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1 1 =================
2 2 IPython reference
3 3 =================
4 4
5 5 .. _command_line_options:
6 6
7 7 Command-line usage
8 8 ==================
9 9
10 10 You start IPython with the command::
11 11
12 12 $ ipython [options] files
13 13
14 14 .. note::
15 15
16 16 For IPython on Python 3, use ``ipython3`` in place of ``ipython``.
17 17
18 18 If invoked with no options, it executes all the files listed in sequence
19 19 and drops you into the interpreter while still acknowledging any options
20 20 you may have set in your ipython_config.py. This behavior is different from
21 21 standard Python, which when called as python -i will only execute one
22 22 file and ignore your configuration setup.
23 23
24 24 Please note that some of the configuration options are not available at
25 25 the command line, simply because they are not practical here. Look into
26 26 your configuration files for details on those. There are separate configuration
27 27 files for each profile, and the files look like "ipython_config.py" or
28 28 "ipython_config_<frontendname>.py". Profile directories look like
29 29 "profile_profilename" and are typically installed in the IPYTHON_DIR directory.
30 30 For Linux users, this will be $HOME/.config/ipython, and for other users it
31 31 will be $HOME/.ipython. For Windows users, $HOME resolves to C:\\Documents and
32 32 Settings\\YourUserName in most instances.
33 33
34 34
35 35 Eventloop integration
36 36 ---------------------
37 37
38 38 Previously IPython had command line options for controlling GUI event loop
39 39 integration (-gthread, -qthread, -q4thread, -wthread, -pylab). As of IPython
40 40 version 0.11, these have been removed. Please see the new ``%gui``
41 41 magic command or :ref:`this section <gui_support>` for details on the new
42 42 interface, or specify the gui at the commandline::
43 43
44 44 $ ipython --gui=qt
45 45
46 46
47 47 Command-line Options
48 48 --------------------
49 49
50 50 To see the options IPython accepts, use ``ipython --help`` (and you probably
51 51 should run the output through a pager such as ``ipython --help | less`` for
52 52 more convenient reading). This shows all the options that have a single-word
53 53 alias to control them, but IPython lets you configure all of its objects from
54 54 the command-line by passing the full class name and a corresponding value; type
55 55 ``ipython --help-all`` to see this full list. For example::
56 56
57 57 ipython --pylab qt
58 58
59 59 is equivalent to::
60 60
61 61 ipython --TerminalIPythonApp.pylab='qt'
62 62
63 63 Note that in the second form, you *must* use the equal sign, as the expression
64 64 is evaluated as an actual Python assignment. While in the above example the
65 65 short form is more convenient, only the most common options have a short form,
66 66 while any configurable variable in IPython can be set at the command-line by
67 67 using the long form. This long form is the same syntax used in the
68 68 configuration files, if you want to set these options permanently.
69 69
70 70
71 71 Interactive use
72 72 ===============
73 73
74 74 IPython is meant to work as a drop-in replacement for the standard interactive
75 75 interpreter. As such, any code which is valid python should execute normally
76 76 under IPython (cases where this is not true should be reported as bugs). It
77 77 does, however, offer many features which are not available at a standard python
78 78 prompt. What follows is a list of these.
79 79
80 80
81 81 Caution for Windows users
82 82 -------------------------
83 83
84 84 Windows, unfortunately, uses the '\\' character as a path separator. This is a
85 85 terrible choice, because '\\' also represents the escape character in most
86 86 modern programming languages, including Python. For this reason, using '/'
87 87 character is recommended if you have problems with ``\``. However, in Windows
88 88 commands '/' flags options, so you can not use it for the root directory. This
89 89 means that paths beginning at the root must be typed in a contrived manner
90 90 like: ``%copy \opt/foo/bar.txt \tmp``
91 91
92 92 .. _magic:
93 93
94 94 Magic command system
95 95 --------------------
96 96
97 97 IPython will treat any line whose first character is a % as a special
98 98 call to a 'magic' function. These allow you to control the behavior of
99 99 IPython itself, plus a lot of system-type features. They are all
100 100 prefixed with a % character, but parameters are given without
101 101 parentheses or quotes.
