which you load at startup time. The default hook is
1812 1817 defined in the IPython.hooks module, and you can use that as a starting
1813 1818 example for further modifications. That file also has general
1814 1819 instructions on how to set a new hook for use once you've defined it.
1815 1820
1816 1821
1817 1822 %env: List environment variables.
1818 1823
1819 1824
1820 1825 %exit: Exit IPython, confirming if configured to do so.
1821 1826
1822 1827 You can configure whether IPython asks for confirmation upon exit by
1823 1828 setting the confirm_exit flag in the ipythonrc file.
1824 1829
1825 1830
1826 1831 %logoff: Temporarily stop logging.
1827 1832
1828 1833 You must have previously started logging.
1829 1834
1830 1835
1831 1836 %logon: Restart logging.
1832 1837
1833 1838 This function is for restarting logging which you've temporarily stopped
1834 1839 with %logoff. For starting logging for the first time, you must use the
1835 1840 %logstart function, which allows you to specify an optional log filename.
1836 1841
1837 1842
1838 1843 %logstart: Start logging anywhere in a session.
1839 1844
1840 1845 %logstart [-o|-r|-t] [log_name [log_mode]]
1841 1846
1842 1847 If no name is given, it defaults to a file named 'ipython_log.py' in
1843 1848 your current directory, in 'rotate' mode (see below).
1844 1849
1845 1850 '%logstart name' saves to file 'name' in 'backup' mode. It saves your
1846 1851 history up to that point and then continues logging.
1847 1852
1848 1853 %logstart takes a second optional parameter: logging mode. This can be
1849 1854 one of (note that the modes are given unquoted):
1850 1855 append: well, that says it.
1851 1856 backup: rename (if exists) to name and start name.
1852 1857 global: single logfile in your home dir, appended to.
1853 1858 over : overwrite existing log.
1854 1859 rotate: create rotating logs name.1 , name.2 , etc.
1855 1860
1856 1861 Options:
1857 1862
1858 1863 -o: log also IPython's output. In this mode, all commands which generate
1859 1864 an Out[NN] prompt are recorded to the logfile, right after their
1860 1865 corresponding input line. The output lines are always prepended with a
1861 1866 '#[Out]# ' marker, so that the log remains valid Python code.
1862 1867
1863 1868 Since this marker is always the same, filtering only the output from a
1864 1869 log is very easy, using for example a simple awk call:
1865 1870
1866 1871 awk -F'#
1867 1872
1868 1873 \begin{displaymath}Out\end{displaymath}
1869 1874
1870 1875 # ' 'if($2) print $2' ipython_log.py
1871 1876
1872 1877 -r: log 'raw' input. Normally, IPython's logs contain the processed
1873 1878 input, so that user lines are logged in their final form, converted into
1874 1879 valid Python. For example, %Exit is logged as '_ip.magic("Exit"). If the
1875 1880 -r flag is given, all input is logged exactly as typed, with no
1876 1881 transformations applied.
1877 1882
1878 1883 -t: put timestamps before each input line logged (these are put in
1879 1884 comments).
1880 1885
1881 1886
1882 1887 %logstate: Print the status of the logging system.
1883 1888
1884 1889
1885 1890 %logstop: Fully stop logging and close log file.
1886 1891
1887 1892 In order to start logging again, a new %logstart call needs to be made,
1888 1893 possibly (though not necessarily) with a new filename, mode and other
1889 1894 options.
1890 1895
1891 1896
1892 1897 %lsmagic: List currently available magic functions.
1893 1898
1894 1899
1895 1900 %macro: Define a set of input lines as a macro for future re-execution.
1896 1901
1897 1902 Usage:
1898 1903 %macro [options] name n1-n2 n3-n4 ... n5 .. n6 ...
1899 1904
1900 1905 Options:
1901 1906
1902 1907 -r: use 'raw' input. By default, the 'processed' history is used, so
1903 1908 that magics are loaded in their transformed version to valid Python. If
1904 1909 this option is given, the raw input as typed as the command line is used
1905 1910 instead.
1906 1911
1907 1912 This will define a global variable called 'name' which is a string made
1908 1913 of joining the slices and lines you specify (n1,n2,... numbers above)
1909 1914 from your input history into a single string. This variable acts like an
1910 1915 automatic function which re-executes those lines as if you had typed
1911 1916 them. You just type 'name' at the prompt and the code executes.
1912 1917
1913 1918 The notation for indicating number ranges is: n1-n2 means 'use line
1914 1919 numbers n1,...n2' (the endpoint is included). That is, '5-7' means using
1915 1920 the lines numbered 5,6 and 7.
1916 1921
1917 1922 Note: as a 'hidden' feature, you can also use traditional python slice
1918 1923 notation, where N:M means numbers N through M-1.
1919 1924
1920 1925 For example, if your history contains (%hist prints it):
1921 1926
1922 1927 44: x=1
1923 1928 45: y=3
1924 1929 46: z=x+y
1925 1930 47: print x
1926 1931 48: a=5
1927 1932 49: print 'x',x,'y',y
1928 1933
1929 1934 you can create a macro with lines 44 through 47 (included) and line 49
1930 1935 called my_macro with:
1931 1936
1932 1937 In [51]: %macro my_macro 44-47 49
1933 1938
1934 1939 Now, typing 'my_macro' (without quotes) will re-execute all this code in
1935 1940 one pass.
1936 1941
1937 1942 You don't need to give the line-numbers in order, and any given line
1938 1943 number can appear multiple times. You can assemble macros with any lines
1939 1944 from your input history in any order.
1940 1945
1941 1946 The macro is a simple object which holds its value in an attribute, but
1942 1947 IPython's display system checks for macros and executes them as code
1943 1948 instead of printing them when you type their name.
1944 1949
1945 1950 You can view a macro's contents by explicitly printing it with:
1946 1951
1947 1952 'print macro_name'.
1948 1953
1949 1954 For one-off cases which DON'T contain magic function calls in them you
1950 1955 can obtain similar results by explicitly executing slices from your
1951 1956 input history with:
1952 1957
1953 1958 In [60]: exec In[44:48]+In[49]
1954 1959
1955 1960
1956 1961 %magic: Print information about the magic function system.
1957 1962
1958 1963
1959 1964 %page: Pretty print the object and display it through a pager.
1960 1965
1961 1966 %page [options] OBJECT
1962 1967
1963 1968 If no object is given, use _ (last output).
1964 1969
1965 1970 Options:
1966 1971
1967 1972 -r: page str(object), don't pretty-print it.
1968 1973
1969 1974
1970 1975 %pdb: Control the automatic calling of the pdb interactive debugger.
1971 1976
1972 1977 Call as '%pdb on', '%pdb 1', '%pdb off' or '%pdb 0'. If called without
1973 1978 argument it works as a toggle.
1974 1979
1975 1980 When an exception is triggered, IPython can optionally call the
1976 1981 interactive pdb debugger after the traceback printout. %pdb toggles this
1977 1982 feature on and off.
1978 1983
1979 1984 The initial state of this feature is set in your ipythonrc configuration
1980 1985 file (the variable is called 'pdb').
1981 1986
1982 1987 If you want to just activate the debugger AFTER an exception has fired,
1983 1988 without having to type '%pdb on' and rerunning your code, you can use
1984 1989 the %debug magic.
1985 1990
1986 1991
1987 1992 %pdef: Print the definition header for any callable object.
1988 1993
1989 1994 If the object is a class, print the constructor information.
1990 1995
1991 1996
1992 1997 %pdoc: Print the docstring for an object.
1993 1998
1994 1999 If the given object is a class, it will print both the class and the
1995 2000 constructor docstrings.
1996 2001
1997 2002
1998 2003 %pfile: Print (or run through pager) the file where an object is defined.
1999 2004
2000 2005 The file opens at the line where the object definition begins. IPython
2001 2006 will honor the environment variable PAGER if set, and otherwise will do
2002 2007 its best to print the file in a convenient form.
2003 2008
2004 2009 If the given argument is not an object currently defined, IPython will
2005 2010 try to interpret it as a filename (automatically adding a .py extension
2006 2011 if needed). You can thus use %pfile as a syntax highlighting code viewer.
2007 2012
2008 2013
2009 2014 %pinfo: Provide detailed information about an object.
2010 2015
2011 2016 '%pinfo object' is just a synonym for object? or ?object.
2012 2017
2013 2018
2014 2019 %popd: Change to directory popped off the top of the stack.
2015 2020
2016 2021
2017 2022 %profile: Print your currently active IPyhton profile.
2018 2023
2019 2024
2020 2025 %prun: Run a statement through the python code profiler.
2021 2026
2022 2027 Usage:
2023 2028 %prun [options] statement
2024 2029
2025 2030 The given statement (which doesn't require quote marks) is run via the
2026 2031 python profiler in a manner similar to the profile.run() function.
2027 2032 Namespaces are internally managed to work correctly; profile.run cannot
2028 2033 be used in IPython because it makes certain assumptions about namespaces
2029 2034 which do not hold under IPython.
2030 2035
2031 2036 Options:
2032 2037
2033 2038 -l <limit>: you can place restrictions on what or how much of the
2034 2039 profile gets printed. The limit value can be:
2035 2040
2036 2041 * A string: only information for function names containing this string
2037 2042 is printed.
2038 2043
2039 2044 * An integer: only these many lines are printed.
2040 2045
2041 2046 * A float (between 0 and 1): this fraction of the report is printed (for
2042 2047 example, use a limit of 0.4 to see the topmost 40% only).
2043 2048
2044 2049 You can combine several limits with repeated use of the option. For
2045 2050 example, '-l __init__ -l 5' will print only the topmost 5 lines of
2046 2051 information about class constructors.
2047 2052
2048 2053 -r: return the pstats.Stats object generated by the profiling. This
2049 2054 object has all the information about the profile in it, and you can
2050 2055 later use it for further analysis or in other functions.
2051 2056
2052 2057 -s <key>: sort profile by given key. You can provide more than one key
2053 2058 by using the option several times: '-s key1 -s key2 -s key3...'. The
2054 2059 default sorting key is 'time'.
2055 2060
2056 2061 The following is copied verbatim from the profile documentation
2057 2062 referenced below:
2058 2063
2059 2064 When more than one key is provided, additional keys are used as
2060 2065 secondary criteria when the there is equality in all keys selected
2061 2066 before them.
2062 2067
2063 2068 Abbreviations can be used for any key names, as long as the abbreviation
2064 2069 is unambiguous. The following are the keys currently defined:
2065 2070
2066 2071 Valid Arg Meaning
2067 2072 "calls" call count
2068 2073 "cumulative" cumulative time
2069 2074 "file" file name
2070 2075 "module" file name
2071 2076 "pcalls" primitive call count
2072 2077 "line" line number
2073 2078 "name" function name
2074 2079 "nfl" name/file/line
2075 2080 "stdname" standard name
2076 2081 "time" internal time
2077 2082
2078 2083 Note that all sorts on statistics are in descending order (placing most
2079 2084 time consuming items first), where as name, file, and line number
2080 2085 searches are in ascending order (i.e., alphabetical). The subtle
2081 2086 distinction between "nfl" and "stdname" is that the standard name is a
2082 2087 sort of the name as printed, which means that the embedded line numbers
2083 2088 get compared in an odd way. For example, lines 3, 20, and 40 would (if
2084 2089 the file names were the same) appear in the string order "20" "3" and
2085 2090 "40". In contrast, "nfl" does a numeric compare of the line numbers. In
2086 2091 fact, sort_stats("nfl") is the same as sort_stats("name", "file", "line").
2087 2092
2088 2093 -T <filename>: save profile results as shown on screen to a text file.
2089 2094 The profile is still shown on screen.
2090 2095
2091 2096 -D <filename>: save (via dump_stats) profile statistics to given
2092 2097 filename. This data is in a format understod by the pstats module, and
2093 2098 is generated by a call to the dump_stats() method of profile objects.
2094 2099 The profile is still shown on screen.
2095 2100
2096 2101 If you want to run complete programs under the profiler's control, use
2097 2102 '%run -p [prof_opts] filename.py [args to program]' where prof_opts
2098 2103 contains profiler specific options as described here.
2099 2104
2100 2105 You can read the complete documentation for the profile module with:
2101 2106 In [1]: import profile; profile.help()
2102 2107
2103 2108
2104 2109 %psearch: Search for object in namespaces by wildcard.
2105 2110
2106 2111 %psearch [options] PATTERN [OBJECT TYPE]
2107 2112
2108 2113 Note: ? can be used as a synonym for %psearch, at the beginning or at
2109 2114 the end: both a*? and ?a* are equivalent to '%psearch a*'. Still, the
2110 2115 rest of the command line must be unchanged (options come first), so for
2111 2116 example the following forms are equivalent
2112 2117
2113 2118 %psearch -i a* function -i a* function? ?-i a* function
2114 2119
2115 2120 Arguments:
2116 2121
2117 2122 PATTERN
2118 2123
2119 2124 where PATTERN is a string containing * as a wildcard similar to its use
2120 2125 in a shell. The pattern is matched in all namespaces on the search path.
2121 2126 By default objects starting with a single _ are not matched, many
2122 2127 IPython generated objects have a single underscore. The default is case
2123 2128 insensitive matching. Matching is also done on the attributes of objects
2124 2129 and not only on the objects in a module.
2125 2130
2126 2131 [OBJECT TYPE]
2127 2132
2128 2133 Is the name of a python type from the types module. The name is given in
2129 2134 lowercase without the ending type, ex. StringType is written string. By
2130 2135 adding a type here only objects matching the given type are matched.
2131 2136 Using all here makes the pattern match all types (this is the default).
2132 2137
2133 2138 Options:
2134 2139
2135 2140 -a: makes the pattern match even objects whose names start with a single
2136 2141 underscore. These names are normally ommitted from the search.
2137 2142
2138 2143 -i/-c: make the pattern case insensitive/sensitive. If neither of these
2139 2144 options is given, the default is read from your ipythonrc file. The
2140 2145 option name which sets this value is 'wildcards_case_sensitive'. If this
2141 2146 option is not specified in your ipythonrc file, IPython's internal
2142 2147 default is to do a case sensitive search.
2143 2148
2144 2149 -e/-s NAMESPACE: exclude/search a given namespace. The pattern you
2145 2150 specifiy can be searched in any of the following namespaces: 'builtin',
2146 2151 'user', 'user_global','internal', 'alias', where 'builtin' and 'user'
2147 2152 are the search defaults. Note that you should not use quotes when
2148 2153 specifying namespaces.
2149 2154
2150 2155 'Builtin' contains the python module builtin, 'user' contains all user
2151 2156 data, 'alias' only contain the shell aliases and no python objects,
2152 2157 'internal' contains objects used by IPython. The 'user_global' namespace
2153 2158 is only used by embedded IPython instances, and it contains module-level
2154 2159 globals. You can add namespaces to the search with -s or exclude them
2155 2160 with -e (these options can be given more than once).
2156 2161
2157 2162 Examples:
2158 2163
2159 2164 %psearch a* -> objects beginning with an a %psearch -e builtin a* ->
2160 2165 objects NOT in the builtin space starting in a %psearch a* function ->
2161 2166 all functions beginning with an a %psearch re.e* -> objects beginning
2162 2167 with an e in module re %psearch r*.e* -> objects that start with e in
2163 2168 modules starting in r %psearch r*.* string -> all strings in modules
2164 2169 beginning with r
2165 2170
2166 2171 Case sensitve search:
2167 2172
2168 2173 %psearch -c a* list all object beginning with lower case a
2169 2174
2170 2175 Show objects beginning with a single _:
2171 2176
2172 2177 %psearch -a _* list objects beginning with a single underscore
2173 2178
2174 2179
2175 2180 %psource: Print (or run through pager) the source code for an object.
2176 2181
2177 2182
2178 2183 %pushd: Place the current dir on stack and change directory.
2179 2184
2180 2185 Usage:
2181 2186 %pushd ['dirname']
2182 2187
2183 2188
2184 2189 %pwd: Return the current working directory path.
2185 2190
2186 2191
2187 2192 %pycat: Show a syntax-highlighted file through a pager.
2188 2193
2189 2194 This magic is similar to the cat utility, but it will assume the file to
2190 2195 be Python source and will show it with syntax highlighting.
2191 2196
2192 2197
2193 2198 %quickref: Show a quick reference sheet
2194 2199
2195 2200
2196 2201 %quit: Exit IPython, confirming if configured to do so (like %exit)
2197 2202
2198 2203
2199 2204 %r: Repeat previous input.
2200 2205
2201 2206 Note: Consider using the more powerfull %rep instead!
2202 2207
2203 2208 If given an argument, repeats the previous command which starts with the
2204 2209 same string, otherwise it just repeats the previous input.
2205 2210
2206 2211 Shell escaped commands (with ! as first character) are not recognized by
2207 2212 this system, only pure python code and magic commands.
2208 2213
2209 2214
2210 2215 %rehashx: Update the alias table with all executable files in $PATH.
2211 2216
2212 2217 This version explicitly checks that every entry in $PATH is a file with
2213 2218 execute access (os.X_OK), so it is much slower than %rehash.
2214 2219
2215 2220 Under Windows, it checks executability as a match agains a ``|``-separated
2216 2221 string of extensions, stored in the IPython config variable
2217 2222 win_exec_ext. This defaults to ``exe|com|bat``.
2218 2223
2219 2224 This function also resets the root module cache of module completer,
2220 2225 used on slow filesystems.
2221 2226
2222 2227
2223 2228 %reset: Resets the namespace by removing all names defined by the user.
2224 2229
2225 2230 Input/Output history are left around in case you need them.
2226 2231
2227 2232
2228 2233 %run: Run the named file inside IPython as a program.
2229 2234
2230 2235 Usage:
2231 2236 %run [-n -i -t [-N<N>] -d [-b<N>] -p [profile options]] file [args]
2232 2237
2233 2238 Parameters after the filename are passed as command-line arguments to
2234 2239 the program (put in sys.argv). Then, control returns to IPython's prompt.
2235 2240
2236 2241 This is similar to running at a system prompt:
2237 2242 $ python file args
2238 2243 but with the advantage of giving you IPython's tracebacks, and of
2239 2244 loading all variables into your interactive namespace for further use
2240 2245 (unless -p is used, see below).
2241 2246
2242 2247 The file is executed in a namespace initially consisting only of
2243 2248 __name__=='__main__' and sys.argv constructed as indicated. It thus sees
2244 2249 its environment as if it were being run as a stand-alone program (except
2245 2250 for sharing global objects such as previously imported modules). But
2246 2251 after execution, the IPython interactive namespace gets updated with all
2247 2252 variables defined in the program (except for __name__ and sys.argv).
2248 2253 This allows for very convenient loading of code for interactive work,
2249 2254 while giving each program a 'clean sheet' to run in.
2250 2255
2251 2256 Options:
2252 2257
2253 2258 -n: __name__ is NOT set to '__main__', but to the running file's name
2254 2259 without extension (as python does under import). This allows running
2255 2260 scripts and reloading the definitions in them without calling code
2256 2261 protected by an ' if __name__ == "__main__" ' clause.
2257 2262
2258 2263 -i: run the file in IPython's namespace instead of an empty one. This is
2259 2264 useful if you are experimenting with code written in a text editor which
2260 2265 depends on variables defined interactively.
2261 2266
2262 2267 -e: ignore sys.exit() calls or SystemExit exceptions in the script being
2263 2268 run. This is particularly useful if IPython is being used to run
2264 2269 unittests, which always exit with a sys.exit() call. In such cases you
2265 2270 are interested in the output of the test results, not in seeing a
2266 2271 traceback of the unittest module.
2267 2272
2268 2273 -t: print timing information at the end of the run. IPython will give
2269 2274 you an estimated CPU time consumption for your script, which under Unix
2270 2275 uses the resource module to avoid the wraparound problems of
2271 2276 time.clock(). Under Unix, an estimate of time spent on system tasks is
2272 2277 also given (for Windows platforms this is reported as 0.0).
2273 2278
2274 2279 If -t is given, an additional -N<N> option can be given, where <N> must
2275 2280 be an integer indicating how many times you want the script to run. The
2276 2281 final timing report will include total and per run results.
2277 2282
2278 2283 For example (testing the script uniq_stable.py):
2279 2284
2280 2285 In [1]: run -t uniq_stable
2281 2286
2282 2287 IPython CPU timings (estimated):
2283 2288 User : 0.19597 s.
2284 2289 System: 0.0 s.
2285 2290
2286 2291 In [2]: run -t -N5 uniq_stable
2287 2292
2288 2293 IPython CPU timings (estimated):
2289 2294 Total runs performed: 5
2290 2295 Times : Total Per run
2291 2296 User : 0.910862 s, 0.1821724 s.
2292 2297 System: 0.0 s, 0.0 s.
2293 2298
2294 2299 -d: run your program under the control of pdb, the Python debugger. This
2295 2300 allows you to execute your program step by step, watch variables, etc.
2296 2301 Internally, what IPython does is similar to calling:
2297 2302
2298 2303 pdb.run('execfile("YOURFILENAME")')
2299 2304
2300 2305 with a breakpoint set on line 1 of your file. You can change the line
2301 2306 number for this automatic breakpoint to be <N> by using the -bN option
2302 2307 (where N must be an integer). For example:
2303 2308
2304 2309 %run -d -b40 myscript
2305 2310
2306 2311 will set the first breakpoint at line 40 in myscript.py. Note that the
2307 2312 first breakpoint must be set on a line which actually does something
2308 2313 (not a comment or docstring) for it to stop execution.
2309 2314
2310 2315 When the pdb debugger starts, you will see a (Pdb) prompt. You must
2311 2316 first enter 'c' (without qoutes) to start execution up to the first
2312 2317 breakpoint.
2313 2318
2314 2319 Entering 'help' gives information about the use of the debugger. You can
2315 2320 easily see pdb's full documentation with "import pdb;pdb.help()" at a
2316 2321 prompt.
2317 2322
2318 2323 -p: run program under the control of the Python profiler module (which
2319 2324 prints a detailed report of execution times, function calls, etc).
2320 2325
2321 2326 You can pass other options after -p which affect the behavior of the
2322 2327 profiler itself. See the docs for %prun for details.
2323 2328
2324 2329 In this mode, the program's variables do NOT propagate back to the
2325 2330 IPython interactive namespace (because they remain in the namespace
2326 2331 where the profiler executes them).
2327 2332
2328 2333 Internally this triggers a call to %prun, see its documentation for
2329 2334 details on the options available specifically for profiling.
2330 2335
2331 2336 There is one special usage for which the text above doesn't apply: if
2332 2337 the filename ends with .ipy, the file is run as ipython script, just as
2333 2338 if the commands were written on IPython prompt.
2334 2339
2335 2340
2336 2341 %runlog: Run files as logs.
2337 2342
2338 2343 Usage:
2339 2344 %runlog file1 file2 ...
2340 2345
2341 2346 Run the named files (treating them as log files) in sequence inside the
2342 2347 interpreter, and return to the prompt. This is much slower than %run
2343 2348 because each line is executed in a try/except block, but it allows
2344 2349 running files with syntax errors in them.
2345 2350
2346 2351 Normally IPython will guess when a file is one of its own logfiles, so
2347 2352 you can typically use %run even for logs. This shorthand allows you to
2348 2353 force any file to be treated as a log file.
2349 2354
2350 2355
2351 2356 %save: Save a set of lines to a given filename.
2352 2357
2353 2358 Usage:
2354 2359 %save [options] filename n1-n2 n3-n4 ... n5 .. n6 ...
2355 2360
2356 2361 Options:
2357 2362
2358 2363 -r: use 'raw' input. By default, the 'processed' history is used, so
2359 2364 that magics are loaded in their transformed version to valid Python. If
2360 2365 this option is given, the raw input as typed as the command line is used
2361 2366 instead.
2362 2367
2363 2368 This function uses the same syntax as %macro for line extraction, but
2364 2369 instead of creating a macro it saves the resulting string to the
2365 2370 filename you specify.
2366 2371
2367 2372 It adds a '.py' extension to the file if you don't do so yourself, and
2368 2373 it asks for confirmation before overwriting existing files.
2369 2374
2370 2375
2371 2376 %sc: Shell capture - execute a shell command and capture its output.
2372 2377
2373 2378 DEPRECATED. Suboptimal, retained for backwards compatibility.
2374 2379
2375 2380 You should use the form 'var = !command' instead. Example:
2376 2381
2377 2382 "%sc -l myfiles = ls " should now be written as
2378 2383
2379 2384 "myfiles = !ls "
2380 2385
2381 2386 myfiles.s, myfiles.l and myfiles.n still apply as documented below.
2382 2387
2383 2388 - %sc [options] varname=command
2384 2389
2385 2390 IPython will run the given command using commands.getoutput(), and will
2386 2391 then update the user's interactive namespace with a variable called
2387 2392 varname, containing the value of the call. Your command can contain
2388 2393 shell wildcards, pipes, etc.
2389 2394
2390 2395 The '=' sign in the syntax is mandatory, and the variable name you
2391 2396 supply must follow Python's standard conventions for valid names.
2392 2397
2393 2398 (A special format without variable name exists for internal use)
2394 2399
2395 2400 Options:
2396 2401
2397 2402 -l: list output. Split the output on newlines into a list before
2398 2403 assigning it to the given variable. By default the output is stored as a
2399 2404 single string.
2400 2405
2401 2406 -v: verbose. Print the contents of the variable.
2402 2407
2403 2408 In most cases you should not need to split as a list, because the
2404 2409 returned value is a special type of string which can automatically
2405 2410 provide its contents either as a list (split on newlines) or as a
2406 2411 space-separated string. These are convenient, respectively, either for
2407 2412 sequential processing or to be passed to a shell command.
2408 2413
2409 2414 For example:
2410 2415
2411 2416 # Capture into variable a In [9]: sc a=ls *py
2412 2417
2413 2418 # a is a string with embedded newlines In [10]: a Out[10]: 'setup.py
2414 2419 win32_manual_post_install.py'
2415 2420
2416 2421 # which can be seen as a list: In [11]: a.l Out[11]: ['setup.py',
2417 2422 'win32_manual_post_install.py']
2418 2423
2419 2424 # or as a whitespace-separated string: In [12]: a.s Out[12]: 'setup.py
2420 2425 win32_manual_post_install.py'
2421 2426
2422 2427 # a.s is useful to pass as a single command line: In [13]: !wc -l $a.s
2423 2428 146 setup.py 130 win32_manual_post_install.py 276 total
2424 2429
2425 2430 # while the list form is useful to loop over: In [14]: for f in a.l:
2426 2431 ....: !wc -l $f ....: 146 setup.py 130 win32_manual_post_install.py
2427 2432
2428 2433 Similiarly, the lists returned by the -l option are also special, in the
2429 2434 sense that you can equally invoke the .s attribute on them to
2430 2435 automatically get a whitespace-separated string from their contents:
2431 2436
2432 2437 In [1]: sc -l b=ls *py
2433 2438
2434 2439 In [2]: b Out[2]: ['setup.py', 'win32_manual_post_install.py']
2435 2440
2436 2441 In [3]: b.s Out[3]: 'setup.py win32_manual_post_install.py'
2437 2442
2438 2443 In summary, both the lists and strings used for ouptut capture have the
2439 2444 following special attributes:
2440 2445
2441 2446 .l (or .list) : value as list. .n (or .nlstr): value as
2442 2447 newline-separated string. .s (or .spstr): value as space-separated string.
2443 2448
2444 2449
2445 2450 %sx: Shell execute - run a shell command and capture its output.
2446 2451
2447 2452 %sx command
2448 2453
2449 2454 IPython will run the given command using commands.getoutput(), and
2450 2455 return the result formatted as a list (split on '\n'). Since the output
2451 2456 is _returned_, it will be stored in ipython's regular output cache
2452 2457 Out[N] and in the '_N' automatic variables.
2453 2458
2454 2459 Notes:
2455 2460
2456 2461 1) If an input line begins with '!!', then %sx is automatically invoked.
2457 2462 That is, while: !ls causes ipython to simply issue system('ls'), typing
2458 2463 !!ls is a shorthand equivalent to: %sx ls
2459 2464
2460 2465 2) %sx differs from %sc in that %sx automatically splits into a list,
2461 2466 like '%sc -l'. The reason for this is to make it as easy as possible to
2462 2467 process line-oriented shell output via further python commands. %sc is
2463 2468 meant to provide much finer control, but requires more typing.
2464 2469
2465 2470 3) Just like %sc -l, this is a list with special attributes:
2466 2471
2467 2472 .l (or .list) : value as list. .n (or .nlstr): value as
2468 2473 newline-separated string. .s (or .spstr): value as whitespace-separated
2469 2474 string.
2470 2475
2471 2476 This is very useful when trying to use such lists as arguments to system
2472 2477 commands.
2473 2478
2474 2479
2475 2480 %system_verbose: Set verbose printing of system calls.
2476 2481
2477 2482 If called without an argument, act as a toggle
2478 2483
2479 2484
2480 2485 %time: Time execution of a Python statement or expression.
2481 2486
2482 2487 The CPU and wall clock times are printed, and the value of the
2483 2488 expression (if any) is returned. Note that under Win32, system time is
2484 2489 always reported as 0, since it can not be measured.
2485 2490
2486 2491 This function provides very basic timing functionality. In Python 2.3,
2487 2492 the timeit module offers more control and sophistication, so this could
2488 2493 be rewritten to use it (patches welcome).
2489 2494
2490 2495 Some examples:
2491 2496
2492 2497 In [1]: time 2**128 CPU times: user 0.00 s, sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00 s
2493 2498 Wall time: 0.00 Out[1]: 340282366920938463463374607431768211456L
2494 2499
2495 2500 In [2]: n = 1000000
2496 2501
2497 2502 In [3]: time sum(range(n)) CPU times: user 1.20 s, sys: 0.05 s, total:
2498 2503 1.25 s Wall time: 1.37 Out[3]: 499999500000L
2499 2504
2500 2505 In [4]: time print 'hello world' hello world CPU times: user 0.00 s,
2501 2506 sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00 s Wall time: 0.00
2502 2507
2503 2508 Note that the time needed by Python to compile the given expression will
2504 2509 be reported if it is more than 0.1s. In this example, the actual
2505 2510 exponentiation is done by Python at compilation time, so while the
2506 2511 expression can take a noticeable amount of time to compute, that time is
2507 2512 purely due to the compilation:
2508 2513
2509 2514 In [5]: time 3**9999; CPU times: user 0.00 s, sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00 s
2510 2515 Wall time: 0.00 s
2511 2516
2512 2517 In [6]: time 3**999999; CPU times: user 0.00 s, sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00
2513 2518 s Wall time: 0.00 s Compiler : 0.78 s
2514 2519
2515 2520
2516 2521 %timeit: Time execution of a Python statement or expression
2517 2522
2518 2523 Usage:
2519 2524 %timeit [-n<N> -r<R> [-t|-c]] statement
2520 2525
2521 2526 Time execution of a Python statement or expression using the timeit module.
2522 2527
2523 2528 Options: -n<N>: execute the given statement <N> times in a loop. If this
2524 2529 value is not given, a fitting value is chosen.
2525 2530
2526 2531 -r<R>: repeat the loop iteration <R> times and take the best result.
2527 2532 Default: 3
2528 2533
2529 2534 -t: use time.time to measure the time, which is the default on Unix.
2530 2535 This function measures wall time.
2531 2536
2532 2537 -c: use time.clock to measure the time, which is the default on Windows
2533 2538 and measures wall time. On Unix, resource.getrusage is used instead and
2534 2539 returns the CPU user time.
2535 2540
2536 2541 -p<P>: use a precision of <P> digits to display the timing result.
2537 2542 Default: 3
2538 2543
2539 2544 Examples:
2540 2545 In [1]: %timeit pass 10000000 loops, best of 3: 53.3 ns per loop
2541 2546
2542 2547 In [2]: u = None
2543 2548
2544 2549 In [3]: %timeit u is None 10000000 loops, best of 3: 184 ns per loop
2545 2550
2546 2551 In [4]: %timeit -r 4 u == None 1000000 loops, best of 4: 242 ns per loop
2547 2552
2548 2553 In [5]: import time
2549 2554
2550 2555 In [6]: %timeit -n1 time.sleep(2) 1 loops, best of 3: 2 s per loop
2551 2556
2552 2557 The times reported by %timeit will be slightly higher than those
2553 2558 reported by the timeit.py script when variables are accessed. This is
2554 2559 due to the fact that %timeit executes the statement in the namespace of
2555 2560 the shell, compared with timeit.py, which uses a single setup statement
2556 2561 to import function or create variables. Generally, the bias does not
2557 2562 matter as long as results from timeit.py are not mixed with those from
2558 2563 %timeit.
2559 2564
2560 2565
2561 2566 %unalias: Remove an alias
2562 2567
2563 2568
2564 2569 %upgrade: Upgrade your IPython installation
2565 2570
2566 2571 This will copy the config files that don't yet exist in your ipython dir
2567 2572 from the system config dir. Use this after upgrading IPython if you
2568 2573 don't wish to delete your .ipython dir.
2569 2574
2570 2575 Call with -nolegacy to get rid of ipythonrc* files (recommended for new
2571 2576 users)
2572 2577
2573 2578
2574 2579 %who: Print all interactive variables, with some minimal formatting.
2575 2580
2576 2581 If any arguments are given, only variables whose type matches one of
2577 2582 these are printed. For example:
2578 2583
2579 2584 %who function str
2580 2585
2581 2586 will only list functions and strings, excluding all other types of
2582 2587 variables. To find the proper type names, simply use type(var) at a
2583 2588 command line to see how python prints type names. For example:
2584 2589
2585 2590 In [1]: type('hello')
2586 2591 Out[1]: <type 'str'>
2587 2592
2588 2593 indicates that the type name for strings is 'str'.
2589 2594
2590 2595 %who always excludes executed names loaded through your configuration
2591 2596 file and things which are internal to IPython.
2592 2597
2593 2598 This is deliberate, as typically you may load many modules and the
2594 2599 purpose of %who is to show you only what you've manually defined.
2595 2600
2596 2601
2597 2602 %who_ls: Return a sorted list of all interactive variables.
2598 2603
2599 2604 If arguments are given, only variables of types matching these arguments
2600 2605 are returned.
2601 2606
2602 2607
2603 2608 %whos: Like %who, but gives some extra information about each variable.
2604 2609
2605 2610 The same type filtering of %who can be applied here.
2606 2611
2607 2612 For all variables, the type is printed. Additionally it prints:
2608 2613
2609 2614 - For ,[],(): their length.
2610 2615
2611 2616 - For numpy and Numeric arrays, a summary with shape, number of
2612 2617 elements, typecode and size in memory.
2613 2618
2614 2619 - Everything else: a string representation, snipping their middle if too
2615 2620 long.
2616 2621
2617 2622
2618 2623 %xmode: Switch modes for the exception handlers.
2619 2624
2620 2625 Valid modes: Plain, Context and Verbose.
2621 2626
2622 2627 If called without arguments, acts as a toggle.
2623 2628
2624 2629
2625 2630 Access to the standard Python help
2626 2631 ----------------------------------
2627 2632
2628 2633 As of Python 2.1, a help system is available with access to object
2629 2634 docstrings and the Python manuals. Simply type 'help' (no quotes) to
2630 2635 access it. You can also type help(object) to obtain information about a
2631 2636 given object, and help('keyword') for information on a keyword. As noted
2632 2637 in sec. 3.1 <node3.html#sec:help-access>, you need to properly configure
2633 2638 your environment variable PYTHONDOCS for this feature to work correctly.
2634 2639
2635 2640
2636 2641
2637 2642 Dynamic object information
2638 2643 --------------------------
2639 2644
2640 2645 Typing ?word or word? prints detailed information about an object. If
2641 2646 certain strings in the object are too long (docstrings, code, etc.) they
2642 2647 get snipped in the center for brevity. This system gives access variable
2643 2648 types and values, full source code for any object (if available),
2644 2649 function prototypes and other useful information.
2645 2650
2646 2651 Typing ??word or word?? gives access to the full information without
2647 2652 snipping long strings. Long strings are sent to the screen through the
2648 2653 less pager if longer than the screen and printed otherwise. On systems
2649 2654 lacking the less command, IPython uses a very basic internal pager.
2650 2655
2651 2656 The following magic functions are particularly useful for gathering
2652 2657 information about your working environment. You can get more details by
2653 2658 typing %magic or querying them individually (use %function_name? with or
2654 2659 without the %), this is just a summary:
2655 2660
2656 2661 * [%pdoc <object>:] Print (or run through a pager if too long) the
2657 2662 docstring for an object. If the given object is a class, it will
2658 2663 print both the class and the constructor docstrings.
2659 2664 * [%pdef <object>:] Print the definition header for any callable
2660 2665 object. If the object is a class, print the constructor information.
2661 2666 * [%psource <object>:] Print (or run through a pager if too long)
2662 2667 the source code for an object.
2663 2668 * [%pfile <object>:] Show the entire source file where an object was
2664 2669 defined via a pager, opening it at the line where the object
2665 2670 definition begins.
2666 2671 * [%who/%whos:] These functions give information about identifiers
2667 2672 you have defined interactively (not things you loaded or defined
2668 2673 in your configuration files). %who just prints a list of
2669 2674 identifiers and %whos prints a table with some basic details about
2670 2675 each identifier.
2671 2676
2672 2677 Note that the dynamic object information functions (?/??, %pdoc, %pfile,
2673 2678 %pdef, %psource) give you access to documentation even on things which
2674 2679 are not really defined as separate identifiers. Try for example typing
2675 2680 {}.get? or after doing import os, type os.path.abspath??.
2676 2681
2677 2682
2678 2683
2679 2684 Readline-based features
2680 2685 -----------------------
2681 2686
2682 2687 These features require the GNU readline library, so they won't work if
2683 2688 your Python installation lacks readline support. We will first describe
2684 2689 the default behavior IPython uses, and then how to change it to suit
2685 2690 your preferences.
2686 2691
2687 2692
2688 2693 Command line completion
2689 2694 -----------------------
2690 2695
2691 2696 At any time, hitting TAB will complete any available python commands or
2692 2697 variable names, and show you a list of the possible completions if
2693 2698 there's no unambiguous one. It will also complete filenames in the
2694 2699 current directory if no python names match what you've typed so far.
2695 2700
2696 2701
2697 2702 Search command history
2698 2703 ----------------------
2699 2704
2700 2705 IPython provides two ways for searching through previous input and thus
2701 2706 reduce the need for repetitive typing:
2702 2707
2703 2708 1. Start typing, and then use Ctrl-p (previous,up) and Ctrl-n
2704 2709 (next,down) to search through only the history items that match
2705 2710 what you've typed so far. If you use Ctrl-p/Ctrl-n at a blank
2706 2711 prompt, they just behave like normal arrow keys.
2707 2712 2. Hit Ctrl-r: opens a search prompt. Begin typing and the system
2708 2713 searches your history for lines that contain what you've typed so
2709 2714 far, completing as much as it can.
2710 2715
2711 2716
2712 2717 Persistent command history across sessions
2713 2718 ------------------------------------------
2714 2719
2715 2720 IPython will save your input history when it leaves and reload it next
2716 2721 time you restart it. By default, the history file is named
2717 2722 $IPYTHONDIR/history, but if you've loaded a named profile,
2718 2723 '-PROFILE_NAME' is appended to the name. This allows you to keep
2719 2724 separate histories related to various tasks: commands related to
2720 2725 numerical work will not be clobbered by a system shell history, for
2721 2726 example.
2722 2727
2723 2728
2724 2729 Autoindent
2725 2730 ----------
2726 2731
2727 2732 IPython can recognize lines ending in ':' and indent the next line,
2728 2733 while also un-indenting automatically after 'raise' or 'return'.
2729 2734
2730 2735 This feature uses the readline library, so it will honor your ~/.inputrc
2731 2736 configuration (or whatever file your INPUTRC variable points to). Adding
2732 2737 the following lines to your .inputrc file can make indenting/unindenting
2733 2738 more convenient (M-i indents, M-u unindents)::
2734 2739
2735 2740 $if Python
2736 2741 "\M-i": " "
2737 2742 "\M-u": "\d\d\d\d"
2738 2743 $endif
2739 2744
2740 2745 Note that there are 4 spaces between the quote marks after "M-i" above.
2741 2746
2742 2747 Warning: this feature is ON by default, but it can cause problems with
2743 2748 the pasting of multi-line indented code (the pasted code gets
2744 2749 re-indented on each line). A magic function %autoindent allows you to
2745 2750 toggle it on/off at runtime. You can also disable it permanently on in
2746 2751 your ipythonrc file (set autoindent 0).