102 102
103 103 Example: typing ``%cd mydir`` changes your working directory to 'mydir', if it
104 104 exists.
105 105
106 106 If you have 'automagic' enabled (as it by default), you don't need
107 107 to type in the % explicitly. IPython will scan its internal list of
108 108 magic functions and call one if it exists. With automagic on you can
109 109 then just type ``cd mydir`` to go to directory 'mydir'. The automagic
110 110 system has the lowest possible precedence in name searches, so defining
111 111 an identifier with the same name as an existing magic function will
112 112 shadow it for automagic use. You can still access the shadowed magic
113 113 function by explicitly using the % character at the beginning of the line.
114 114
115 115 An example (with automagic on) should clarify all this:
116 116
117 117 .. sourcecode:: ipython
118 118
119 119 In [1]: cd ipython # %cd is called by automagic
120 120 /home/fperez/ipython
121 121
122 122 In [2]: cd=1 # now cd is just a variable
123 123
124 124 In [3]: cd .. # and doesn't work as a function anymore
125 125 File "<ipython-input-3-9fedb3aff56c>", line 1
126 126 cd ..
127 127 ^
128 128 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
129 129
130 130
131 131 In [4]: %cd .. # but %cd always works
132 132 /home/fperez
133 133
134 134 In [5]: del cd # if you remove the cd variable, automagic works again
135 135
136 136 In [6]: cd ipython
137 137
138 138 /home/fperez/ipython
139 139
140 140 You can define your own magic functions to extend the system. The
141 141 following example defines a new magic command, %impall:
142 142
143 143 .. sourcecode:: python
144 144
145 145 ip = get_ipython()
146 146
147 147 def doimp(self, arg):
148 148 ip = self.api
149 149 ip.ex("import %s; reload(%s); from %s import *" % (arg,arg,arg) )
150 150
151 151 ip.define_magic('impall', doimp)
152 152
153 153 Type ``%magic`` for more information, including a list of all available magic
154 154 functions at any time and their docstrings. You can also type
155 155 ``%magic_function_name?`` (see :ref:`below <dynamic_object_info>` for information on
156 156 the '?' system) to get information about any particular magic function you are
157 157 interested in.
158 158
159 159 The API documentation for the :mod:`IPython.core.magic` module contains the full
160 160 docstrings of all currently available magic commands.
161 161
162 162
163 163 Access to the standard Python help
164 164 ----------------------------------
165 165
166 166 Simply type ``help()`` to access Python's standard help system. You can
167 167 also type ``help(object)`` for information about a given object, or
168 168 ``help('keyword')`` for information on a keyword. You may need to configure your
169 169 PYTHONDOCS environment variable for this feature to work correctly.
170 170
171 171 .. _dynamic_object_info:
172 172
173 173 Dynamic object information
174 174 --------------------------
175 175
176 176 Typing ``?word`` or ``word?`` prints detailed information about an object. If
177 177 certain strings in the object are too long (e.g. function signatures) they get
178 178 snipped in the center for brevity. This system gives access variable types and
179 179 values, docstrings, function prototypes and other useful information.
180 180
181 181 If the information will not fit in the terminal, it is displayed in a pager
182 182 (``less`` if available, otherwise a basic internal pager).
183 183
184 184 Typing ``??word`` or ``word??`` gives access to the full information, including
185 185 the source code where possible. Long strings are not snipped.
186 186
187 187 The following magic functions are particularly useful for gathering
188 188 information about your working environment. You can get more details by
189 189 typing ``%magic`` or querying them individually (``%function_name?``);
190 190 this is just a summary:
191 191
192 192 * **%pdoc <object>**: Print (or run through a pager if too long) the
193 193 docstring for an object. If the given object is a class, it will
194 194 print both the class and the constructor docstrings.