2747 2752
2748 2753
2749 2754 Customizing readline behavior
2750 2755 -----------------------------
2751 2756
2752 2757 All these features are based on the GNU readline library, which has an
2753 2758 extremely customizable interface. Normally, readline is configured via a
2754 2759 file which defines the behavior of the library; the details of the
2755 2760 syntax for this can be found in the readline documentation available
2756 2761 with your system or on the Internet. IPython doesn't read this file (if
2757 2762 it exists) directly, but it does support passing to readline valid
2758 2763 options via a simple interface. In brief, you can customize readline by
2759 2764 setting the following options in your ipythonrc configuration file (note
2760 2765 that these options can not be specified at the command line):
2761 2766
2762 2767 * [readline_parse_and_bind:] this option can appear as many times as
2763 2768 you want, each time defining a string to be executed via a
2764 2769 readline.parse_and_bind() command. The syntax for valid commands
2765 2770 of this kind can be found by reading the documentation for the GNU
2766 2771 readline library, as these commands are of the kind which readline
2767 2772 accepts in its configuration file.
2768 2773 * [readline_remove_delims:] a string of characters to be removed
2769 2774 from the default word-delimiters list used by readline, so that
2770 2775 completions may be performed on strings which contain them. Do not
2771 2776 change the default value unless you know what you're doing.
2772 2777 * [readline_omit__names:] when tab-completion is enabled, hitting
2773 2778 <tab> after a '.' in a name will complete all attributes of an
2774 2779 object, including all the special methods whose names include
2775 2780 double underscores (like __getitem__ or __class__). If you'd
2776 2781 rather not see these names by default, you can set this option to
2777 2782 1. Note that even when this option is set, you can still see those
2778 2783 names by explicitly typing a _ after the period and hitting <tab>:
2779 2784 'name._<tab>' will always complete attribute names starting with '_'.
2780 2785 * [ ] This option is off by default so that new users see all
2781 2786 attributes of any objects they are dealing with.
2782 2787
2783 2788 You will find the default values along with a corresponding detailed
2784 2789 explanation in your ipythonrc file.
2785 2790
2786 2791
2787 2792 Session logging and restoring
2788 2793 -----------------------------
2789 2794
2790 2795 You can log all input from a session either by starting IPython with the
2791 2796 command line switches -log or -logfile (see sec. 5.2
2792 2797 <node5.html#sec:cmd-line-opts>)or by activating the logging at any
2793 2798 moment with the magic function %logstart.
2794 2799
2795 2800 Log files can later be reloaded with the -logplay option and IPython
2796 2801 will attempt to 'replay' the log by executing all the lines in it, thus
2797 2802 restoring the state of a previous session. This feature is not quite
2798 2803 perfect, but can still be useful in many cases.
2799 2804
2800 2805 The log files can also be used as a way to have a permanent record of
2801 2806 any code you wrote while experimenting. Log files are regular text files
2802 2807 which you can later open in your favorite text editor to extract code or
2803 2808 to 'clean them up' before using them to replay a session.
2804 2809
2805 2810 The %logstart function for activating logging in mid-session is used as
2806 2811 follows:
2807 2812
2808 2813 %logstart [log_name [log_mode]]
2809 2814
2810 2815 If no name is given, it defaults to a file named 'log' in your
2811 2816 IPYTHONDIR directory, in 'rotate' mode (see below).
2812 2817
2813 2818 '%logstart name' saves to file 'name' in 'backup' mode. It saves your
2814 2819 history up to that point and then continues logging.
2815 2820
2816 2821 %logstart takes a second optional parameter: logging mode. This can be
2817 2822 one of (note that the modes are given unquoted):
2818 2823
2819 2824 * [over:] overwrite existing log_name.
2820 2825 * [backup:] rename (if exists) to log_name~ and start log_name.
2821 2826 * [append:] well, that says it.
2822 2827 * [rotate:] create rotating logs log_name.1~, log_name.2~, etc.
2823 2828
2824 2829 The %logoff and %logon functions allow you to temporarily stop and
2825 2830 resume logging to a file which had previously been started with
2826 2831 %logstart. They will fail (with an explanation) if you try to use them
2827 2832 before logging has been started.
2828 2833
2829 2834
2830 2835
2831 2836 System shell access
2832 2837 -------------------
2833 2838
2834 2839 Any input line beginning with a ! character is passed verbatim (minus
2835 2840 the !, of course) to the underlying operating system. For example,
2836 2841 typing !ls will run 'ls' in the current directory.
2837 2842
2838 2843 Manual capture of command output
2839 2844 --------------------------------
2840 2845
2841 2846 If the input line begins with two exclamation marks, !!, the command is
2842 2847 executed but its output is captured and returned as a python list, split
2843 2848 on newlines. Any output sent by the subprocess to standard error is
2844 2849 printed separately, so that the resulting list only captures standard
2845 2850 output. The !! syntax is a shorthand for the %sx magic command.
2846 2851
2847 2852 Finally, the %sc magic (short for 'shell capture') is similar to %sx,
2848 2853 but allowing more fine-grained control of the capture details, and
2849 2854 storing the result directly into a named variable. The direct use of
2850 2855 %sc is now deprecated, and you should ise the ``var = !cmd`` syntax
2851 2856 instead.
2852 2857
2853 2858 IPython also allows you to expand the value of python variables when
2854 2859 making system calls. Any python variable or expression which you prepend
2855 2860 with $ will get expanded before the system call is made::
2856 2861
2857 2862 In [1]: pyvar='Hello world'
2858 2863 In [2]: !echo "A python variable: $pyvar"
2859 2864 A python variable: Hello world
2860 2865
2861 2866 If you want the shell to actually see a literal $, you need to type it
2862 2867 twice::
2863 2868
2864 2869 In [3]: !echo "A system variable: $$HOME"
2865 2870 A system variable: /home/fperez
2866 2871
2867 2872 You can pass arbitrary expressions, though you'll need to delimit them
2868 2873 with {} if there is ambiguity as to the extent of the expression::
2869 2874
2870 2875 In [5]: x=10
2871 2876 In [6]: y=20
2872 2877 In [13]: !echo $x+y
2873 2878 10+y
2874 2879 In [7]: !echo ${x+y}
2875 2880 30
2876 2881
2877 2882 Even object attributes can be expanded::
2878 2883
2879 2884 In [12]: !echo $sys.argv
2880 2885 [/home/fperez/usr/bin/ipython]
2881 2886
2882 2887
2883 2888 System command aliases
2884 2889 ----------------------
2885 2890
2886 2891 The %alias magic function and the alias option in the ipythonrc
2887 2892 configuration file allow you to define magic functions which are in fact
2888 2893 system shell commands. These aliases can have parameters.
2889 2894
2890 2895 '%alias alias_name cmd' defines 'alias_name' as an alias for 'cmd'
2891 2896
2892 2897 Then, typing '%alias_name params' will execute the system command 'cmd
2893 2898 params' (from your underlying operating system).
2894 2899
2895 2900 You can also define aliases with parameters using %s specifiers (one per
2896 2901 parameter). The following example defines the %parts function as an
2897 2902 alias to the command 'echo first %s second %s' where each %s will be
2898 2903 replaced by a positional parameter to the call to %parts::
2899 2904
2900 2905 In [1]: alias parts echo first %s second %s
2901 2906 In [2]: %parts A B
2902 2907 first A second B
2903 2908 In [3]: %parts A
2904 2909 Incorrect number of arguments: 2 expected.
2905 2910 parts is an alias to: 'echo first %s second %s'
2906 2911
2907 2912 If called with no parameters, %alias prints the table of currently
2908 2913 defined aliases.
2909 2914
2910 2915 The %rehash/rehashx magics allow you to load your entire $PATH as
2911 2916 ipython aliases. See their respective docstrings (or sec. 6.2
2912 2917 <#sec:magic> for further details).
2913 2918
2914 2919
2915 2920
2916 2921 Recursive reload
2917 2922 ----------------
2918 2923
2919 2924 The dreload function does a recursive reload of a module: changes made
2920 2925 to the module since you imported will actually be available without
2921 2926 having to exit.
2922 2927
2923 2928
2924 2929 Verbose and colored exception traceback printouts
2925 2930 -------------------------------------------------
2926 2931
2927 2932 IPython provides the option to see very detailed exception tracebacks,
2928 2933 which can be especially useful when debugging large programs. You can
2929 2934 run any Python file with the %run function to benefit from these
2930 2935 detailed tracebacks. Furthermore, both normal and verbose tracebacks can
2931 2936 be colored (if your terminal supports it) which makes them much easier
2932 2937 to parse visually.
2933 2938
2934 2939 See the magic xmode and colors functions for details (just type %magic).
2935 2940
2936 2941 These features are basically a terminal version of Ka-Ping Yee's cgitb
2937 2942 module, now part of the standard Python library.
2938 2943
2939 2944
2940 2945
2941 2946 Input caching system
2942 2947 --------------------
2943 2948
2944 2949 IPython offers numbered prompts (In/Out) with input and output caching.
2945 2950 All input is saved and can be retrieved as variables (besides the usual
2946 2951 arrow key recall).
2947 2952
2948 2953 The following GLOBAL variables always exist (so don't overwrite them!):
2949 2954 _i: stores previous input. _ii: next previous. _iii: next-next previous.
2950 2955 _ih : a list of all input _ih[n] is the input from line n and this list
2951 2956 is aliased to the global variable In. If you overwrite In with a
2952 2957 variable of your own, you can remake the assignment to the internal list
2953 2958 with a simple 'In=_ih'.
2954 2959
2955 2960 Additionally, global variables named _i<n> are dynamically created (<n>
2956 2961 being the prompt counter), such that
2957 2962 _i<n> == _ih[<n>] == In[<n>].
2958 2963
2959 2964 For example, what you typed at prompt 14 is available as _i14, _ih[14]
2960 2965 and In[14].
2961 2966
2962 2967 This allows you to easily cut and paste multi line interactive prompts
2963 2968 by printing them out: they print like a clean string, without prompt
2964 2969 characters. You can also manipulate them like regular variables (they
2965 2970 are strings), modify or exec them (typing 'exec _i9' will re-execute the
2966 2971 contents of input prompt 9, 'exec In[9:14]+In[18]' will re-execute lines
2967 2972 9 through 13 and line 18).
2968 2973
2969 2974 You can also re-execute multiple lines of input easily by using the
2970 2975 magic %macro function (which automates the process and allows
2971 2976 re-execution without having to type 'exec' every time). The macro system
2972 2977 also allows you to re-execute previous lines which include magic
2973 2978 function calls (which require special processing). Type %macro? or see
2974 2979 sec. 6.2 <#sec:magic> for more details on the macro system.
2975 2980
2976 2981 A history function %hist allows you to see any part of your input
2977 2982 history by printing a range of the _i variables.
2978 2983
2979 2984 Output caching system
2980 2985 ---------------------
2981 2986
2982 2987 For output that is returned from actions, a system similar to the input
2983 2988 cache exists but using _ instead of _i. Only actions that produce a
2984 2989 result (NOT assignments, for example) are cached. If you are familiar
2985 2990 with Mathematica, IPython's _ variables behave exactly like
2986 2991 Mathematica's % variables.
2987 2992
2988 2993 The following GLOBAL variables always exist (so don't overwrite them!):
2989 2994
2990 2995 * [_] (a single underscore) : stores previous output, like Python's
2991 2996 default interpreter.
2992 2997 * [__] (two underscores): next previous.
2993 2998 * [___] (three underscores): next-next previous.
2994 2999
2995 3000 Additionally, global variables named _<n> are dynamically created (<n>
2996 3001 being the prompt counter), such that the result of output <n> is always
2997 3002 available as _<n> (don't use the angle brackets, just the number, e.g.
2998 3003 _21).
2999 3004
3000 3005 These global variables are all stored in a global dictionary (not a
3001 3006 list, since it only has entries for lines which returned a result)
3002 3007 available under the names _oh and Out (similar to _ih and In). So the
3003 3008 output from line 12 can be obtained as _12, Out[12] or _oh[12]. If you
3004 3009 accidentally overwrite the Out variable you can recover it by typing
3005 3010 'Out=_oh' at the prompt.
3006 3011
3007 3012 This system obviously can potentially put heavy memory demands on your
3008 3013 system, since it prevents Python's garbage collector from removing any
3009 3014 previously computed results. You can control how many results are kept
3010 3015 in memory with the option (at the command line or in your ipythonrc
3011 3016 file) cache_size. If you set it to 0, the whole system is completely
3012 3017 disabled and the prompts revert to the classic '>>>' of normal Python.
3013 3018
3014 3019
3015 3020 Directory history
3016 3021 -----------------
3017 3022
3018 3023 Your history of visited directories is kept in the global list _dh, and
3019 3024 the magic %cd command can be used to go to any entry in that list. The
3020 3025 %dhist command allows you to view this history. do ``cd -<TAB`` to
3021 3026 conventiently view the directory history.
3022 3027
3023 3028
3024 3029 Automatic parentheses and quotes
3025 3030 --------------------------------
3026 3031
3027 3032 These features were adapted from Nathan Gray's LazyPython. They are
3028 3033 meant to allow less typing for common situations.
3029 3034
3030 3035
3031 3036 Automatic parentheses
3032 3037 ---------------------
3033 3038
3034 3039 Callable objects (i.e. functions, methods, etc) can be invoked like this
3035 3040 (notice the commas between the arguments)::
3036 3041
3037 3042 >>> callable_ob arg1, arg2, arg3
3038 3043
3039 3044 and the input will be translated to this::
3040 3045
3041 3046 -> callable_ob(arg1, arg2, arg3)
3042 3047
3043 3048 You can force automatic parentheses by using '/' as the first character
3044 3049 of a line. For example::
3045 3050
3046 3051 >>> /globals # becomes 'globals()'
3047 3052
3048 3053 Note that the '/' MUST be the first character on the line! This won't work::
3049 3054
3050 3055 >>> print /globals # syntax error
3051 3056
3052 3057 In most cases the automatic algorithm should work, so you should rarely
3053 3058 need to explicitly invoke /. One notable exception is if you are trying
3054 3059 to call a function with a list of tuples as arguments (the parenthesis
3055 3060 will confuse IPython)::
3056 3061
3057 3062 In [1]: zip (1,2,3),(4,5,6) # won't work
3058 3063
3059 3064 but this will work::
3060 3065
3061 3066 In [2]: /zip (1,2,3),(4,5,6)
3062 3067 ---> zip ((1,2,3),(4,5,6))
3063 3068 Out[2]= [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
3064 3069
3065 3070 IPython tells you that it has altered your command line by displaying
3066 3071 the new command line preceded by ->. e.g.::
3067 3072
3068 3073 In [18]: callable list
3069 3074 ----> callable (list)
3070 3075
3071 3076
3072 3077 Automatic quoting
3073 3078 -----------------
3074 3079
3075 3080 You can force automatic quoting of a function's arguments by using ','
3076 3081 or ';' as the first character of a line. For example::
3077 3082
3078 3083 >>> ,my_function /home/me # becomes my_function("/home/me")
3079 3084
3080 3085 If you use ';' instead, the whole argument is quoted as a single string
3081 3086 (while ',' splits on whitespace)::
3082 3087
3083 3088 >>> ,my_function a b c # becomes my_function("a","b","c")
3084 3089
3085 3090 >>> ;my_function a b c # becomes my_function("a b c")
3086 3091
3087 3092 Note that the ',' or ';' MUST be the first character on the line! This
3088 3093 won't work::
3089 3094
3090 3095 >>> x = ,my_function /home/me # syntax error
3091 3096
3092 3097 Customization
3093 3098 =============
3094 3099
3100 There are 2 ways to configure IPython - the old way of using ipythonrc
3101 files (an INI-file like format), and the new way that involves editing
3102 your ipy_user_conf.py. Both configuration systems work at the same
3103 time, so you can set your options in both, but if you are hesitating
3104 about which alternative to choose, we recommend the ipy_user_conf.py
3105 approach, as it will give you more power and control in the long
3106 run. However, there are few options such as pylab_import_all that can
3107 only be specified in ipythonrc file or command line - the reason for
3108 this is that they are needed before IPython has been started up, and
3109 the IPApi object used in ipy_user_conf.py is not yet available at that
3110 time. A hybrid approach of specifying a few options in ipythonrc and
3111 doing the more advanced configuration in ipy_user_conf.py is also
3112 possible.
3113
3114 The ipythonrc approach
3115 ----------------------
3116
3095 3117 As we've already mentioned, IPython reads a configuration file which can
3096 3118 be specified at the command line (-rcfile) or which by default is
3097 3119 assumed to be called ipythonrc. Such a file is looked for in the current
3098 3120 directory where IPython is started and then in your IPYTHONDIR, which
3099 3121 allows you to have local configuration files for specific projects. In
3100 3122 this section we will call these types of configuration files simply
3101 3123 rcfiles (short for resource configuration file).
3102 3124
3103 3125 The syntax of an rcfile is one of key-value pairs separated by
3104 3126 whitespace, one per line. Lines beginning with a # are ignored as
3105 3127 comments, but comments can not be put on lines with data (the parser is
3106 3128 fairly primitive). Note that these are not python files, and this is
3107 3129 deliberate, because it allows us to do some things which would be quite
3108 3130 tricky to implement if they were normal python files.
3109 3131
3110 3132 First, an rcfile can contain permanent default values for almost all
3111 3133 command line options (except things like -help or -Version). Sec 5.2
3112 3134 <node5.html#sec:cmd-line-opts> contains a description of all
3113 3135 command-line options. However, values you explicitly specify at the
3114 3136 command line override the values defined in the rcfile.
3115 3137
3116 3138 Besides command line option values, the rcfile can specify values for
3117 3139 certain extra special options which are not available at the command
3118 3140 line. These options are briefly described below.
3119 3141
3120 3142 Each of these options may appear as many times as you need it in the file.
3121 3143
3122 3144 * [include <file1> <file2> ...:] you can name other rcfiles you want
3123 3145 to recursively load up to 15 levels (don't use the <> brackets in
3124 3146 your names!). This feature allows you to define a 'base' rcfile
3125 3147 with general options and special-purpose files which can be loaded
3126 3148 only when needed with particular configuration options. To make
3127 3149 this more convenient, IPython accepts the -profile <name> option
3128 3150 (abbreviates to -p <name>) which tells it to look for an rcfile
3129 3151 named ipythonrc-<name>.
3130 3152 * [import_mod <mod1> <mod2> ...:] import modules with 'import
3131 3153 <mod1>,<mod2>,...'
3132 3154 * [import_some <mod> <f1> <f2> ...:] import functions with 'from
3133 3155 <mod> import <f1>,<f2>,...'
3134 3156 * [import_all <mod1> <mod2> ...:] for each module listed import
3135 3157 functions with ``from <mod> import *``.
3136 3158 * [execute <python code>:] give any single-line python code to be
3137 3159 executed.
3138 3160 * [execfile <filename>:] execute the python file given with an
3139 3161 'execfile(filename)' command. Username expansion is performed on
3140 3162 the given names. So if you need any amount of extra fancy
3141 3163 customization that won't fit in any of the above 'canned' options,
3142 3164 you can just put it in a separate python file and execute it.
3143 3165 * [alias <alias_def>:] this is equivalent to calling
3144 3166 '%alias <alias_def>' at the IPython command line. This way, from
3145 3167 within IPython you can do common system tasks without having to
3146 3168 exit it or use the ! escape. IPython isn't meant to be a shell
3147 3169 replacement, but it is often very useful to be able to do things
3148 3170 with files while testing code. This gives you the flexibility to
3149 3171 have within IPython any aliases you may be used to under your
3150 3172 normal system shell.
3151 3173
3152 3174
3153
3154 3175 Sample ipythonrc file
3155 3176 ---------------------
3156 3177
3157 3178 The default rcfile, called ipythonrc and supplied in your IPYTHONDIR
3158 3179 directory contains lots of comments on all of these options. We
3159 3180 reproduce it here for reference::
3160 3181
3161 3182
3162 3183 # -*- Mode: Shell-Script -*- Not really, but shows comments correctly
3163 3184 # $Id: ipythonrc 2156 2007-03-19 02:32:19Z fperez $
3164 3185
3165 3186 #***************************************************************************
3166 3187 #
3167 3188 # Configuration file for IPython -- ipythonrc format
3168 3189 #
3169 3190 # ===========================================================
3170 3191 # Deprecation note: you should look into modifying ipy_user_conf.py (located
3171 3192 # in ~/.ipython or ~/_ipython, depending on your platform) instead, it's a
3172 3193 # more flexible and robust (and better supported!) configuration
3173 3194 # method.
3174 3195 # ===========================================================
3175 3196 #
3176 3197 # The format of this file is simply one of 'key value' lines.
3177 3198 # Lines containing only whitespace at the beginning and then a # are ignored
3178 3199 # as comments. But comments can NOT be put on lines with data.
3179 3200
3180 3201 # The meaning and use of each key are explained below.
3181 3202
3182 3203 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3183 3204 # Section: included files
3184 3205
3185 3206 # Put one or more *config* files (with the syntax of this file) you want to
3186 3207 # include. For keys with a unique value the outermost file has precedence. For
3187 3208 # keys with multiple values, they all get assembled into a list which then
3188 3209 # gets loaded by IPython.
3189 3210
3190 3211 # In this file, all lists of things should simply be space-separated.
3191 3212
3192 3213 # This allows you to build hierarchies of files which recursively load
3193 3214 # lower-level services. If this is your main ~/.ipython/ipythonrc file, you
3194 3215 # should only keep here basic things you always want available. Then you can
3195 3216 # include it in every other special-purpose config file you create.
3196 3217 include
3197 3218
3198 3219 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3199 3220 # Section: startup setup
3200 3221
3201 3222 # These are mostly things which parallel a command line option of the same
3202 3223 # name.
3203 3224
3204 3225 # Keys in this section should only appear once. If any key from this section
3205 3226 # is encountered more than once, the last value remains, all earlier ones get
3206 3227 # discarded.
3207 3228
3208 3229
3209 3230 # Automatic calling of callable objects. If set to 1 or 2, callable objects
3210 3231 # are automatically called when invoked at the command line, even if you don't
3211 3232 # type parentheses. IPython adds the parentheses for you. For example:
3212 3233
3213 3234 #In [1]: str 45
3214 3235 #------> str(45)
3215 3236 #Out[1]: '45'
3216 3237
3217 3238 # IPython reprints your line with '---->' indicating that it added
3218 3239 # parentheses. While this option is very convenient for interactive use, it
3219 3240 # may occasionally cause problems with objects which have side-effects if
3220 3241 # called unexpectedly.
3221 3242
3222 3243 # The valid values for autocall are:
3223 3244
3224 3245 # autocall 0 -> disabled (you can toggle it at runtime with the %autocall magic)
3225 3246
3226 3247 # autocall 1 -> active, but do not apply if there are no arguments on the line.
3227 3248
3228 3249 # In this mode, you get:
3229 3250
3230 3251 #In [1]: callable
3231 3252 #Out[1]: <built-in function callable>
3232 3253
3233 3254 #In [2]: callable 'hello'
3234 3255 #------> callable('hello')
3235 3256 #Out[2]: False
3236 3257
3237 3258 # 2 -> Active always. Even if no arguments are present, the callable object
3238 3259 # is called:
3239 3260
3240 3261 #In [4]: callable
3241 3262 #------> callable()
3242 3263
3243 3264 # Note that even with autocall off, you can still use '/' at the start of a
3244 3265 # line to treat the first argument on the command line as a function and add
3245 3266 # parentheses to it:
3246 3267
3247 3268 #In [8]: /str 43
3248 3269 #------> str(43)
3249 3270 #Out[8]: '43'
3250 3271
3251 3272 autocall 1
3252 3273
3253 3274 # Auto-edit syntax errors. When you use the %edit magic in ipython to edit
3254 3275 # source code (see the 'editor' variable below), it is possible that you save
3255 3276 # a file with syntax errors in it. If this variable is true, IPython will ask
3256 3277 # you whether to re-open the editor immediately to correct such an error.
3257 3278
3258 3279 autoedit_syntax 0
3259 3280
3260 3281 # Auto-indent. IPython can recognize lines ending in ':' and indent the next
3261 3282 # line, while also un-indenting automatically after 'raise' or 'return'.
3262 3283
3263 3284 # This feature uses the readline library, so it will honor your ~/.inputrc
3264 3285 # configuration (or whatever file your INPUTRC variable points to). Adding
3265 3286 # the following lines to your .inputrc file can make indent/unindenting more
3266 3287 # convenient (M-i indents, M-u unindents):
3267 3288
3268 3289 # $if Python
3269 3290 # "\M-i": " "
3270 3291 # "\M-u": "\d\d\d\d"
3271 3292 # $endif
3272 3293
3273 3294 # The feature is potentially a bit dangerous, because it can cause problems
3274 3295 # with pasting of indented code (the pasted code gets re-indented on each
3275 3296 # line). But it's a huge time-saver when working interactively. The magic
3276 3297 # function %autoindent allows you to toggle it on/off at runtime.
3277 3298
3278 3299 autoindent 1
3279 3300
3280 3301 # Auto-magic. This gives you access to all the magic functions without having
3281 3302 # to prepend them with an % sign. If you define a variable with the same name
3282 3303 # as a magic function (say who=1), you will need to access the magic function
3283 3304 # with % (%who in this example). However, if later you delete your variable
3284 3305 # (del who), you'll recover the automagic calling form.
3285 3306
3286 3307 # Considering that many magic functions provide a lot of shell-like
3287 3308 # functionality, automagic gives you something close to a full Python+system
3288 3309 # shell environment (and you can extend it further if you want).
3289 3310
3290 3311 automagic 1
3291 3312
3292 3313 # Size of the output cache. After this many entries are stored, the cache will
3293 3314 # get flushed. Depending on the size of your intermediate calculations, you
3294 3315 # may have memory problems if you make it too big, since keeping things in the
3295 3316 # cache prevents Python from reclaiming the memory for old results. Experiment
3296 3317 # with a value that works well for you.
3297 3318
3298 3319 # If you choose cache_size 0 IPython will revert to python's regular >>>
3299 3320 # unnumbered prompt. You will still have _, __ and ___ for your last three
3300 3321 # results, but that will be it. No dynamic _1, _2, etc. will be created. If
3301 3322 # you are running on a slow machine or with very limited memory, this may
3302 3323 # help.
3303 3324
3304 3325 cache_size 1000
3305 3326
3306 3327 # Classic mode: Setting 'classic 1' you lose many of IPython niceties,
3307 3328 # but that's your choice! Classic 1 -> same as IPython -classic.
3308 3329 # Note that this is _not_ the normal python interpreter, it's simply
3309 3330 # IPython emulating most of the classic interpreter's behavior.
3310 3331 classic 0
3311 3332
3312 3333 # colors - Coloring option for prompts and traceback printouts.
3313 3334
3314 3335 # Currently available schemes: NoColor, Linux, LightBG.
3315 3336
3316 3337 # This option allows coloring the prompts and traceback printouts. This
3317 3338 # requires a terminal which can properly handle color escape sequences. If you
3318 3339 # are having problems with this, use the NoColor scheme (uses no color escapes
3319 3340 # at all).
3320 3341
3321 3342 # The Linux option works well in linux console type environments: dark
3322 3343 # background with light fonts.
3323 3344
3324 3345 # LightBG is similar to Linux but swaps dark/light colors to be more readable
3325 3346 # in light background terminals.
3326 3347
3327 3348 # keep uncommented only the one you want:
3328 3349 colors Linux
3329 3350 #colors LightBG
3330 3351 #colors NoColor
3331 3352
3332 3353 ########################
3333 3354 # Note to Windows users
3334 3355 #
3335 3356 # Color and readline support is avaialble to Windows users via Gary Bishop's
3336 3357 # readline library. You can find Gary's tools at
3337 3358 # http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncpythontools.
3338 3359 # Note that his readline module requires in turn the ctypes library, available
3339 3360 # at http://starship.python.net/crew/theller/ctypes.
3340 3361 ########################
3341 3362
3342 3363 # color_info: IPython can display information about objects via a set of
3343 3364 # functions, and optionally can use colors for this, syntax highlighting
3344 3365 # source code and various other elements. This information is passed through a
3345 3366 # pager (it defaults to 'less' if $PAGER is not set).
3346 3367
3347 3368 # If your pager has problems, try to setting it to properly handle escapes
3348 3369 # (see the less manpage for detail), or disable this option. The magic
3349 3370 # function %color_info allows you to toggle this interactively for testing.
3350 3371
3351 3372 color_info 1
3352 3373
3353 3374 # confirm_exit: set to 1 if you want IPython to confirm when you try to exit
3354 3375 # with an EOF (Control-d in Unix, Control-Z/Enter in Windows). Note that using
3355 3376 # the magic functions %Exit or %Quit you can force a direct exit, bypassing
3356 3377 # any confirmation.
3357 3378
3358 3379 confirm_exit 1
3359 3380
3360 3381 # Use deep_reload() as a substitute for reload() by default. deep_reload() is
3361 3382 # still available as dreload() and appears as a builtin.
3362 3383
3363 3384 deep_reload 0
3364 3385
3365 3386 # Which editor to use with the %edit command. If you leave this at 0, IPython
3366 3387 # will honor your EDITOR environment variable. Since this editor is invoked on
3367 3388 # the fly by ipython and is meant for editing small code snippets, you may
3368 3389 # want to use a small, lightweight editor here.
3369 3390
3370 3391 # For Emacs users, setting up your Emacs server properly as described in the
3371 3392 # manual is a good idea. An alternative is to use jed, a very light editor
3372 3393 # with much of the feel of Emacs (though not as powerful for heavy-duty work).
3373 3394
3374 3395 editor 0
3375 3396
3376 3397 # log 1 -> same as ipython -log. This automatically logs to ./ipython.log
3377 3398 log 0
3378 3399
3379 3400 # Same as ipython -Logfile YourLogfileName.
3380 3401 # Don't use with log 1 (use one or the other)
3381 3402 logfile ''
3382 3403
3383 3404 # banner 0 -> same as ipython -nobanner
3384 3405 banner 1
3385 3406
3386 3407 # messages 0 -> same as ipython -nomessages
3387 3408 messages 1
3388 3409
3389 3410 # Automatically call the pdb debugger after every uncaught exception. If you
3390 3411 # are used to debugging using pdb, this puts you automatically inside of it
3391 3412 # after any call (either in IPython or in code called by it) which triggers an
3392 3413 # exception which goes uncaught.
3393 3414 pdb 0
3394 3415
3395 3416 # Enable the pprint module for printing. pprint tends to give a more readable
3396 3417 # display (than print) for complex nested data structures.
3397 3418 pprint 1
3398 3419
3399 3420 # Prompt strings
3400 3421
3401 3422 # Most bash-like escapes can be used to customize IPython's prompts, as well as
3402 3423 # a few additional ones which are IPython-specific. All valid prompt escapes
3403 3424 # are described in detail in the Customization section of the IPython HTML/PDF
3404 3425 # manual.
3405 3426
3406 3427 # Use \# to represent the current prompt number, and quote them to protect
3407 3428 # spaces.
3408 3429 prompt_in1 'In [\#]: '
3409 3430
3410 3431 # \D is replaced by as many dots as there are digits in the
3411 3432 # current value of \#.
3412 3433 prompt_in2 ' .\D.: '
3413 3434
3414 3435 prompt_out 'Out[\#]: '
3415 3436
3416 3437 # Select whether to left-pad the output prompts to match the length of the
3417 3438 # input ones. This allows you for example to use a simple '>' as an output
3418 3439 # prompt, and yet have the output line up with the input. If set to false,
3419 3440 # the output prompts will be unpadded (flush left).
3420 3441 prompts_pad_left 1
3421 3442
3422 3443 # Pylab support: when ipython is started with the -pylab switch, by default it
3423 3444 # executes 'from matplotlib.pylab import *'. Set this variable to false if you
3424 3445 # want to disable this behavior.
3425 3446
3426 3447 # For details on pylab, see the matplotlib website:
3427 3448 # http://matplotlib.sf.net
3428 3449 pylab_import_all 1
3429 3450
3430 3451
3431 3452 # quick 1 -> same as ipython -quick
3432 3453 quick 0
3433 3454
3434 3455 # Use the readline library (1) or not (0). Most users will want this on, but
3435 3456 # if you experience strange problems with line management (mainly when using
3436 3457 # IPython inside Emacs buffers) you may try disabling it. Not having it on
3437 3458 # prevents you from getting command history with the arrow keys, searching and
3438 3459 # name completion using TAB.
3439 3460
3440 3461 readline 1
3441 3462
3442 3463 # Screen Length: number of lines of your screen. This is used to control
3443 3464 # printing of very long strings. Strings longer than this number of lines will
3444 3465 # be paged with the less command instead of directly printed.
3445 3466
3446 3467 # The default value for this is 0, which means IPython will auto-detect your
3447 3468 # screen size every time it needs to print. If for some reason this isn't
3448 3469 # working well (it needs curses support), specify it yourself. Otherwise don't
3449 3470 # change the default.
3450 3471
3451 3472 screen_length 0
3452 3473
3453 3474 # Prompt separators for input and output.
3454 3475 # Use \n for newline explicitly, without quotes.
3455 3476 # Use 0 (like at the cmd line) to turn off a given separator.
3456 3477
3457 3478 # The structure of prompt printing is:
3458 3479 # (SeparateIn)Input....
3459 3480 # (SeparateOut)Output...
3460 3481 # (SeparateOut2), # that is, no newline is printed after Out2
3461 3482 # By choosing these you can organize your output any way you want.
3462 3483
3463 3484 separate_in \n
3464 3485 separate_out 0
3465 3486 separate_out2 0
3466 3487
3467 3488 # 'nosep 1' is a shorthand for '-SeparateIn 0 -SeparateOut 0 -SeparateOut2 0'.
3468 3489 # Simply removes all input/output separators, overriding the choices above.
3469 3490 nosep 0
3470 3491
3471 3492 # Wildcard searches - IPython has a system for searching names using
3472 3493 # shell-like wildcards; type %psearch? for details. This variables sets
3473 3494 # whether by default such searches should be case sensitive or not. You can
3474 3495 # always override the default at the system command line or the IPython
3475 3496 # prompt.
3476 3497
3477 3498 wildcards_case_sensitive 1
3478 3499
3479 3500 # Object information: at what level of detail to display the string form of an
3480 3501 # object. If set to 0, ipython will compute the string form of any object X,
3481 3502 # by calling str(X), when X? is typed. If set to 1, str(X) will only be
3482 3503 # computed when X?? is given, and if set to 2 or higher, it will never be
3483 3504 # computed (there is no X??? level of detail). This is mostly of use to
3484 3505 # people who frequently manipulate objects whose string representation is
3485 3506 # extremely expensive to compute.
3486 3507
3487 3508 object_info_string_level 0
3488 3509
3489 3510 # xmode - Exception reporting mode.
3490 3511
3491 3512 # Valid modes: Plain, Context and Verbose.
3492 3513
3493 3514 # Plain: similar to python's normal traceback printing.
3494 3515
3495 3516 # Context: prints 5 lines of context source code around each line in the
3496 3517 # traceback.
3497 3518
3498 3519 # Verbose: similar to Context, but additionally prints the variables currently
3499 3520 # visible where the exception happened (shortening their strings if too
3500 3521 # long). This can potentially be very slow, if you happen to have a huge data
3501 3522 # structure whose string representation is complex to compute. Your computer
3502 3523 # may appear to freeze for a while with cpu usage at 100%. If this occurs, you
3503 3524 # can cancel the traceback with Ctrl-C (maybe hitting it more than once).
3504 3525
3505 3526 #xmode Plain
3506 3527 xmode Context
3507 3528 #xmode Verbose
3508 3529
3509 3530 # multi_line_specials: if true, allow magics, aliases and shell escapes (via
3510 3531 # !cmd) to be used in multi-line input (like for loops). For example, if you
3511 3532 # have this active, the following is valid in IPython:
3512 3533 #
3513 3534 #In [17]: for i in range(3):
3514 3535 # ....: mkdir $i
3515 3536 # ....: !touch $i/hello
3516 3537 # ....: ls -l $i
3517 3538
3518 3539 multi_line_specials 1
3519 3540
3520 3541
3521 3542 # System calls: When IPython makes system calls (e.g. via special syntax like
3522 3543 # !cmd or !!cmd, or magics like %sc or %sx), it can print the command it is
3523 3544 # executing to standard output, prefixed by a header string.
3524 3545
3525 3546 system_header "IPython system call: "
3526 3547
3527 3548 system_verbose 1
3528 3549
3529 3550 # wxversion: request a specific wxPython version (used for -wthread)
3530 3551
3531 3552 # Set this to the value of wxPython you want to use, but note that this
3532 3553 # feature requires you to have the wxversion Python module to work. If you
3533 3554 # don't have the wxversion module (try 'import wxversion' at the prompt to
3534 3555 # check) or simply want to leave the system to pick up the default, leave this
3535 3556 # variable at 0.
3536 3557
3537 3558 wxversion 0
3538 3559
3539 3560 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3540 3561 # Section: Readline configuration (readline is not available for MS-Windows)
3541 3562
3542 3563 # This is done via the following options:
3543 3564
3544 3565 # (i) readline_parse_and_bind: this option can appear as many times as you
3545 3566 # want, each time defining a string to be executed via a
3546 3567 # readline.parse_and_bind() command. The syntax for valid commands of this
3547 3568 # kind can be found by reading the documentation for the GNU readline library,
3548 3569 # as these commands are of the kind which readline accepts in its
3549 3570 # configuration file.
3550 3571
3551 3572 # The TAB key can be used to complete names at the command line in one of two
3552 3573 # ways: 'complete' and 'menu-complete'. The difference is that 'complete' only
3553 3574 # completes as much as possible while 'menu-complete' cycles through all
3554 3575 # possible completions. Leave the one you prefer uncommented.
3555 3576
3556 3577 readline_parse_and_bind tab: complete
3557 3578 #readline_parse_and_bind tab: menu-complete
3558 3579
3559 3580 # This binds Control-l to printing the list of all possible completions when
3560 3581 # there is more than one (what 'complete' does when hitting TAB twice, or at
3561 3582 # the first TAB if show-all-if-ambiguous is on)
3562 3583 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-l": possible-completions
3563 3584
3564 3585 # This forces readline to automatically print the above list when tab
3565 3586 # completion is set to 'complete'. You can still get this list manually by
3566 3587 # using the key bound to 'possible-completions' (Control-l by default) or by
3567 3588 # hitting TAB twice. Turning this on makes the printing happen at the first
3568 3589 # TAB.
3569 3590 readline_parse_and_bind set show-all-if-ambiguous on
3570 3591
3571 3592 # If you have TAB set to complete names, you can rebind any key (Control-o by
3572 3593 # default) to insert a true TAB character.
3573 3594 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-o": tab-insert
3574 3595
3575 3596 # These commands allow you to indent/unindent easily, with the 4-space
3576 3597 # convention of the Python coding standards. Since IPython's internal
3577 3598 # auto-indent system also uses 4 spaces, you should not change the number of
3578 3599 # spaces in the code below.
3579 3600 readline_parse_and_bind "\M-i": " "
3580 3601 readline_parse_and_bind "\M-o": "\d\d\d\d"
3581 3602 readline_parse_and_bind "\M-I": "\d\d\d\d"
3582 3603
3583 3604 # Bindings for incremental searches in the history. These searches use the
3584 3605 # string typed so far on the command line and search anything in the previous
3585 3606 # input history containing them.
3586 3607 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-r": reverse-search-history
3587 3608 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-s": forward-search-history
3588 3609
3589 3610 # Bindings for completing the current line in the history of previous
3590 3611 # commands. This allows you to recall any previous command by typing its first
3591 3612 # few letters and hitting Control-p, bypassing all intermediate commands which
3592 3613 # may be in the history (much faster than hitting up-arrow 50 times!)
3593 3614 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-p": history-search-backward
3594 3615 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-n": history-search-forward
3595 3616
3596 3617 # I also like to have the same functionality on the plain arrow keys. If you'd
3597 3618 # rather have the arrows use all the history (and not just match what you've
3598 3619 # typed so far), comment out or delete the next two lines.
3599 3620 readline_parse_and_bind "\e[A": history-search-backward
3600 3621 readline_parse_and_bind "\e[B": history-search-forward
3601 3622
3602 3623 # These are typically on by default under *nix, but not win32.
3603 3624 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-k": kill-line
3604 3625 readline_parse_and_bind "\C-u": unix-line-discard
3605 3626
3606 3627 # (ii) readline_remove_delims: a string of characters to be removed from the
3607 3628 # default word-delimiters list used by readline, so that completions may be
3608 3629 # performed on strings which contain them.