195 195 * **%pdef <object>**: Print the definition header for any callable
196 196 object. If the object is a class, print the constructor information.
197 197 * **%psource <object>**: Print (or run through a pager if too long)
198 198 the source code for an object.
199 199 * **%pfile <object>**: Show the entire source file where an object was
200 200 defined via a pager, opening it at the line where the object
201 201 definition begins.
202 202 * **%who/%whos**: These functions give information about identifiers
203 203 you have defined interactively (not things you loaded or defined
204 204 in your configuration files). %who just prints a list of
205 205 identifiers and %whos prints a table with some basic details about
206 206 each identifier.
207 207
208 208 Note that the dynamic object information functions (?/??, ``%pdoc``,
209 209 ``%pfile``, ``%pdef``, ``%psource``) work on object attributes, as well as
210 210 directly on variables. For example, after doing ``import os``, you can use
211 211 ``os.path.abspath??``.
212 212
213 213 .. _readline:
214 214
215 215 Readline-based features
216 216 -----------------------
217 217
218 218 These features require the GNU readline library, so they won't work if your
219 219 Python installation lacks readline support. We will first describe the default
220 220 behavior IPython uses, and then how to change it to suit your preferences.
221 221
222 222
223 223 Command line completion
224 224 +++++++++++++++++++++++
225 225
226 226 At any time, hitting TAB will complete any available python commands or
227 227 variable names, and show you a list of the possible completions if
228 228 there's no unambiguous one. It will also complete filenames in the
229 229 current directory if no python names match what you've typed so far.
230 230
231 231
232 232 Search command history
233 233 ++++++++++++++++++++++
234 234
235 235 IPython provides two ways for searching through previous input and thus
236 236 reduce the need for repetitive typing:
237 237
238 238 1. Start typing, and then use Ctrl-p (previous,up) and Ctrl-n
239 239 (next,down) to search through only the history items that match
240 240 what you've typed so far. If you use Ctrl-p/Ctrl-n at a blank
241 241 prompt, they just behave like normal arrow keys.
242 242 2. Hit Ctrl-r: opens a search prompt. Begin typing and the system
243 243 searches your history for lines that contain what you've typed so
244 244 far, completing as much as it can.
245 245
246 246
247 247 Persistent command history across sessions
248 248 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
249 249
250 250 IPython will save your input history when it leaves and reload it next
251 251 time you restart it. By default, the history file is named
252 252 $IPYTHON_DIR/profile_<name>/history.sqlite. This allows you to keep
253 253 separate histories related to various tasks: commands related to
254 254 numerical work will not be clobbered by a system shell history, for
255 255 example.
256 256
257 257
258 258 Autoindent
259 259 ++++++++++
260 260
261 261 IPython can recognize lines ending in ':' and indent the next line,
262 262 while also un-indenting automatically after 'raise' or 'return'.
263 263
264 264 This feature uses the readline library, so it will honor your
265 265 :file:`~/.inputrc` configuration (or whatever file your INPUTRC variable points
266 266 to). Adding the following lines to your :file:`.inputrc` file can make
267 267 indenting/unindenting more convenient (M-i indents, M-u unindents)::
268 268
269 269 $if Python
270 270 "\M-i": " "
271 271 "\M-u": "\d\d\d\d"
272 272 $endif
273 273
274 274 Note that there are 4 spaces between the quote marks after "M-i" above.
275 275
276 276 .. warning::
277 277
278 278 Setting the above indents will cause problems with unicode text entry in
279 279 the terminal.
280 280
281 281 .. warning::
282 282
283 283 Autoindent is ON by default, but it can cause problems with the pasting of
284 284 multi-line indented code (the pasted code gets re-indented on each line). A
285 285 magic function %autoindent allows you to toggle it on/off at runtime. You
286 286 can also disable it permanently on in your :file:`ipython_config.py` file
287 287 (set TerminalInteractiveShell.autoindent=False).