3609 3630
3610 3631 readline_remove_delims -/~
3611 3632
3612 3633 # (iii) readline_merge_completions: whether to merge the result of all
3613 3634 # possible completions or not. If true, IPython will complete filenames,
3614 3635 # python names and aliases and return all possible completions. If you set it
3615 3636 # to false, each completer is used at a time, and only if it doesn't return
3616 3637 # any completions is the next one used.
3617 3638
3618 3639 # The default order is: [python_matches, file_matches, alias_matches]
3619 3640
3620 3641 readline_merge_completions 1
3621 3642
3622 3643 # (iv) readline_omit__names: normally hitting <tab> after a '.' in a name
3623 3644 # will complete all attributes of an object, including all the special methods
3624 3645 # whose names start with single or double underscores (like __getitem__ or
3625 3646 # __class__).
3626 3647
3627 3648 # This variable allows you to control this completion behavior:
3628 3649
3629 3650 # readline_omit__names 1 -> completion will omit showing any names starting
3630 3651 # with two __, but it will still show names starting with one _.
3631 3652
3632 3653 # readline_omit__names 2 -> completion will omit all names beginning with one
3633 3654 # _ (which obviously means filtering out the double __ ones).
3634 3655
3635 3656 # Even when this option is set, you can still see those names by explicitly
3636 3657 # typing a _ after the period and hitting <tab>: 'name._<tab>' will always
3637 3658 # complete attribute names starting with '_'.
3638 3659
3639 3660 # This option is off by default so that new users see all attributes of any
3640 3661 # objects they are dealing with.
3641 3662
3642 3663 readline_omit__names 0
3643 3664
3644 3665 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3645 3666 # Section: modules to be loaded with 'import ...'
3646 3667
3647 3668 # List, separated by spaces, the names of the modules you want to import
3648 3669
3649 3670 # Example:
3650 3671 # import_mod sys os
3651 3672 # will produce internally the statements
3652 3673 # import sys
3653 3674 # import os
3654 3675
3655 3676 # Each import is executed in its own try/except block, so if one module
3656 3677 # fails to load the others will still be ok.
3657 3678
3658 3679 import_mod
3659 3680
3660 3681 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3661 3682 # Section: modules to import some functions from: 'from ... import ...'
3662 3683
3663 3684 # List, one per line, the modules for which you want only to import some
3664 3685 # functions. Give the module name first and then the name of functions to be
3665 3686 # imported from that module.
3666 3687
3667 3688 # Example:
3668 3689
3669 3690 # import_some IPython.genutils timing timings
3670 3691 # will produce internally the statement
3671 3692 # from IPython.genutils import timing, timings
3672 3693
3673 3694 # timing() and timings() are two IPython utilities for timing the execution of
3674 3695 # your own functions, which you may find useful. Just commment out the above
3675 3696 # line if you want to test them.
3676 3697
3677 3698 # If you have more than one modules_some line, each gets its own try/except
3678 3699 # block (like modules, see above).
3679 3700
3680 3701 import_some
3681 3702
3682 3703 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3683 3704 # Section: modules to import all from : 'from ... import *'
3684 3705
3685 3706 # List (same syntax as import_mod above) those modules for which you want to
3686 3707 # import all functions. Remember, this is a potentially dangerous thing to do,
3687 3708 # since it is very easy to overwrite names of things you need. Use with
3688 3709 # caution.
3689 3710
3690 3711 # Example:
3691 3712 # import_all sys os
3692 3713 # will produce internally the statements
3693 3714 # from sys import *
3694 3715 # from os import *
3695 3716
3696 3717 # As before, each will be called in a separate try/except block.
3697 3718
3698 3719 import_all
3699 3720
3700 3721 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3701 3722 # Section: Python code to execute.
3702 3723
3703 3724 # Put here code to be explicitly executed (keep it simple!)
3704 3725 # Put one line of python code per line. All whitespace is removed (this is a
3705 3726 # feature, not a bug), so don't get fancy building loops here.
3706 3727 # This is just for quick convenient creation of things you want available.
3707 3728
3708 3729 # Example:
3709 3730 # execute x = 1
3710 3731 # execute print 'hello world'; y = z = 'a'
3711 3732 # will produce internally
3712 3733 # x = 1
3713 3734 # print 'hello world'; y = z = 'a'
3714 3735 # and each *line* (not each statement, we don't do python syntax parsing) is
3715 3736 # executed in its own try/except block.
3716 3737
3717 3738 execute
3718 3739
3719 3740 # Note for the adventurous: you can use this to define your own names for the
3720 3741 # magic functions, by playing some namespace tricks:
3721 3742
3722 3743 # execute __IPYTHON__.magic_pf = __IPYTHON__.magic_profile
3723 3744
3724 3745 # defines %pf as a new name for %profile.
3725 3746
3726 3747 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3727 3748 # Section: Pyhton files to load and execute.
3728 3749
3729 3750 # Put here the full names of files you want executed with execfile(file). If
3730 3751 # you want complicated initialization, just write whatever you want in a
3731 3752 # regular python file and load it from here.
3732 3753
3733 3754 # Filenames defined here (which *must* include the extension) are searched for
3734 3755 # through all of sys.path. Since IPython adds your .ipython directory to
3735 3756 # sys.path, they can also be placed in your .ipython dir and will be
3736 3757 # found. Otherwise (if you want to execute things not in .ipyton nor in
3737 3758 # sys.path) give a full path (you can use ~, it gets expanded)
3738 3759
3739 3760 # Example:
3740 3761 # execfile file1.py ~/file2.py
3741 3762 # will generate
3742 3763 # execfile('file1.py')
3743 3764 # execfile('_path_to_your_home/file2.py')
3744 3765
3745 3766 # As before, each file gets its own try/except block.
3746 3767
3747 3768 execfile
3748 3769
3749 3770 # If you are feeling adventurous, you can even add functionality to IPython
3750 3771 # through here. IPython works through a global variable called __ip which
3751 3772 # exists at the time when these files are read. If you know what you are doing
3752 3773 # (read the source) you can add functions to __ip in files loaded here.
3753 3774
3754 3775 # The file example-magic.py contains a simple but correct example. Try it:
3755 3776
3756 3777 # execfile example-magic.py
3757 3778
3758 3779 # Look at the examples in IPython/iplib.py for more details on how these magic
3759 3780 # functions need to process their arguments.
3760 3781
3761 3782 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3762 3783 # Section: aliases for system shell commands
3763 3784
3764 3785 # Here you can define your own names for system commands. The syntax is
3765 3786 # similar to that of the builtin %alias function:
3766 3787
3767 3788 # alias alias_name command_string
3768 3789
3769 3790 # The resulting aliases are auto-generated magic functions (hence usable as
3770 3791 # %alias_name)
3771 3792
3772 3793 # For example:
3773 3794
3774 3795 # alias myls ls -la
3775 3796
3776 3797 # will define 'myls' as an alias for executing the system command 'ls -la'.
3777 3798 # This allows you to customize IPython's environment to have the same aliases
3778 3799 # you are accustomed to from your own shell.
3779 3800
3780 3801 # You can also define aliases with parameters using %s specifiers (one per
3781 3802 # parameter):
3782 3803
3783 3804 # alias parts echo first %s second %s
3784 3805
3785 3806 # will give you in IPython:
3786 3807 # >>> %parts A B
3787 3808 # first A second B
3788 3809
3789 3810 # Use one 'alias' statement per alias you wish to define.
3790 3811
3791 3812 # alias
3792 3813
3793 3814 #************************* end of file <ipythonrc> ************************
3794 3815
3795 3816
3817 ipy_user_conf.py
3818 ----------------
3819
3820 There should be a simple template ipy_user_conf.py file in your
3821 ~/.ipython directory. It is a plain python module that is imported
3822 during IPython startup, so you can do pretty much what you want there
3823 - import modules, configure extensions, change options, define magic
3824 commands, put variables and functions in the IPython namespace,
3825 etc. You use the IPython extension api object, acquired by
3826 IPython.ipapi.get() and documented in the "IPython extension API"
3827 chapter, to interact with IPython. A sample ipy_user_conf.py is listed
3828 below for reference::
3829
3830 # Most of your config files and extensions will probably start
3831 # with this import
3832
3833 import IPython.ipapi
3834 ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
3835
3836 # You probably want to uncomment this if you did %upgrade -nolegacy
3837 # import ipy_defaults
3838
3839 import os
3840
3841 def main():
3842
3843 #ip.dbg.debugmode = True
3844 ip.dbg.debug_stack()
3845
3846 # uncomment if you want to get ipython -p sh behaviour
3847 # without having to use command line switches
3848 import ipy_profile_sh
3849 import jobctrl
3850
3851 # Configure your favourite editor?
3852 # Good idea e.g. for %edit os.path.isfile
3853
3854 #import ipy_editors
3855
3856 # Choose one of these:
3857
3858 #ipy_editors.scite()
3859 #ipy_editors.scite('c:/opt/scite/scite.exe')
3860 #ipy_editors.komodo()
3861 #ipy_editors.idle()
3862 # ... or many others, try 'ipy_editors??' after import to see them
3863
3864 # Or roll your own:
3865 #ipy_editors.install_editor("c:/opt/jed +$line $file")
3866
3867
3868 o = ip.options
3869 # An example on how to set options
3870 #o.autocall = 1
3871 o.system_verbose = 0
3872
3873 #import_all("os sys")
3874 #execf('~/_ipython/ns.py')
3875
3876
3877 # -- prompt
3878 # A different, more compact set of prompts from the default ones, that
3879 # always show your current location in the filesystem:
3880
3881 #o.prompt_in1 = r'\C_LightBlue[\C_LightCyan\Y2\C_LightBlue]\C_Normal\n\C_Green|\#>'
3882 #o.prompt_in2 = r'.\D: '
3883 #o.prompt_out = r'[\#] '
3884
3885 # Try one of these color settings if you can't read the text easily
3886 # autoexec is a list of IPython commands to execute on startup
3887 #o.autoexec.append('%colors LightBG')
3888 #o.autoexec.append('%colors NoColor')
3889 o.autoexec.append('%colors Linux')
3890
3891
3892 # some config helper functions you can use
3893 def import_all(modules):
3894 """ Usage: import_all("os sys") """
3895 for m in modules.split():
3896 ip.ex("from %s import *" % m)
3897
3898 def execf(fname):
3899 """ Execute a file in user namespace """
3900 ip.ex('execfile("%s")' % os.path.expanduser(fname))
3901
3902 main()
3903
3904
3796 3905
3797 3906 Fine-tuning your prompt
3798 3907 -----------------------
3799 3908
3800 3909 IPython's prompts can be customized using a syntax similar to that of
3801 3910 the bash shell. Many of bash's escapes are supported, as well as a few
3802 additional ones. We list them below:
3911 additional ones. We list them below::
3803 3912
3804 *\#*
3913 \#
3805 3914 the prompt/history count number. This escape is automatically
3806 3915 wrapped in the coloring codes for the currently active color scheme.
3807 *\N*
3916 \N
3808 3917 the 'naked' prompt/history count number: this is just the number
3809 3918 itself, without any coloring applied to it. This lets you produce
3810 3919 numbered prompts with your own colors.
3811 *\D*
3920 \D
3812 3921 the prompt/history count, with the actual digits replaced by dots.
3813 3922 Used mainly in continuation prompts (prompt_in2)
3814 *\w*
3923 \w
3815 3924 the current working directory
3816 *\W*
3925 \W
3817 3926 the basename of current working directory
3818 *\Xn*
3927 \Xn
3819 3928 where $n=0\ldots5.$ The current working directory, with $HOME
3820 3929 replaced by ~, and filtered out to contain only $n$ path elements
3821 *\Yn*
3930 \Yn
3822 3931 Similar to \Xn, but with the $n+1$ element included if it is ~ (this
3823 3932 is similar to the behavior of the %cn escapes in tcsh)
3824 *\u*
3933 \u
3825 3934 the username of the current user
3826 *\$*
3935 \$
3827 3936 if the effective UID is 0, a #, otherwise a $
3828 *\h*
3937 \h
3829 3938 the hostname up to the first '.'
3830 *\H*
3939 \H
3831 3940 the hostname
3832 *\n*
3941 \n
3833 3942 a newline
3834 *\r*
3943 \r
3835 3944 a carriage return
3836 *\v*
3945 \v
3837 3946 IPython version string
3838 3947
3839 3948 In addition to these, ANSI color escapes can be insterted into the
3840 3949 prompts, as \C_ColorName. The list of valid color names is: Black, Blue,
3841 3950 Brown, Cyan, DarkGray, Green, LightBlue, LightCyan, LightGray,
3842 3951 LightGreen, LightPurple, LightRed, NoColor, Normal, Purple, Red, White,
3843 3952 Yellow.
3844 3953
3845 3954 Finally, IPython supports the evaluation of arbitrary expressions in
3846 3955 your prompt string. The prompt strings are evaluated through the syntax
3847 3956 of PEP 215, but basically you can use $x.y to expand the value of x.y,
3848 3957 and for more complicated expressions you can use braces: ${foo()+x} will
3849 3958 call function foo and add to it the value of x, before putting the
3850 3959 result into your prompt. For example, using
3851 3960 prompt_in1 '${commands.getoutput("uptime")}\nIn [\#]: '
3852 3961 will print the result of the uptime command on each prompt (assuming the
3853 3962 commands module has been imported in your ipythonrc file).
3854 3963
3855 3964
3856 3965 Prompt examples
3857 3966
3858 3967 The following options in an ipythonrc file will give you IPython's
3859 3968 default prompts::
3860 3969
3861 3970 prompt_in1 'In [\#]:'
3862 3971 prompt_in2 ' .\D.:'
3863 3972 prompt_out 'Out[\#]:'
3864 3973
3865 3974 which look like this::
3866 3975
3867 3976 In [1]: 1+2
3868 3977 Out[1]: 3
3869 3978
3870 3979 In [2]: for i in (1,2,3):
3871 3980 ...: print i,
3872 3981 ...:
3873 3982 1 2 3
3874 3983
3875 3984 These will give you a very colorful prompt with path information::
3876 3985
3877 3986 #prompt_in1 '\C_Red\u\C_Blue[\C_Cyan\Y1\C_Blue]\C_LightGreen\#>'
3878 3987 prompt_in2 ' ..\D>'
3879 3988 prompt_out '<\#>'
3880 3989
3881 3990 which look like this::
3882 3991
3883 3992 fperez[~/ipython]1> 1+2
3884 3993 <1> 3
3885 3994 fperez[~/ipython]2> for i in (1,2,3):
3886 3995 ...> print i,
3887 3996 ...>
3888 3997 1 2 3
3889 3998
3890 3999
3891 4000
3892 4001 IPython profiles
3893 4002 ----------------
3894 4003
3895 4004 As we already mentioned, IPython supports the -profile command-line
3896 4005 option (see sec. 5.2 <node5.html#sec:cmd-line-opts>). A profile is
3897 4006 nothing more than a particular configuration file like your basic
3898 4007 ipythonrc one, but with particular customizations for a specific
3899 4008 purpose. When you start IPython with 'ipython -profile <name>', it
3900 4009 assumes that in your IPYTHONDIR there is a file called ipythonrc-<name>,
3901 4010 and loads it instead of the normal ipythonrc.
3902 4011
3903 4012 This system allows you to maintain multiple configurations which load
3904 4013 modules, set options, define functions, etc. suitable for different
3905 4014 tasks and activate them in a very simple manner. In order to avoid
3906 4015 having to repeat all of your basic options (common things that don't
3907 4016 change such as your color preferences, for example), any profile can
3908 4017 include another configuration file. The most common way to use profiles
3909 4018 is then to have each one include your basic ipythonrc file as a starting
3910 4019 point, and then add further customizations.
3911 4020
3912 4021 In sections 11 <node11.html#sec:syntax-extensions> and 16
3913 4022 <node16.html#sec:Gnuplot> we discuss some particular profiles which come
3914 4023 as part of the standard IPython distribution. You may also look in your
3915 4024 IPYTHONDIR directory, any file whose name begins with ipythonrc- is a
3916 4025 profile. You can use those as examples for further customizations to
3917 4026 suit your own needs.
3918 4027
3919 4028 IPython as your default Python environment
3920 4029 ==========================================
3921 4030
3922 4031 Python honors the environment variable PYTHONSTARTUP and will execute at
3923 4032 startup the file referenced by this variable. If you put at the end of
3924 4033 this file the following two lines of code::
3925 4034
3926 4035 import IPython
3927 4036 IPython.Shell.IPShell().mainloop(sys_exit=1)
3928 4037
3929 4038 then IPython will be your working environment anytime you start Python.
3930 4039 The sys_exit=1 is needed to have IPython issue a call to sys.exit() when
3931 4040 it finishes, otherwise you'll be back at the normal Python '>>>'
3932 4041 prompt^4 <footnode.html#foot2368>.
3933 4042
3934 4043 This is probably useful to developers who manage multiple Python
3935 4044 versions and don't want to have correspondingly multiple IPython
3936 4045 versions. Note that in this mode, there is no way to pass IPython any
3937 4046 command-line options, as those are trapped first by Python itself.
3938 4047
3939 4048 Embedding IPython
3940 4049 =================
3941 4050
3942 4051 It is possible to start an IPython instance inside your own Python
3943 4052 programs. This allows you to evaluate dynamically the state of your
3944 4053 code, operate with your variables, analyze them, etc. Note however that
3945 4054 any changes you make to values while in the shell do not propagate back
3946 4055 to the running code, so it is safe to modify your values because you
3947 4056 won't break your code in bizarre ways by doing so.
3948 4057
3949 4058 This feature allows you to easily have a fully functional python
3950 4059 environment for doing object introspection anywhere in your code with a
3951 4060 simple function call. In some cases a simple print statement is enough,
3952 4061 but if you need to do more detailed analysis of a code fragment this
3953 4062 feature can be very valuable.
3954 4063
3955 4064 It can also be useful in scientific computing situations where it is
3956 4065 common to need to do some automatic, computationally intensive part and
3957 4066 then stop to look at data, plots, etc^5 <footnode.html#foot3206>.
3958 4067 Opening an IPython instance will give you full access to your data and
3959 4068 functions, and you can resume program execution once you are done with
3960 4069 the interactive part (perhaps to stop again later, as many times as
3961 4070 needed).
3962 4071
3963 4072 The following code snippet is the bare minimum you need to include in
3964 4073 your Python programs for this to work (detailed examples follow later)::
3965 4074
3966 4075 from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed
3967 4076
3968 4077 ipshell = IPShellEmbed()
3969 4078
3970 4079 ipshell() # this call anywhere in your program will start IPython
3971 4080
3972 4081 You can run embedded instances even in code which is itself being run at
3973 4082 the IPython interactive prompt with '%run <filename>'. Since it's easy
3974 4083 to get lost as to where you are (in your top-level IPython or in your
3975 4084 embedded one), it's a good idea in such cases to set the in/out prompts
3976 4085 to something different for the embedded instances. The code examples
3977 4086 below illustrate this.
3978 4087
3979 4088 You can also have multiple IPython instances in your program and open
3980 4089 them separately, for example with different options for data
3981 4090 presentation. If you close and open the same instance multiple times,
3982 4091 its prompt counters simply continue from each execution to the next.
3983 4092
3984 4093 Please look at the docstrings in the Shell.py module for more details on
3985 4094 the use of this system.
3986 4095
3987 4096 The following sample file illustrating how to use the embedding
3988 4097 functionality is provided in the examples directory as example-embed.py.
3989 4098 It should be fairly self-explanatory::
3990 4099
3991 4100
3992 4101 #!/usr/bin/env python
3993 4102
3994 4103 """An example of how to embed an IPython shell into a running program.
3995 4104
3996 4105 Please see the documentation in the IPython.Shell module for more details.
3997 4106
3998 4107 The accompanying file example-embed-short.py has quick code fragments for
3999 4108 embedding which you can cut and paste in your code once you understand how
4000 4109 things work.
4001 4110
4002 4111 The code in this file is deliberately extra-verbose, meant for learning."""
4003 4112
4004 4113 # The basics to get you going:
4005 4114
4006 4115 # IPython sets the __IPYTHON__ variable so you can know if you have nested
4007 4116 # copies running.
4008 4117
4009 4118 # Try running this code both at the command line and from inside IPython (with
4010 4119 # %run example-embed.py)
4011 4120 try:
4012 4121 __IPYTHON__
4013 4122 except NameError:
4014 4123 nested = 0
4015 4124 args = ['']
4016 4125 else:
4017 4126 print "Running nested copies of IPython."
4018 4127 print "The prompts for the nested copy have been modified"
4019 4128 nested = 1
4020 4129 # what the embedded instance will see as sys.argv:
4021 4130 args = ['-pi1','In <\\#>: ','-pi2',' .\\D.: ',
4022 4131 '-po','Out<\\#>: ','-nosep']
4023 4132
4024 4133 # First import the embeddable shell class
4025 4134 from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed
4026 4135
4027 4136 # Now create an instance of the embeddable shell. The first argument is a
4028 4137 # string with options exactly as you would type them if you were starting
4029 4138 # IPython at the system command line. Any parameters you want to define for
4030 4139 # configuration can thus be specified here.
4031 4140 ipshell = IPShellEmbed(args,
4032 4141 banner = 'Dropping into IPython',
4033 4142 exit_msg = 'Leaving Interpreter, back to program.')
4034 4143
4035 4144 # Make a second instance, you can have as many as you want.
4036 4145 if nested:
4037 4146 args[1] = 'In2<\\#>'
4038 4147 else:
4039 4148 args = ['-pi1','In2<\\#>: ','-pi2',' .\\D.: ',
4040 4149 '-po','Out<\\#>: ','-nosep']
4041 4150 ipshell2 = IPShellEmbed(args,banner = 'Second IPython instance.')
4042 4151
4043 4152 print '\nHello. This is printed from the main controller program.\n'
4044 4153
4045 4154 # You can then call ipshell() anywhere you need it (with an optional
4046 4155 # message):
4047 4156 ipshell('***Called from top level. '
4048 4157 'Hit Ctrl-D to exit interpreter and continue program.\n'
4049 4158 'Note that if you use %kill_embedded, you can fully deactivate\n'
4050 4159 'This embedded instance so it will never turn on again')
4051 4160
4052 4161 print '\nBack in caller program, moving along...\n'
4053 4162
4054 4163 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4055 4164 # More details:
4056 4165
4057 4166 # IPShellEmbed instances don't print the standard system banner and
4058 4167 # messages. The IPython banner (which actually may contain initialization
4059 4168 # messages) is available as <instance>.IP.BANNER in case you want it.
4060 4169
4061 4170 # IPShellEmbed instances print the following information everytime they
4062 4171 # start:
4063 4172
4064 4173 # - A global startup banner.
4065 4174
4066 4175 # - A call-specific header string, which you can use to indicate where in the
4067 4176 # execution flow the shell is starting.
4068 4177
4069 4178 # They also print an exit message every time they exit.
4070 4179
4071 4180 # Both the startup banner and the exit message default to None, and can be set
4072 4181 # either at the instance constructor or at any other time with the
4073 4182 # set_banner() and set_exit_msg() methods.
4074 4183
4075 4184 # The shell instance can be also put in 'dummy' mode globally or on a per-call
4076 4185 # basis. This gives you fine control for debugging without having to change
4077 4186 # code all over the place.
4078 4187
4079 4188 # The code below illustrates all this.
4080 4189
4081 4190
4082 4191 # This is how the global banner and exit_msg can be reset at any point
4083 4192 ipshell.set_banner('Entering interpreter - New Banner')
4084 4193 ipshell.set_exit_msg('Leaving interpreter - New exit_msg')
4085 4194
4086 4195 def foo(m):
4087 4196 s = 'spam'
4088 4197 ipshell('***In foo(). Try @whos, or print s or m:')
4089 4198 print 'foo says m = ',m
4090 4199
4091 4200 def bar(n):
4092 4201 s = 'eggs'
4093 4202 ipshell('***In bar(). Try @whos, or print s or n:')
4094 4203 print 'bar says n = ',n
4095 4204
4096 4205 # Some calls to the above functions which will trigger IPython:
4097 4206 print 'Main program calling foo("eggs")\n'
4098 4207 foo('eggs')
4099 4208
4100 4209 # The shell can be put in 'dummy' mode where calls to it silently return. This
4101 4210 # allows you, for example, to globally turn off debugging for a program with a
4102 4211 # single call.
4103 4212 ipshell.set_dummy_mode(1)
4104 4213 print '\nTrying to call IPython which is now "dummy":'
4105 4214 ipshell()
4106 4215 print 'Nothing happened...'
4107 4216 # The global 'dummy' mode can still be overridden for a single call
4108 4217 print '\nOverriding dummy mode manually:'
4109 4218 ipshell(dummy=0)
4110 4219
4111 4220 # Reactivate the IPython shell
4112 4221 ipshell.set_dummy_mode(0)
4113 4222
4114 4223 print 'You can even have multiple embedded instances:'
4115 4224 ipshell2()
4116 4225
4117 4226 print '\nMain program calling bar("spam")\n'
4118 4227 bar('spam')
4119 4228
4120 4229 print 'Main program finished. Bye!'
4121 4230
4122 4231 #********************** End of file <example-embed.py> ***********************
4123 4232
4124 4233 Once you understand how the system functions, you can use the following
4125 4234 code fragments in your programs which are ready for cut and paste::
4126 4235
4127 4236
4128 4237 """Quick code snippets for embedding IPython into other programs.
4129 4238
4130 4239 See example-embed.py for full details, this file has the bare minimum code for
4131 4240 cut and paste use once you understand how to use the system."""
4132 4241
4133 4242 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4134 4243 # This code loads IPython but modifies a few things if it detects it's running
4135 4244 # embedded in another IPython session (helps avoid confusion)
4136 4245
4137 4246 try:
4138 4247 __IPYTHON__
4139 4248 except NameError:
4140 4249 argv = ['']
4141 4250 banner = exit_msg = ''
4142 4251 else:
4143 4252 # Command-line options for IPython (a list like sys.argv)
4144 4253 argv = ['-pi1','In <\\#>:','-pi2',' .\\D.:','-po','Out<\\#>:']
4145 4254 banner = '*** Nested interpreter ***'
4146 4255 exit_msg = '*** Back in main IPython ***'
4147 4256
4148 4257 # First import the embeddable shell class
4149 4258 from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed
4150 4259 # Now create the IPython shell instance. Put ipshell() anywhere in your code
4151 4260 # where you want it to open.
4152 4261 ipshell = IPShellEmbed(argv,banner=banner,exit_msg=exit_msg)
4153 4262
4154 4263 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4155 4264 # This code will load an embeddable IPython shell always with no changes for
4156 4265 # nested embededings.
4157 4266
4158 4267 from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed
4159 4268 ipshell = IPShellEmbed()
4160 4269 # Now ipshell() will open IPython anywhere in the code.
4161 4270
4162 4271 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4163 4272 # This code loads an embeddable shell only if NOT running inside
4164 4273 # IPython. Inside IPython, the embeddable shell variable ipshell is just a
4165 4274 # dummy function.
4166 4275
4167 4276 try:
4168 4277 __IPYTHON__
4169 4278 except NameError:
4170 4279 from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed
4171 4280 ipshell = IPShellEmbed()
4172 4281 # Now ipshell() will open IPython anywhere in the code
4173 4282 else:
4174 4283 # Define a dummy ipshell() so the same code doesn't crash inside an
4175 4284 # interactive IPython
4176 4285 def ipshell(): pass
4177 4286
4178 4287 #******************* End of file <example-embed-short.py> ********************
4179 4288
4180 4289 Using the Python debugger (pdb)
4181 4290 ===============================
4182 4291
4183 4292 Running entire programs via pdb
4184 4293 -------------------------------
4185 4294
4186 4295 pdb, the Python debugger, is a powerful interactive debugger which
4187 4296 allows you to step through code, set breakpoints, watch variables, etc.
4188 4297 IPython makes it very easy to start any script under the control of pdb,
4189 4298 regardless of whether you have wrapped it into a 'main()' function or
4190 4299 not. For this, simply type '%run -d myscript' at an IPython prompt. See
4191 4300 the %run command's documentation (via '%run?' or in Sec. 6.2
4192 4301 <node6.html#sec:magic>) for more details, including how to control where
4193 4302 pdb will stop execution first.
4194 4303
4195 4304 For more information on the use of the pdb debugger, read the included
4196 4305 pdb.doc file (part of the standard Python distribution). On a stock
4197 4306 Linux system it is located at /usr/lib/python2.3/pdb.doc, but the
4198 4307 easiest way to read it is by using the help() function of the pdb module
4199 4308 as follows (in an IPython prompt):
4200 4309
4201 4310 In [1]: import pdb
4202 4311 In [2]: pdb.help()
4203 4312
4204 4313 This will load the pdb.doc document in a file viewer for you automatically.
4205 4314
4206 4315
4207 4316 Automatic invocation of pdb on exceptions
4208 4317 -----------------------------------------
4209 4318
4210 4319 IPython, if started with the -pdb option (or if the option is set in
4211 4320 your rc file) can call the Python pdb debugger every time your code
4212 4321 triggers an uncaught exception^6 <footnode.html#foot2403>. This feature
4213 4322 can also be toggled at any time with the %pdb magic command. This can be
4214 4323 extremely useful in order to find the origin of subtle bugs, because pdb
4215 4324 opens up at the point in your code which triggered the exception, and
4216 4325 while your program is at this point 'dead', all the data is still
4217 4326 available and you can walk up and down the stack frame and understand
4218 4327 the origin of the problem.
4219 4328
4220 4329 Furthermore, you can use these debugging facilities both with the
4221 4330 embedded IPython mode and without IPython at all. For an embedded shell
4222 4331 (see sec. 9 <node9.html#sec:embed>), simply call the constructor with
4223 4332 '-pdb' in the argument string and automatically pdb will be called if an
4224 4333 uncaught exception is triggered by your code.
4225 4334
4226 4335 For stand-alone use of the feature in your programs which do not use
4227 4336 IPython at all, put the following lines toward the top of your 'main'
4228 routine:
4337 routine::
4229 4338
4230 4339 import sys,IPython.ultraTB
4231 4340 sys.excepthook = IPython.ultraTB.FormattedTB(mode='Verbose',
4232 4341 color_scheme='Linux', call_pdb=1)
4233 4342
4234 4343 The mode keyword can be either 'Verbose' or 'Plain', giving either very
4235 4344 detailed or normal tracebacks respectively. The color_scheme keyword can
4236 4345 be one of 'NoColor', 'Linux' (default) or 'LightBG'. These are the same
4237 4346 options which can be set in IPython with -colors and -xmode.
4238 4347
4239 4348 This will give any of your programs detailed, colored tracebacks with
4240 4349 automatic invocation of pdb.
4241 4350
4242 4351
4243 4352 Extensions for syntax processing
4244 4353 ================================
4245 4354
4246 4355 This isn't for the faint of heart, because the potential for breaking
4247 4356 things is quite high. But it can be a very powerful and useful feature.
4248 4357 In a nutshell, you can redefine the way IPython processes the user input
4249 4358 line to accept new, special extensions to the syntax without needing to
4250 4359 change any of IPython's own code.
4251 4360
4252 4361 In the IPython/Extensions directory you will find some examples
4253 4362 supplied, which we will briefly describe now. These can be used 'as is'
4254 4363 (and both provide very useful functionality), or you can use them as a
4255 4364 starting point for writing your own extensions.
4256 4365
4257 4366
4258 Pasting of code starting with '»> ' or '... '
4367 Pasting of code starting with '>>> ' or '... '
4259 4368 ----------------------------------------------
4260 4369
4261 4370 In the python tutorial it is common to find code examples which have
4262 4371 been taken from real python sessions. The problem with those is that all
4263 4372 the lines begin with either '>>> ' or '... ', which makes it impossible
4264 4373 to paste them all at once. One must instead do a line by line manual
4265 4374 copying, carefully removing the leading extraneous characters.
4266 4375
4267 4376 This extension identifies those starting characters and removes them
4268 4377 from the input automatically, so that one can paste multi-line examples
4269 4378 directly into IPython, saving a lot of time. Please look at the file
4270 4379 InterpreterPasteInput.py in the IPython/Extensions directory for details
4271 4380 on how this is done.
4272 4381
4273 4382 IPython comes with a special profile enabling this feature, called
4274 4383 tutorial. Simply start IPython via 'ipython -p tutorial' and the feature
4275 4384 will be available. In a normal IPython session you can activate the
4276 4385 feature by importing the corresponding module with:
4277 4386 In [1]: import IPython.Extensions.InterpreterPasteInput
4278 4387
4279 4388 The following is a 'screenshot' of how things work when this extension
4280 4389 is on, copying an example from the standard tutorial::
4281 4390
4282 4391 IPython profile: tutorial
4283 4392
4284 4393 *** Pasting of code with ">>>" or "..." has been enabled.
4285 4394
4286 4395 In [1]: >>> def fib2(n): # return Fibonacci series up to n
4287 4396 ...: ... """Return a list containing the Fibonacci series up to
4288 4397 n."""
4289 4398 ...: ... result = []
4290 4399 ...: ... a, b = 0, 1
4291 4400 ...: ... while b < n:
4292 4401 ...: ... result.append(b) # see below
4293 4402 ...: ... a, b = b, a+b
4294 4403 ...: ... return result
4295 4404 ...:
4296 4405
4297 4406 In [2]: fib2(10)
4298 4407 Out[2]: [1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8]
4299 4408
4300 4409 Note that as currently written, this extension does not recognize
4301 4410 IPython's prompts for pasting. Those are more complicated, since the
4302 4411 user can change them very easily, they involve numbers and can vary in
4303 4412 length. One could however extract all the relevant information from the
4304 4413 IPython instance and build an appropriate regular expression. This is
4305 4414 left as an exercise for the reader.
4306 4415
4307 4416
4308 4417 Input of physical quantities with units
4309 4418 ---------------------------------------
4310 4419
4311 4420 The module PhysicalQInput allows a simplified form of input for physical
4312 4421 quantities with units. This file is meant to be used in conjunction with
4313 4422 the PhysicalQInteractive module (in the same directory) and
4314 4423 Physics.PhysicalQuantities from Konrad Hinsen's ScientificPython
4315 4424 (http://dirac.cnrs-orleans.fr/ScientificPython/).
4316 4425
4317 4426 The Physics.PhysicalQuantities module defines PhysicalQuantity objects,
4318 4427 but these must be declared as instances of a class. For example, to
4319 4428 define v as a velocity of 3 m/s, normally you would write::
4320 4429
4321 4430 In [1]: v = PhysicalQuantity(3,'m/s')
4322 4431
4323 4432 Using the PhysicalQ_Input extension this can be input instead as:
4324 4433 In [1]: v = 3 m/s
4325 4434 which is much more convenient for interactive use (even though it is
4326 4435 blatantly invalid Python syntax).
4327 4436
4328 4437 The physics profile supplied with IPython (enabled via 'ipython -p
4329 4438 physics') uses these extensions, which you can also activate with:
4330 4439
4331 4440 from math import * # math MUST be imported BEFORE PhysicalQInteractive
4332 4441 from IPython.Extensions.PhysicalQInteractive import *
4333 4442 import IPython.Extensions.PhysicalQInput
4334 4443
4335 4444
4336 4445 IPython as a system shell - the 'Sh' profile
4337 4446 ============================================
4338 4447
4339 4448 The 'sh' profile optimizes IPython for system shell usage. Apart from
4340 4449 certain job control functionality that is present in unix (ctrl+z does
4341 4450 "suspend"), the sh profile should provide you with most of the
4342 4451 functionality you use daily in system shell, and more. Invoke IPython
4343 4452 in 'sh' profile by doing 'ipython -p sh', or (in win32) by launching
4344 4453 the "pysh" shortcut in start menu.
4345 4454
4346 4455 If you want to use the features of sh profile as your defaults (which
4347 4456 might be a good idea if you use other profiles a lot of the time but
4348 still want the convenience of sh profile), add "import ipy_profile_sh"
4457 still want the convenience of sh profile), add ``import ipy_profile_sh``
4349 4458 to your ~/.ipython/ipy_user_conf.py.
4350 4459
4351 4460 The 'sh' profile is different from the default profile in that:
4352 4461
4353 4462 * Prompt shows the current directory
4354 4463 * Spacing between prompts and input is more compact (no padding with
4355 4464 empty lines). The startup banner is more compact as well.
4356 4465 * System commands are directly available (in alias table) without
4357 4466 requesting %rehashx - however, if you install new programs along
4358 4467 your PATH, you might want to run %rehashx to update the persistent
4359 4468 alias table
4360 4469 * Macros are stored in raw format by default. That is, instead of
4361 4470 '_ip.system("cat foo"), the macro will contain text 'cat foo')
4362 4471 * Autocall is in full mode
4363 4472 * Calling "up" does "cd .."
4364 4473
4365 4474 The 'sh' profile is different from the now-obsolete (and unavailable)
4366 4475 'pysh' profile in that:
4367 4476
4368 4477 * '$$var = command' and '$var = command' syntax is not supported
4369 4478 * anymore. Use 'var = !command' instead (incidentally, this is
4370 4479 * available in all IPython profiles). Note that !!command *will*
4371 4480 * work.
4372 4481
4373 4482 Aliases
4374 4483 -------
4375 4484
4376 4485 All of your $PATH has been loaded as IPython aliases, so you should be
4377 4486 able to type any normal system command and have it executed. See
4378 4487 %alias? and %unalias? for details on the alias facilities. See also
4379 4488 %rehashx? for details on the mechanism used to load $PATH.
4380 4489
4381 4490
4382 4491 Directory management
4383 4492 --------------------
4384 4493
4385 4494 Since each command passed by ipython to the underlying system is executed
4386 4495 in a subshell which exits immediately, you can NOT use !cd to navigate
4387 4496 the filesystem.
4388 4497
4389 4498 IPython provides its own builtin '%cd' magic command to move in the
4390 4499 filesystem (the % is not required with automagic on). It also maintains
4391 4500 a list of visited directories (use %dhist to see it) and allows direct
4392 4501 switching to any of them. Type 'cd?' for more details.
4393 4502
4394 4503 %pushd, %popd and %dirs are provided for directory stack handling.
4395 4504
4396 4505
4397 4506 Enabled extensions
4398 4507 ------------------
4399 4508
4400 4509 Some extensions, listed below, are enabled as default in this profile.
4401 4510
4402 4511 envpersist
4403 4512 ++++++++++
4404 4513
4405 4514 %env can be used to "remember" environment variable manipulations. Examples::
4406 4515
4407 4516 %env - Show all environment variables
4408 4517 %env VISUAL=jed - set VISUAL to jed
4409 4518 %env PATH+=;/foo - append ;foo to PATH
4410 4519 %env PATH+=;/bar - also append ;bar to PATH
4411 4520 %env PATH-=/wbin; - prepend /wbin; to PATH
4412 4521 %env -d VISUAL - forget VISUAL persistent val
4413 4522 %env -p - print all persistent env modifications
4414 4523
4415 4524 ipy_which
4416 4525 +++++++++
4417 4526
4418 4527 %which magic command. Like 'which' in unix, but knows about ipython aliases.
4419 4528
4420 4529 Example::
4421 4530
4422 4531 [C:/ipython]|14> %which st
4423 4532 st -> start .
4424 4533 [C:/ipython]|15> %which d
4425 4534 d -> dir /w /og /on
4426 4535 [C:/ipython]|16> %which cp
4427 4536 cp -> cp
4428 4537 == c:\bin\cp.exe
4429 4538 c:\bin\cp.exe
4430 4539
4431 4540 ipy_app_completers
4432 4541 ++++++++++++++++++
4433 4542
4434 4543 Custom tab completers for some apps like svn, hg, bzr, apt-get. Try 'apt-get install <TAB>' in debian/ubuntu.
4435 4544
4436 4545 ipy_rehashdir
4437 4546 +++++++++++++
4438 4547
4439 4548 Allows you to add system command aliases for commands that are not along your path. Let's say that you just installed Putty and want to be able to invoke it without adding it to path, you can create the alias for it with rehashdir::
4440 4549
4441 4550 [~]|22> cd c:/opt/PuTTY/
4442 4551 [c:opt/PuTTY]|23> rehashdir .
4443 4552 <23> ['pageant', 'plink', 'pscp', 'psftp', 'putty', 'puttygen', 'unins000']
4444 4553
4445 4554 Now, you can execute any of those commams directly::
4446 4555
4447 4556 [c:opt/PuTTY]|24> cd
4448 4557 [~]|25> putty
4449 4558
4450 4559 (the putty window opens).