288 288
289 289 If you want to paste multiple lines in the terminal, it is recommended that
290 290 you use ``%paste``.
291 291
292 292
293 293 Customizing readline behavior
294 294 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
295 295
296 296 All these features are based on the GNU readline library, which has an
297 297 extremely customizable interface. Normally, readline is configured via a
298 298 file which defines the behavior of the library; the details of the
299 299 syntax for this can be found in the readline documentation available
300 300 with your system or on the Internet. IPython doesn't read this file (if
301 301 it exists) directly, but it does support passing to readline valid
302 302 options via a simple interface. In brief, you can customize readline by
303 303 setting the following options in your configuration file (note
304 304 that these options can not be specified at the command line):
305 305
306 306 * **readline_parse_and_bind**: this holds a list of strings to be executed
307 307 via a readline.parse_and_bind() command. The syntax for valid commands
308 308 of this kind can be found by reading the documentation for the GNU
309 309 readline library, as these commands are of the kind which readline
310 310 accepts in its configuration file.
311 311 * **readline_remove_delims**: a string of characters to be removed
312 312 from the default word-delimiters list used by readline, so that
313 313 completions may be performed on strings which contain them. Do not
314 314 change the default value unless you know what you're doing.
315 315
316 316 You will find the default values in your configuration file.
317 317
318 318
319 319 Session logging and restoring
320 320 -----------------------------
321 321
322 322 You can log all input from a session either by starting IPython with the
323 323 command line switch ``--logfile=foo.py`` (see :ref:`here <command_line_options>`)
324 324 or by activating the logging at any moment with the magic function %logstart.
325 325
326 326 Log files can later be reloaded by running them as scripts and IPython
327 327 will attempt to 'replay' the log by executing all the lines in it, thus
328 328 restoring the state of a previous session. This feature is not quite
329 329 perfect, but can still be useful in many cases.
330 330
331 331 The log files can also be used as a way to have a permanent record of
332 332 any code you wrote while experimenting. Log files are regular text files
333 333 which you can later open in your favorite text editor to extract code or
334 334 to 'clean them up' before using them to replay a session.
335 335
336 336 The `%logstart` function for activating logging in mid-session is used as
337 337 follows::
338 338
339 339 %logstart [log_name [log_mode]]
340 340
341 341 If no name is given, it defaults to a file named 'ipython_log.py' in your
342 342 current working directory, in 'rotate' mode (see below).
343 343
344 344 '%logstart name' saves to file 'name' in 'backup' mode. It saves your
345 345 history up to that point and then continues logging.
346 346
347 347 %logstart takes a second optional parameter: logging mode. This can be
348 348 one of (note that the modes are given unquoted):
349 349
350 350 * [over:] overwrite existing log_name.
351 351 * [backup:] rename (if exists) to log_name~ and start log_name.
352 352 * [append:] well, that says it.
353 353 * [rotate:] create rotating logs log_name.1~, log_name.2~, etc.
354 354
355 355 The %logoff and %logon functions allow you to temporarily stop and
356 356 resume logging to a file which had previously been started with
357 357 %logstart. They will fail (with an explanation) if you try to use them
358 358 before logging has been started.
359 359
360 360 .. _system_shell_access:
361 361
362 362 System shell access
363 363 -------------------
364 364
365 365 Any input line beginning with a ! character is passed verbatim (minus
366 366 the !, of course) to the underlying operating system. For example,
367 367 typing ``!ls`` will run 'ls' in the current directory.
368 368
369 369 Manual capture of command output
370 370 --------------------------------
371 371
372 372 You can assign the result of a system command to a Python variable with the
373 373 syntax ``myfiles = !ls``. This gets machine readable output from stdout
374 374 (e.g. without colours), and splits on newlines. To explicitly get this sort of
375 375 output without assigning to a variable, use two exclamation marks (``!!ls``) or
376 376 the ``%sx`` magic command.