4451 4560
4452 4561 If you want to store the alias so that it will always be available, do '%store putty'. If you want to %store all these aliases persistently, just do it in a for loop::
4453 4562
4454 4563 [~]|27> for a in _23:
4455 4564 |..> %store $a
4456 4565 |..>
4457 4566 |..>
4458 4567 Alias stored: pageant (0, 'c:\\opt\\PuTTY\\pageant.exe')
4459 4568 Alias stored: plink (0, 'c:\\opt\\PuTTY\\plink.exe')
4460 4569 Alias stored: pscp (0, 'c:\\opt\\PuTTY\\pscp.exe')
4461 4570 Alias stored: psftp (0, 'c:\\opt\\PuTTY\\psftp.exe')
4462 4571 ...
4463 4572
4464 4573 mglob
4465 4574 +++++
4466 4575
4467 4576 Provide the magic function %mglob, which makes it easier (than the 'find' command) to collect (possibly recursive) file lists. Examples::
4468 4577
4469 4578 [c:/ipython]|9> mglob *.py
4470 4579 [c:/ipython]|10> mglob *.py rec:*.txt
4471 4580 [c:/ipython]|19> workfiles = %mglob !.svn/ !.hg/ !*_Data/ !*.bak rec:.
4472 4581
4473 4582 Note that the first 2 calls will put the file list in result history (_, _9, _10), and the last one will assign it to 'workfiles'.
4474 4583
4475 4584
4585 Prompt customization
4586 --------------------
4476 4587
4588 The sh profile uses the following prompt configurations::
4477 4589
4590 o.prompt_in1= r'\C_LightBlue[\C_LightCyan\Y2\C_LightBlue]\C_Green|\#>'
4591 o.prompt_in2= r'\C_Green|\C_LightGreen\D\C_Green>'
4478 4592
4479 Prompt customization
4480 --------------------
4593 You can change the prompt configuration to your liking by editing
4594 ipy_user_conf.py.
4481 4595
4482 The supplied ipy_profile_sh.py profile comes with an example of a very
4483 colored and detailed prompt, mainly to serve as an illustration. The
4484 valid escape sequences, besides color names, are::
4596 String lists
4597 ============
4598
4599 String lists (IPython.genutils.SList) are handy way to process output
4600 from system commands. They are produced by ``var = !cmd`` syntax.
4601
4602 First, we acquire the output of 'ls -l'::
4603
4604 [Q:doc/examples]|2> lines = !ls -l
4605 ==
4606 ['total 23',
4607 '-rw-rw-rw- 1 ville None 1163 Sep 30 2006 example-demo.py',
4608 '-rw-rw-rw- 1 ville None 1927 Sep 30 2006 example-embed-short.py',
4609 '-rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 4606 Sep 1 17:15 example-embed.py',
4610 '-rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 1017 Sep 30 2006 example-gnuplot.py',
4611 '-rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 339 Jun 11 18:01 extension.py',
4612 '-rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 113 Dec 20 2006 seteditor.py',
4613 '-rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 245 Dec 12 2006 seteditor.pyc']
4614
4615 Now, let's take a look at the contents of 'lines' (the first number is
4616 the list element number)::
4617
4618 [Q:doc/examples]|3> lines
4619 <3> SList (.p, .n, .l, .s, .grep(), .fields() available). Value:
4620
4621 0: total 23
4622 1: -rw-rw-rw- 1 ville None 1163 Sep 30 2006 example-demo.py
4623 2: -rw-rw-rw- 1 ville None 1927 Sep 30 2006 example-embed-short.py
4624 3: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 4606 Sep 1 17:15 example-embed.py
4625 4: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 1017 Sep 30 2006 example-gnuplot.py
4626 5: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 339 Jun 11 18:01 extension.py
4627 6: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 113 Dec 20 2006 seteditor.py
4628 7: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 245 Dec 12 2006 seteditor.pyc
4629
4630 Now, let's filter out the 'embed' lines::
4631
4632 [Q:doc/examples]|4> l2 = lines.grep('embed',prune=1)
4633 [Q:doc/examples]|5> l2
4634 <5> SList (.p, .n, .l, .s, .grep(), .fields() available). Value:
4635
4636 0: total 23
4637 1: -rw-rw-rw- 1 ville None 1163 Sep 30 2006 example-demo.py
4638 2: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 1017 Sep 30 2006 example-gnuplot.py
4639 3: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 339 Jun 11 18:01 extension.py
4640 4: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 113 Dec 20 2006 seteditor.py
4641 5: -rwxrwxrwx 1 ville None 245 Dec 12 2006 seteditor.pyc
4642
4643 Now, we want strings having just file names and permissions::
4644
4645 [Q:doc/examples]|6> l2.fields(8,0)
4646 <6> SList (.p, .n, .l, .s, .grep(), .fields() available). Value:
4647
4648 0: total
4649 1: example-demo.py -rw-rw-rw-
4650 2: example-gnuplot.py -rwxrwxrwx
4651 3: extension.py -rwxrwxrwx
4652 4: seteditor.py -rwxrwxrwx
4653 5: seteditor.pyc -rwxrwxrwx
4654
4655 Note how the line with 'total' does not raise IndexError.
4656
4657 If you want to split these (yielding lists), call fields() without
4658 arguments::
4659
4660 [Q:doc/examples]|7> _.fields()
4661 <7>
4662 [['total'],
4663 ['example-demo.py', '-rw-rw-rw-'],
4664 ['example-gnuplot.py', '-rwxrwxrwx'],
4665 ['extension.py', '-rwxrwxrwx'],
4666 ['seteditor.py', '-rwxrwxrwx'],
4667 ['seteditor.pyc', '-rwxrwxrwx']]
4668
4669 If you want to pass these separated with spaces to a command (typical
4670 for lists if files), use the .s property::
4671
4672
4673 [Q:doc/examples]|13> files = l2.fields(8).s
4674 [Q:doc/examples]|14> files
4675 <14> 'example-demo.py example-gnuplot.py extension.py seteditor.py seteditor.pyc'
4676 [Q:doc/examples]|15> ls $files
4677 example-demo.py example-gnuplot.py extension.py seteditor.py seteditor.pyc
4678
4679 SLists are inherited from normal python lists, so every list method is
4680 available::
4681
4682 [Q:doc/examples]|21> lines.append('hey')
4683
4684
4685 Real world example: remove all files outside version control
4686 ------------------------------------------------------------
4687
4688 First, capture output of "hg status"::
4689
4690 [Q:/ipython]|28> out = !hg status
4691 ==
4692 ['M IPython\\Extensions\\ipy_kitcfg.py',
4693 'M IPython\\Extensions\\ipy_rehashdir.py',
4694 ...
4695 '? build\\lib\\IPython\\Debugger.py',
4696 '? build\\lib\\IPython\\Extensions\\InterpreterExec.py',
4697 '? build\\lib\\IPython\\Extensions\\InterpreterPasteInput.py',
4698 ...
4699
4700 (lines starting with ? are not under version control).
4701
4702 ::
4703
4704 [Q:/ipython]|35> junk = out.grep(r'^\?').fields(1)
4705 [Q:/ipython]|36> junk
4706 <36> SList (.p, .n, .l, .s, .grep(), .fields() availab
4707 ...
4708 10: build\bdist.win32\winexe\temp\_ctypes.py
4709 11: build\bdist.win32\winexe\temp\_hashlib.py
4710 12: build\bdist.win32\winexe\temp\_socket.py
4711
4712 Now we can just remove these files by doing 'rm $junk.s'.
4713
4714 The .s, .n, .p properties
4715 -------------------------
4716
4717 The '.s' property returns one string where lines are separated by
4718 single space (for convenient passing to system commands). The '.n'
4719 property return one string where the lines are separated by '\n'
4720 (i.e. the original output of the function). If the items in string
4721 list are file names, '.p' can be used to get a list of "path" objects
4722 for convenient file manipulation.
4485 4723
4486 \#
4487 - Prompt number, wrapped in the color escapes for the input prompt
4488 (determined by the current color scheme).
4489 \N
4490 - Just the prompt counter number, without any coloring wrappers. You
4491 can thus customize the actual prompt colors manually.
4492 \D
4493 - Dots, as many as there are digits in \# (so they align).
4494 \w
4495 - Current working directory (cwd).
4496 \W
4497 - Basename of current working directory.
4498 \XN
4499 - Where N=0..5. N terms of the cwd, with $HOME written as ~.
4500 \YN
4501 - Where N=0..5. Like XN, but if ~ is term N+1 it's also shown.
4502 \u
4503 - Username.
4504 \H
4505 - Full hostname.
4506 \h
4507 - Hostname up to first '.'
4508 \$
4509 - Root symbol ($ or #).
4510 \t
4511 - Current time, in H:M:S format.
4512 \v
4513 - IPython release version.
4514 \n
4515 - Newline.
4516 \r
4517 - Carriage return.
4518 \\
4519 - An explicitly escaped '\'.
4520
4521 You can configure your prompt colors using any ANSI color escape. Each
4522 color escape sets the color for any subsequent text, until another
4523 escape comes in and changes things. The valid color escapes are::
4524
4525 \C_Black
4526 \C_Blue
4527 \C_Brown
4528 \C_Cyan
4529 \C_DarkGray
4530 \C_Green
4531 \C_LightBlue
4532 \C_LightCyan
4533 \C_LightGray
4534 \C_LightGreen
4535 \C_LightPurple
4536 \C_LightRed
4537 \C_Purple
4538 \C_Red
4539 \C_White
4540 \C_Yellow
4541 \C_Normal
4542 Stop coloring, defaults to your terminal settings.
4543 4724
4544 4725 Threading support
4545 4726 =================
4546 4727
4547 4728 WARNING: The threading support is still somewhat experimental, and it
4548 4729 has only seen reasonable testing under Linux. Threaded code is
4549 4730 particularly tricky to debug, and it tends to show extremely
4550 4731 platform-dependent behavior. Since I only have access to Linux machines,
4551 4732 I will have to rely on user's experiences and assistance for this area
4552 4733 of IPython to improve under other platforms.
4553 4734
4554 4735 IPython, via the -gthread , -qthread, -q4thread and -wthread options
4555 4736 (described in Sec. 5.1 <node5.html#sec:threading-opts>), can run in
4556 4737 multithreaded mode to support pyGTK, Qt3, Qt4 and WXPython applications
4557 4738 respectively. These GUI toolkits need to control the python main loop of
4558 4739 execution, so under a normal Python interpreter, starting a pyGTK, Qt3,
4559 4740 Qt4 or WXPython application will immediately freeze the shell.
4560 4741
4561 4742 IPython, with one of these options (you can only use one at a time),
4562 4743 separates the graphical loop and IPython's code execution run into
4563 4744 different threads. This allows you to test interactively (with %run, for
4564 4745 example) your GUI code without blocking.
4565 4746
4566 4747 A nice mini-tutorial on using IPython along with the Qt Designer
4567 4748 application is available at the SciPy wiki:
4568 4749 http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/Qt_with_IPython_and_Designer.
4569 4750
4570 4751
4571 4752 Tk issues
4572 4753 ---------
4573 4754
4574 4755 As indicated in Sec. 5.1 <node5.html#sec:threading-opts>, a special -tk
4575 4756 option is provided to try and allow Tk graphical applications to coexist
4576 4757 interactively with WX, Qt or GTK ones. Whether this works at all,
4577 4758 however, is very platform and configuration dependent. Please experiment
4578 4759 with simple test cases before committing to using this combination of Tk
4579 4760 and GTK/Qt/WX threading in a production environment.
4580 4761
4581 4762
4582 4763 I/O pitfalls
4583 4764 ------------
4584 4765
4585 4766 Be mindful that the Python interpreter switches between threads every
4586 4767 $N$ bytecodes, where the default value as of Python 2.3 is $N=100.$ This
4587 4768 value can be read by using the sys.getcheckinterval() function, and it
4588 4769 can be reset via sys.setcheckinterval(N). This switching of threads can
4589 4770 cause subtly confusing effects if one of your threads is doing file I/O.
4590 4771 In text mode, most systems only flush file buffers when they encounter a
4591 4772 '\n'. An instruction as simple as::
4592 4773
4593 4774 print >> filehandle, ''hello world''
4594 4775
4595 4776 actually consists of several bytecodes, so it is possible that the
4596 4777 newline does not reach your file before the next thread switch.
4597 4778 Similarly, if you are writing to a file in binary mode, the file won't
4598 4779 be flushed until the buffer fills, and your other thread may see
4599 4780 apparently truncated files.
4600 4781
4601 4782 For this reason, if you are using IPython's thread support and have (for
4602 4783 example) a GUI application which will read data generated by files
4603 4784 written to from the IPython thread, the safest approach is to open all
4604 4785 of your files in unbuffered mode (the third argument to the file/open
4605 4786 function is the buffering value)::
4606 4787
4607 4788 filehandle = open(filename,mode,0)
4608 4789
4609 4790 This is obviously a brute force way of avoiding race conditions with the
4610 4791 file buffering. If you want to do it cleanly, and you have a resource
4611 4792 which is being shared by the interactive IPython loop and your GUI
4612 4793 thread, you should really handle it with thread locking and
4613 4794 syncrhonization properties. The Python documentation discusses these.
4614 4795
4615 4796 Interactive demos with IPython
4616 4797 ==============================
4617 4798
4618 4799 IPython ships with a basic system for running scripts interactively in
4619 4800 sections, useful when presenting code to audiences. A few tags embedded
4620 4801 in comments (so that the script remains valid Python code) divide a file
4621 4802 into separate blocks, and the demo can be run one block at a time, with
4622 4803 IPython printing (with syntax highlighting) the block before executing
4623 4804 it, and returning to the interactive prompt after each block. The
4624 4805 interactive namespace is updated after each block is run with the
4625 4806 contents of the demo's namespace.
4626 4807
4627 4808 This allows you to show a piece of code, run it and then execute
4628 4809 interactively commands based on the variables just created. Once you
4629 4810 want to continue, you simply execute the next block of the demo. The
4630 4811 following listing shows the markup necessary for dividing a script into
4631 4812 sections for execution as a demo::
4632 4813
4633 4814
4634 4815 """A simple interactive demo to illustrate the use of IPython's Demo class.
4635 4816
4636 4817 Any python script can be run as a demo, but that does little more than showing
4637 4818 it on-screen, syntax-highlighted in one shot. If you add a little simple
4638 4819 markup, you can stop at specified intervals and return to the ipython prompt,
4639 4820 resuming execution later.
4640 4821 """
4641 4822
4642 4823 print 'Hello, welcome to an interactive IPython demo.'
4643 4824 print 'Executing this block should require confirmation before proceeding,'
4644 4825 print 'unless auto_all has been set to true in the demo object'
4645 4826
4646 4827 # The mark below defines a block boundary, which is a point where IPython will
4647 4828 # stop execution and return to the interactive prompt.
4648 4829 # Note that in actual interactive execution,
4649 4830 # <demo> --- stop ---
4650 4831
4651 4832 x = 1
4652 4833 y = 2
4653 4834
4654 4835 # <demo> --- stop ---
4655 4836
4656 4837 # the mark below makes this block as silent
4657 4838 # <demo> silent
4658 4839
4659 4840 print 'This is a silent block, which gets executed but not printed.'
4660 4841
4661 4842 # <demo> --- stop ---
4662 4843 # <demo> auto
4663 4844 print 'This is an automatic block.'
4664 4845 print 'It is executed without asking for confirmation, but printed.'
4665 4846 z = x+y
4666 4847
4667 4848 print 'z=',x
4668 4849
4669 4850 # <demo> --- stop ---
4670 4851 # This is just another normal block.
4671 4852 print 'z is now:', z
4672 4853
4673 4854 print 'bye!'
4674 4855
4675 4856 In order to run a file as a demo, you must first make a Demo object out
4676 4857 of it. If the file is named myscript.py, the following code will make a
4677 4858 demo::
4678 4859
4679 4860 from IPython.demo import Demo
4680 4861
4681 4862 mydemo = Demo('myscript.py')
4682 4863
4683 4864 This creates the mydemo object, whose blocks you run one at a time by
4684 4865 simply calling the object with no arguments. If you have autocall active
4685 4866 in IPython (the default), all you need to do is type::
4686 4867
4687 4868 mydemo
4688 4869
4689 4870 and IPython will call it, executing each block. Demo objects can be
4690 4871 restarted, you can move forward or back skipping blocks, re-execute the
4691 4872 last block, etc. Simply use the Tab key on a demo object to see its
4692 4873 methods, and call '?' on them to see their docstrings for more usage
4693 4874 details. In addition, the demo module itself contains a comprehensive
4694 4875 docstring, which you can access via::
4695 4876
4696 4877 from IPython import demo
4697 4878
4698 4879 demo?
4699 4880
4700 4881 Limitations: It is important to note that these demos are limited to
4701 4882 fairly simple uses. In particular, you can not put division marks in
4702 4883 indented code (loops, if statements, function definitions, etc.)
4703 4884 Supporting something like this would basically require tracking the
4704 4885 internal execution state of the Python interpreter, so only top-level
4705 4886 divisions are allowed. If you want to be able to open an IPython
4706 4887 instance at an arbitrary point in a program, you can use IPython's
4707 4888 embedding facilities, described in detail in Sec. 9
4708 4889
4709 4890
4710 4891 Plotting with matplotlib
4711 4892 ========================
4712 4893
4713 4894 The matplotlib library (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net
4714 4895 http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net) provides high quality 2D plotting for
4715 4896 Python. Matplotlib can produce plots on screen using a variety of GUI
4716 4897 toolkits, including Tk, GTK and WXPython. It also provides a number of
4717 4898 commands useful for scientific computing, all with a syntax compatible
4718 4899 with that of the popular Matlab program.
4719 4900
4720 4901 IPython accepts the special option -pylab (Sec. 5.2
4721 4902 <node5.html#sec:cmd-line-opts>). This configures it to support
4722 4903 matplotlib, honoring the settings in the .matplotlibrc file. IPython
4723 4904 will detect the user's choice of matplotlib GUI backend, and
4724 4905 automatically select the proper threading model to prevent blocking. It
4725 4906 also sets matplotlib in interactive mode and modifies %run slightly, so
4726 4907 that any matplotlib-based script can be executed using %run and the
4727 4908 final show() command does not block the interactive shell.
4728 4909
4729 4910 The -pylab option must be given first in order for IPython to configure
4730 4911 its threading mode. However, you can still issue other options
4731 4912 afterwards. This allows you to have a matplotlib-based environment
4732 4913 customized with additional modules using the standard IPython profile
4733 4914 mechanism (Sec. 7.3 <node7.html#sec:profiles>): ''ipython -pylab -p
4734 4915 myprofile'' will load the profile defined in ipythonrc-myprofile after
4735 4916 configuring matplotlib.
4736 4917
4918 IPython Extension Api
4919 =====================
4920
4921 IPython api (defined in IPython/ipapi.py) is the public api that
4922 should be used for
4923
4924 * Configuration of user preferences (.ipython/ipy_user_conf.py)
4925 * Creating new profiles (.ipython/ipy_profile_PROFILENAME.py)
4926 * Writing extensions
4927
4928 Note that by using the extension api for configuration (editing
4929 ipy_user_conf.py instead of ipythonrc), you get better validity checks
4930 and get richer functionality - for example, you can import an
4931 extension and call functions in it to configure it for your purposes.
4932
4933 For an example extension (the 'sh' profile), see
4934 IPython/Extensions/ipy_profile_sh.py.
4935
4936 For the last word on what's available, see the source code of
4937 IPython/ipapi.py.
4938
4939
4940 Getting started
4941 ---------------
4942
4943 If you want to define an extension, create a normal python module that
4944 can be imported. The module will access IPython functionality through
4945 the 'ip' object defined below.
4946
4947 If you are creating a new profile (e.g. foobar), name the module as
4948 'ipy_profile_foobar.py' and put it in your ~/.ipython directory. Then,
4949 when you start ipython with the '-p foobar' argument, the module is
4950 automatically imported on ipython startup.
4951
4952 If you are just doing some per-user configuration, you can either
4953
4954 * Put the commands directly into ipy_user_conf.py.
4955
4956 * Create a new module with your customization code and import *that*
4957 module in ipy_user_conf.py. This is preferable to the first approach,
4958 because now you can reuse and distribute your customization code.