377 377
378 378 The captured list has some convenience features. ``myfiles.n`` or ``myfiles.s``
379 379 returns a string delimited by newlines or spaces, respectively. ``myfiles.p``
380 380 produces `path objects <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/path.py>`_ from the list items.
381 381 See :ref:`string_lists` for details.
382 382
383 383 IPython also allows you to expand the value of python variables when
384 384 making system calls. Wrap variables or expressions in {braces}::
385 385
386 386 In [1]: pyvar = 'Hello world'
387 387 In [2]: !echo "A python variable: {pyvar}"
388 388 A python variable: Hello world
389 389 In [3]: import math
390 390 In [4]: x = 8
391 391 In [5]: !echo {math.factorial(x)}
392 392 40320
393 393
394 394 For simple cases, you can alternatively prepend $ to a variable name::
395 395
396 396 In [6]: !echo $sys.argv
397 397 [/home/fperez/usr/bin/ipython]
398 398 In [7]: !echo "A system variable: $$HOME" # Use $$ for literal $
399 399 A system variable: /home/fperez
400 400
401 401 System command aliases
402 402 ----------------------
403 403
404 404 The %alias magic function allows you to define magic functions which are in fact
405 405 system shell commands. These aliases can have parameters.
406 406
407 407 ``%alias alias_name cmd`` defines 'alias_name' as an alias for 'cmd'
408 408
409 409 Then, typing ``alias_name params`` will execute the system command 'cmd
410 410 params' (from your underlying operating system).
411 411
412 412 You can also define aliases with parameters using %s specifiers (one per
413 413 parameter). The following example defines the parts function as an
414 414 alias to the command 'echo first %s second %s' where each %s will be
415 415 replaced by a positional parameter to the call to %parts::
416 416
417 417 In [1]: %alias parts echo first %s second %s
418 418 In [2]: parts A B
419 419 first A second B
420 420 In [3]: parts A
421 421 ERROR: Alias <parts> requires 2 arguments, 1 given.
422 422
423 423 If called with no parameters, %alias prints the table of currently
424 424 defined aliases.
425 425
426 426 The %rehashx magic allows you to load your entire $PATH as
427 427 ipython aliases. See its docstring for further details.
428 428
429 429
430 430 .. _dreload:
431 431
432 432 Recursive reload
433 433 ----------------
434 434
435 435 The :mod:`IPython.lib.deepreload` module allows you to recursively reload a
436 436 module: changes made to any of its dependencies will be reloaded without
437 437 having to exit. To start using it, do::
438 438
439 439 from IPython.lib.deepreload import reload as dreload
440 440
441 441
442 442 Verbose and colored exception traceback printouts
443 443 -------------------------------------------------
444 444
445 445 IPython provides the option to see very detailed exception tracebacks,
446 446 which can be especially useful when debugging large programs. You can
447 447 run any Python file with the %run function to benefit from these
448 448 detailed tracebacks. Furthermore, both normal and verbose tracebacks can
449 449 be colored (if your terminal supports it) which makes them much easier
450 450 to parse visually.
451 451
452 452 See the magic xmode and colors functions for details (just type %magic).
453 453
454 454 These features are basically a terminal version of Ka-Ping Yee's cgitb
455 455 module, now part of the standard Python library.
456 456
457 457
458 458 .. _input_caching:
459 459
460 460 Input caching system
461 461 --------------------
462 462
463 463 IPython offers numbered prompts (In/Out) with input and output caching
464 464 (also referred to as 'input history'). All input is saved and can be
465 465 retrieved as variables (besides the usual arrow key recall), in
466 466 addition to the %rep magic command that brings a history entry
467 467 up for editing on the next command line.
468 468
469 469 The following GLOBAL variables always exist (so don't overwrite them!):
470 470
471 471 * _i, _ii, _iii: store previous, next previous and next-next previous inputs.
472 472 * In, _ih : a list of all inputs; _ih[n] is the input from line n. If you
473 473 overwrite In with a variable of your own, you can remake the assignment to the
474 474 internal list with a simple ``In=_ih``.
475 475
476 476 Additionally, global variables named _i<n> are dynamically created (<n>
477 477 being the prompt counter), so ``_i<n> == _ih[<n>] == In[<n>]``.
478 478
479 479 For example, what you typed at prompt 14 is available as _i14, _ih[14]
480 480 and In[14].
481 481
482 482 This allows you to easily cut and paste multi line interactive prompts
483 483 by printing them out: they print like a clean string, without prompt
484 484 characters. You can also manipulate them like regular variables (they
485 485 are strings), modify or exec them (typing ``exec _i9`` will re-execute the
486 486 contents of input prompt 9.
487 487
488 488 You can also re-execute multiple lines of input easily by using the
489 489 magic %rerun or %macro functions. The macro system also allows you to re-execute
490 490 previous lines which include magic function calls (which require special
491 491 processing). Type %macro? for more details on the macro system.
492 492
493 493 A history function %hist allows you to see any part of your input
494 494 history by printing a range of the _i variables.
495 495
496 496 You can also search ('grep') through your history by typing
497 497 ``%hist -g somestring``. This is handy for searching for URLs, IP addresses,
498 498 etc. You can bring history entries listed by '%hist -g' up for editing
499 499 with the %recall command, or run them immediately with %rerun.
500 500
501 501 .. _output_caching:
502 502
503 503 Output caching system
504 504 ---------------------
505 505
506 506 For output that is returned from actions, a system similar to the input
507 507 cache exists but using _ instead of _i. Only actions that produce a
508 508 result (NOT assignments, for example) are cached. If you are familiar
509 509 with Mathematica, IPython's _ variables behave exactly like
510 510 Mathematica's % variables.
511 511
512 512 The following GLOBAL variables always exist (so don't overwrite them!):
513 513
514 514 * [_] (a single underscore) : stores previous output, like Python's
515 515 default interpreter.
516 516 * [__] (two underscores): next previous.
517 517 * [___] (three underscores): next-next previous.
518 518
519 519 Additionally, global variables named _<n> are dynamically created (<n>
520 520 being the prompt counter), such that the result of output <n> is always
521 521 available as _<n> (don't use the angle brackets, just the number, e.g.
522 522 _21).
523 523
524 524 These variables are also stored in a global dictionary (not a
525 525 list, since it only has entries for lines which returned a result)
526 526 available under the names _oh and Out (similar to _ih and In). So the
527 527 output from line 12 can be obtained as _12, Out[12] or _oh[12]. If you
528 528 accidentally overwrite the Out variable you can recover it by typing
529 529 'Out=_oh' at the prompt.
530 530
531 531 This system obviously can potentially put heavy memory demands on your
532 532 system, since it prevents Python's garbage collector from removing any
533 533 previously computed results. You can control how many results are kept
534 534 in memory with the option (at the command line or in your configuration
535 535 file) cache_size. If you set it to 0, the whole system is completely
536 536 disabled and the prompts revert to the classic '>>>' of normal Python.
537 537
538 538
539 539 Directory history
540 540 -----------------
541 541
542 542 Your history of visited directories is kept in the global list _dh, and
543 543 the magic %cd command can be used to go to any entry in that list. The
544 544 %dhist command allows you to view this history. Do ``cd -<TAB>`` to
545 545 conveniently view the directory history.
546 546
547 547
548 548 Automatic parentheses and quotes
549 549 --------------------------------
550 550
551 551 These features were adapted from Nathan Gray's LazyPython. They are
552 552 meant to allow less typing for common situations.