4959
4960 Getting a handle to the api
4961 ---------------------------
4962
4963 Put this in the start of your module::
4964
4965 #!python
4966 import IPython.ipapi
4967 ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
4968
4969 The 'ip' object will then be used for accessing IPython
4970 functionality. 'ip' will mean this api object in all the following
4971 code snippets. The same 'ip' that we just acquired is always
4972 accessible in interactive IPython sessions by the name _ip - play with
4973 it like this::
4974
4975 [~\_ipython]|81> a = 10
4976 [~\_ipython]|82> _ip.e
4977 _ip.ev _ip.ex _ip.expose_magic
4978 [~\_ipython]|82> _ip.ev('a+13')
4979 <82> 23
4980
4981 The _ip object is also used in some examples in this document - it can
4982 be substituted by 'ip' in non-interactive use.
4983
4984 Changing options
4985 ----------------
4986
4987 The ip object has 'options' attribute that can be used te get/set
4988 configuration options (just as in the ipythonrc file)::
4989
4990 o = ip.options
4991 o.autocall = 2
4992 o.automagic = 1
4993
4994 Executing statements in IPython namespace with 'ex' and 'ev'
4995 ------------------------------------------------------------
4996
4997 Often, you want to e.g. import some module or define something that
4998 should be visible in IPython namespace. Use ``ip.ev`` to
4999 *evaluate* (calculate the value of) expression and ``ip.ex`` to
5000 '''execute''' a statement::
5001
5002 # path module will be visible to the interactive session
5003 ip.ex("from path import path" )
5004
5005 # define a handy function 'up' that changes the working directory
5006
5007 ip.ex('import os')
5008 ip.ex("def up(): os.chdir('..')")
5009
5010
5011 # _i2 has the input history entry #2, print its value in uppercase.
5012 print ip.ev('_i2.upper()')
5013
5014 Accessing the IPython namespace
5015 -------------------------------
5016
5017 ip.user_ns attribute has a dictionary containing the IPython global
5018 namespace (the namespace visible in the interactive session).
5019
5020 ::
5021
5022 [~\_ipython]|84> tauno = 555
5023 [~\_ipython]|85> _ip.user_ns['tauno']
5024 <85> 555
5025
5026 Defining new magic commands
5027 ---------------------------
5028
5029 The following example defines a new magic command, %impall. What the
5030 command does should be obvious::
5031
5032 def doimp(self, arg):
5033 ip = self.api
5034 ip.ex("import %s; reload(%s); from %s import *" % (
5035 arg,arg,arg)
5036 )
5037
5038 ip.expose_magic('impall', doimp)
5039
5040 Things to observe in this example:
5041
5042 * Define a function that implements the magic command using the
5043 ipapi methods defined in this document
5044 * The first argument of the function is 'self', i.e. the
5045 interpreter object. It shouldn't be used directly. however.
5046 The interpreter object is probably *not* going to remain stable
5047 through IPython versions.
5048 * Access the ipapi through 'self.api' instead of the global 'ip' object.
5049 * All the text following the magic command on the command line is
5050 contained in the second argument
5051 * Expose the magic by ip.expose_magic()
5052
5053
5054 Calling magic functions and system commands
5055 -------------------------------------------
5056
5057 Use ip.magic() to execute a magic function, and ip.system() to execute
5058 a system command::
5059
5060 # go to a bookmark
5061 ip.magic('%cd -b relfiles')
5062
5063 # execute 'ls -F' system command. Interchangeable with os.system('ls'), really.
5064 ip.system('ls -F')
5065
5066 Launching IPython instance from normal python code
5067 --------------------------------------------------
5068
5069 Use ipapi.launch_new_instance() with an argument that specifies the
5070 namespace to use. This can be useful for trivially embedding IPython
5071 into your program. Here's an example of normal python program test.py
5072 ('''without''' an existing IPython session) that launches an IPython
5073 interpreter and regains control when the interpreter is exited::
5074
5075 [ipython]|1> cat test.py
5076 my_ns = dict(
5077 kissa = 15,
5078 koira = 16)
5079 import IPython.ipapi
5080 print "launching IPython instance"
5081 IPython.ipapi.launch_new_instance(my_ns)
5082 print "Exited IPython instance!"
5083 print "New vals:",my_ns['kissa'], my_ns['koira']
5084
5085 And here's what it looks like when run (note how we don't start it
5086 from an ipython session)::
5087
5088 Q:\ipython>python test.py
5089 launching IPython instance
5090 Py 2.5 (r25:51908, Sep 19 2006, 09:52:17) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] IPy 0.7.3b3.r1975
5091 [ipython]|1> kissa = 444
5092 [ipython]|2> koira = 555
5093 [ipython]|3> Exit
5094 Exited IPython instance!
5095 New vals: 444 555
5096
5097 Accessing unexposed functionality
5098 ---------------------------------
5099
5100 There are still many features that are not exposed via the ipapi. If
5101 you can't avoid using them, you can use the functionality in
5102 InteractiveShell object (central IPython session class, defined in
5103 iplib.py) through ip.IP.
5104
5105 For example::
5106
5107 [~]|7> _ip.IP.expand_aliases('np','myfile.py')
5108 <7> 'c:/opt/Notepad++/notepad++.exe myfile.py'
5109 [~]|8>
5110
5111 Still, it's preferable that if you encounter such a feature, contact
5112 the IPython team and request that the functionality be exposed in a
5113 future version of IPython. Things not in ipapi are more likely to
5114 change over time.
5115
4737 5116 Reporting bugs
4738 5117 ==============
4739 5118
4740 5119 Automatic crash reports
4741 5120 -----------------------
4742 5121
4743 5122 Ideally, IPython itself shouldn't crash. It will catch exceptions
4744 5123 produced by you, but bugs in its internals will still crash it.
4745 5124
4746 5125 In such a situation, IPython will leave a file named
4747 5126 IPython_crash_report.txt in your IPYTHONDIR directory (that way if
4748 5127 crashes happen several times it won't litter many directories, the
4749 5128 post-mortem file is always located in the same place and new occurrences
4750 5129 just overwrite the previous one). If you can mail this file to the
4751 5130 developers (see sec. 20 <node20.html#sec:credits> for names and
4752 5131 addresses), it will help us a lot in understanding the cause of the
4753 5132 problem and fixing it sooner.
4754 5133
4755 5134
4756 5135 The bug tracker
4757 5136 ---------------
4758 5137
4759 5138 IPython also has an online bug-tracker, located at
4760 5139 http://projects.scipy.org/ipython/ipython/report/1. In addition to
4761 5140 mailing the developers, it would be a good idea to file a bug report
4762 5141 here. This will ensure that the issue is properly followed to
4763 5142 conclusion. To report new bugs you will have to register first.
4764 5143
4765 5144 You can also use this bug tracker to file feature requests.
4766 5145
4767 5146 Brief history
4768 5147 =============
4769 5148
4770 5149
4771 5150 Origins
5151 -------
4772 5152
4773 5153 The current IPython system grew out of the following three projects:
4774 5154
4775 5155 * [ipython] by Fernando Pérez. I was working on adding
4776 5156 Mathematica-type prompts and a flexible configuration system
4777 5157 (something better than $PYTHONSTARTUP) to the standard Python
4778 5158 interactive interpreter.
4779 5159 * [IPP] by Janko Hauser. Very well organized, great usability. Had
4780 5160 an old help system. IPP was used as the 'container' code into
4781 5161 which I added the functionality from ipython and LazyPython.
4782 5162 * [LazyPython] by Nathan Gray. Simple but very powerful. The quick
4783 5163 syntax (auto parens, auto quotes) and verbose/colored tracebacks
4784 5164 were all taken from here.
4785 5165
4786 5166 When I found out (see sec. 20 <node20.html#figgins>) about IPP and
4787 5167 LazyPython I tried to join all three into a unified system. I thought
4788 5168 this could provide a very nice working environment, both for regular
4789 5169 programming and scientific computing: shell-like features, IDL/Matlab
4790 5170 numerics, Mathematica-type prompt history and great object introspection
4791 5171 and help facilities. I think it worked reasonably well, though it was a
4792 5172 lot more work than I had initially planned.
4793 5173
4794 5174
4795 5175 Current status
4796 5176 --------------
4797 5177
4798 5178 The above listed features work, and quite well for the most part. But
4799 5179 until a major internal restructuring is done (see below), only bug
4800 5180 fixing will be done, no other features will be added (unless very minor
4801 5181 and well localized in the cleaner parts of the code).
4802 5182
4803 5183 IPython consists of some 18000 lines of pure python code, of which
4804 5184 roughly two thirds is reasonably clean. The rest is, messy code which
4805 5185 needs a massive restructuring before any further major work is done.
4806 5186 Even the messy code is fairly well documented though, and most of the
4807 5187 problems in the (non-existent) class design are well pointed to by a
4808 5188 PyChecker run. So the rewriting work isn't that bad, it will just be
4809 5189 time-consuming.
4810 5190
4811 5191
4812 5192 Future
4813 5193 ------
4814 5194
4815 5195 See the separate new_design document for details. Ultimately, I would
4816 5196 like to see IPython become part of the standard Python distribution as a
4817 5197 'big brother with batteries' to the standard Python interactive
4818 5198 interpreter. But that will never happen with the current state of the
4819 5199 code, so all contributions are welcome.
4820 5200
4821 5201 License
4822 5202 =======
4823 5203
4824 5204 IPython is released under the terms of the BSD license, whose general
4825 5205 form can be found at:
4826 5206 http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php. The full text of the
4827 5207 IPython license is reproduced below::
4828 5208
4829 5209 IPython is released under a BSD-type license.
4830 5210
4831 5211 Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Fernando Perez
4832 5212 <fperez@colorado.edu>.
4833 5213
4834 5214 Copyright (c) 2001 Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de> and
4835 5215 Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>.
4836 5216
4837 5217 All rights reserved.
4838 5218
4839 5219 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
4840 5220 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
4841 5221 are met:
4842 5222
4843 5223 a. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
4844 5224 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
4845 5225
4846 5226 b. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
4847 5227 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
4848 5228 documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
4849 5229
4850 5230 c. Neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of any
4851 5231 contributors to this software may be used to endorse or promote
4852 5232 products derived from this software without specific prior written
4853 5233 permission.
4854 5234
4855 5235 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
4856 5236 "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
4857 5237 LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
4858 5238 FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
4859 5239 REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
4860 5240 INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING,
4861 5241 BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
4862 5242 LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
4863 5243 CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
4864 5244 LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN
4865 5245 ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
4866 5246 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
4867 5247
4868 5248 Individual authors are the holders of the copyright for their code and
4869 5249 are listed in each file.
4870 5250
4871 5251 Some files (DPyGetOpt.py, for example) may be licensed under different
4872 5252 conditions. Ultimately each file indicates clearly the conditions under
4873 5253 which its author/authors have decided to publish the code.
4874 5254
4875 5255 Versions of IPython up to and including 0.6.3 were released under the
4876 5256 GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), available at
4877 5257 http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html.
4878 5258
4879 5259 Credits
4880 5260 =======
4881 5261
4882 5262 IPython is mainly developed by Fernando Pérez
4883 5263 <Fernando.Perez@colorado.edu>, but the project was born from mixing in
4884 5264 Fernando's code with the IPP project by Janko Hauser
4885 5265 <jhauser-AT-zscout.de> and LazyPython by Nathan Gray
4886 5266 <n8gray-AT-caltech.edu>. For all IPython-related requests, please
4887 5267 contact Fernando.
4888 5268
4889 5269 As of early 2006, the following developers have joined the core team:
4890 5270
4891 5271 * [Robert Kern] <rkern-AT-enthought.com>: co-mentored the 2005
4892 5272 Google Summer of Code project to develop python interactive
4893 5273 notebooks (XML documents) and graphical interface. This project
4894 5274 was awarded to the students Tzanko Matev <tsanko-AT-gmail.com> and
4895 5275 Toni Alatalo <antont-AT-an.org>
4896 5276 * [Brian Granger] <bgranger-AT-scu.edu>: extending IPython to allow
4897 5277 support for interactive parallel computing.
4898 5278 * [Ville Vainio] <vivainio-AT-gmail.com>: Ville is the new
4899 5279 maintainer for the main trunk of IPython after version 0.7.1.
4900 5280
4901 5281 User or development help should be requested via the IPython mailing lists:
4902 5282
4903 5283 *User list:*
4904 5284 http://scipy.net/mailman/listinfo/ipython-user
4905 5285 *Developer's list:*
4906 5286 http://scipy.net/mailman/listinfo/ipython-dev
4907 5287
4908 5288 The IPython project is also very grateful to^7 <footnode.html#foot2913>:
4909 5289
4910 5290 Bill Bumgarner <bbum-AT-friday.com>: for providing the DPyGetOpt module
4911 5291 which gives very powerful and convenient handling of command-line
4912 5292 options (light years ahead of what Python 2.1.1's getopt module does).
4913 5293
4914 5294 Ka-Ping Yee <ping-AT-lfw.org>: for providing the Itpl module for
4915 5295 convenient and powerful string interpolation with a much nicer syntax
4916 5296 than formatting through the '%' operator.
4917 5297
4918 5298 Arnd Baecker <baecker-AT-physik.tu-dresden.de>: for his many very useful
4919 5299 suggestions and comments, and lots of help with testing and
4920 5300 documentation checking. Many of IPython's newer features are a result of
4921 5301 discussions with him (bugs are still my fault, not his).
4922 5302
4923 5303 Obviously Guido van Rossum and the whole Python development team, that
4924 5304 goes without saying.
4925 5305
4926 5306 IPython's website is generously hosted at http://ipython.scipy.orgby
4927 5307 Enthought (http://www.enthought.com). I am very grateful to them and all
4928 5308 of the SciPy team for their contribution.
4929 5309
4930 5310 Fernando would also like to thank Stephen Figgins <fig-AT-monitor.net>,
4931 5311 an O'Reilly Python editor. His Oct/11/2001 article about IPP and
4932 5312 LazyPython, was what got this project started. You can read it at:
4933 5313 http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2001/10/11/pythonnews.html.
4934 5314
4935 5315 And last but not least, all the kind IPython users who have emailed new
4936 5316 code, bug reports, fixes, comments and ideas. A brief list follows,
4937 5317 please let me know if I have ommitted your name by accident:
4938 5318
4939 5319 * [Jack Moffit] <jack-AT-xiph.org> Bug fixes, including the infamous
4940 5320 color problem. This bug alone caused many lost hours and
4941 5321 frustration, many thanks to him for the fix. I've always been a
4942 5322 fan of Ogg & friends, now I have one more reason to like these folks.
4943 5323 Jack is also contributing with Debian packaging and many other
4944 5324 things.
4945 5325 * [Alexander Schmolck] <a.schmolck-AT-gmx.net> Emacs work, bug
4946 5326 reports, bug fixes, ideas, lots more. The ipython.el mode for
4947 5327 (X)Emacs is Alex's code, providing full support for IPython under
4948 5328 (X)Emacs.
4949 5329 * [Andrea Riciputi] <andrea.riciputi-AT-libero.it> Mac OSX
4950 5330 information, Fink package management.
4951 5331 * [Gary Bishop] <gb-AT-cs.unc.edu> Bug reports, and patches to work
4952 5332 around the exception handling idiosyncracies of WxPython. Readline
4953 5333 and color support for Windows.
4954 5334 * [Jeffrey Collins] <Jeff.Collins-AT-vexcel.com> Bug reports. Much
4955 5335 improved readline support, including fixes for Python 2.3.
4956 5336 * [Dryice Liu] <dryice-AT-liu.com.cn> FreeBSD port.
4957 5337 * [Mike Heeter] <korora-AT-SDF.LONESTAR.ORG>
4958 5338 * [Christopher Hart] <hart-AT-caltech.edu> PDB integration.
4959 5339 * [Milan Zamazal] <pdm-AT-zamazal.org> Emacs info.
4960 5340 * [Philip Hisley] <compsys-AT-starpower.net>
4961 5341 * [Holger Krekel] <pyth-AT-devel.trillke.net> Tab completion, lots
4962 5342 more.
4963 5343 * [Robin Siebler] <robinsiebler-AT-starband.net>
4964 5344 * [Ralf Ahlbrink] <ralf_ahlbrink-AT-web.de>
4965 5345 * [Thorsten Kampe] <thorsten-AT-thorstenkampe.de>
4966 5346 * [Fredrik Kant] <fredrik.kant-AT-front.com> Windows setup.
4967 5347 * [Syver Enstad] <syver-en-AT-online.no> Windows setup.
4968 5348 * [Richard] <rxe-AT-renre-europe.com> Global embedding.
4969 5349 * [Hayden Callow] <h.callow-AT-elec.canterbury.ac.nz> Gnuplot.py 1.6
4970 5350 compatibility.
4971 5351 * [Leonardo Santagada] <retype-AT-terra.com.br> Fixes for Windows
4972 5352 installation.
4973 5353 * [Christopher Armstrong] <radix-AT-twistedmatrix.com> Bugfixes.
4974 5354 * [Francois Pinard] <pinard-AT-iro.umontreal.ca> Code and
4975 5355 documentation fixes.
4976 5356 * [Cory Dodt] <cdodt-AT-fcoe.k12.ca.us> Bug reports and Windows
4977 5357 ideas. Patches for Windows installer.
4978 5358 * [Olivier Aubert] <oaubert-AT-bat710.univ-lyon1.fr> New magics.
4979 5359 * [King C. Shu] <kingshu-AT-myrealbox.com> Autoindent patch.
4980 5360 * [Chris Drexler] <chris-AT-ac-drexler.de> Readline packages for
4981 5361 Win32/CygWin.
4982 5362 * [Gustavo Cordova Avila] <gcordova-AT-sismex.com> EvalDict code for
4983 5363 nice, lightweight string interpolation.
4984 5364 * [Kasper Souren] <Kasper.Souren-AT-ircam.fr> Bug reports, ideas.
4985 5365 * [Gever Tulley] <gever-AT-helium.com> Code contributions.
4986 5366 * [Ralf Schmitt] <ralf-AT-brainbot.com> Bug reports & fixes.
4987 5367 * [Oliver Sander] <osander-AT-gmx.de> Bug reports.
4988 5368 * [Rod Holland] <rhh-AT-structurelabs.com> Bug reports and fixes to
4989 5369 logging module.
4990 5370 * [Daniel 'Dang' Griffith] <pythondev-dang-AT-lazytwinacres.net>
4991 5371 Fixes, enhancement suggestions for system shell use.
4992 5372 * [Viktor Ransmayr] <viktor.ransmayr-AT-t-online.de> Tests and
4993 5373 reports on Windows installation issues. Contributed a true Windows
4994 5374 binary installer.
4995 5375 * [Mike Salib] <msalib-AT-mit.edu> Help fixing a subtle bug related
4996 5376 to traceback printing.
4997 5377 * [W.J. van der Laan] <gnufnork-AT-hetdigitalegat.nl> Bash-like
4998 5378 prompt specials.
4999 5379 * [Antoon Pardon] <Antoon.Pardon-AT-rece.vub.ac.be> Critical fix for
5000 5380 the multithreaded IPython.
5001 5381 * [John Hunter] <jdhunter-AT-nitace.bsd.uchicago.edu> Matplotlib
5002 5382 author, helped with all the development of support for matplotlib
5003 5383 in IPyhton, including making necessary changes to matplotlib itself.
5004 5384 * [Matthew Arnison] <maffew-AT-cat.org.au> Bug reports, '%run -d' idea.
5005 5385 * [Prabhu Ramachandran] <prabhu_r-AT-users.sourceforge.net> Help
5006 5386 with (X)Emacs support, threading patches, ideas...
5007 5387 * [Norbert Tretkowski] <tretkowski-AT-inittab.de> help with Debian
5008 5388 packaging and distribution.
5009 5389 * [George Sakkis] <gsakkis-AT-eden.rutgers.edu> New matcher for
5010 5390 tab-completing named arguments of user-defined functions.
5011 5391 * [Jörgen Stenarson] <jorgen.stenarson-AT-bostream.nu> Wildcard
5012 5392 support implementation for searching namespaces.
5013 5393 * [Vivian De Smedt] <vivian-AT-vdesmedt.com> Debugger enhancements,
5014 5394 so that when pdb is activated from within IPython, coloring, tab
5015 5395 completion and other features continue to work seamlessly.
5016 5396 * [Scott Tsai] <scottt958-AT-yahoo.com.tw> Support for automatic
5017 5397 editor invocation on syntax errors (see
5018 5398 http://www.scipy.net/roundup/ipython/issue36).
5019 5399 * [Alexander Belchenko] <bialix-AT-ukr.net> Improvements for win32
5020 5400 paging system.
5021 5401 * [Will Maier] <willmaier-AT-ml1.net> Official OpenBSD port.
5022 5402
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