553 553
554 554
555 555 Automatic parentheses
556 556 +++++++++++++++++++++
557 557
558 558 Callable objects (i.e. functions, methods, etc) can be invoked like this
559 559 (notice the commas between the arguments)::
560 560
561 561 In [1]: callable_ob arg1, arg2, arg3
562 562 ------> callable_ob(arg1, arg2, arg3)
563 563
564 564 You can force automatic parentheses by using '/' as the first character
565 565 of a line. For example::
566 566
567 567 In [2]: /globals # becomes 'globals()'
568 568
569 569 Note that the '/' MUST be the first character on the line! This won't work::
570 570
571 571 In [3]: print /globals # syntax error
572 572
573 573 In most cases the automatic algorithm should work, so you should rarely
574 574 need to explicitly invoke /. One notable exception is if you are trying
575 575 to call a function with a list of tuples as arguments (the parenthesis
576 576 will confuse IPython)::
577 577
578 578 In [4]: zip (1,2,3),(4,5,6) # won't work
579 579
580 580 but this will work::
581 581
582 582 In [5]: /zip (1,2,3),(4,5,6)
583 583 ------> zip ((1,2,3),(4,5,6))
584 584 Out[5]: [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
585 585
586 586 IPython tells you that it has altered your command line by displaying
587 587 the new command line preceded by ->. e.g.::
588 588
589 589 In [6]: callable list
590 590 ------> callable(list)
591 591
592 592
593 593 Automatic quoting
594 594 +++++++++++++++++
595 595
596 596 You can force automatic quoting of a function's arguments by using ','
597 597 or ';' as the first character of a line. For example::
598 598
599 599 In [1]: ,my_function /home/me # becomes my_function("/home/me")
600 600
601 601 If you use ';' the whole argument is quoted as a single string, while ',' splits
602 602 on whitespace::
603 603
604 604 In [2]: ,my_function a b c # becomes my_function("a","b","c")
605 605
606 606 In [3]: ;my_function a b c # becomes my_function("a b c")
607 607
608 608 Note that the ',' or ';' MUST be the first character on the line! This
609 609 won't work::
610 610
611 611 In [4]: x = ,my_function /home/me # syntax error
612 612
613 613 IPython as your default Python environment
614 614 ==========================================
615 615
616 616 Python honors the environment variable PYTHONSTARTUP and will execute at
617 617 startup the file referenced by this variable. If you put the following code at
618 618 the end of that file, then IPython will be your working environment anytime you
619 619 start Python::
620 620
621 621 from IPython.frontend.terminal.ipapp import launch_new_instance
622 622 launch_new_instance()
623 623 raise SystemExit
624 624
625 625 The ``raise SystemExit`` is needed to exit Python when
626 626 it finishes, otherwise you'll be back at the normal Python '>>>'
627 627 prompt.
628 628
629 629 This is probably useful to developers who manage multiple Python
630 630 versions and don't want to have correspondingly multiple IPython
631 631 versions. Note that in this mode, there is no way to pass IPython any
632 632 command-line options, as those are trapped first by Python itself.
633 633
634 634 .. _Embedding:
635 635
636 636 Embedding IPython
637 637 =================
638 638
639 639 It is possible to start an IPython instance inside your own Python
640 640 programs. This allows you to evaluate dynamically the state of your
641 641 code, operate with your variables, analyze them, etc. Note however that
642 642 any changes you make to values while in the shell do not propagate back
643 643 to the running code, so it is safe to modify your values because you
644 644 won't break your code in bizarre ways by doing so.
645 645
646 646 .. note::
647 647
648 648 At present, trying to embed IPython from inside IPython causes problems. Run
649 649 the code samples below outside IPython.
650 650
651 651 This feature allows you to easily have a fully functional python
652 652 environment for doing object introspection anywhere in your code with a
653 653 simple function call. In some cases a simple print statement is enough,
654 654 but if you need to do more detailed analysis of a code fragment this
655 655 feature can be very valuable.
656 656
657 657 It can also be useful in scientific computing situations where it is
658 658 common to need to do some automatic, computationally intensive part and
659 659 then stop to look at data, plots, etc.
660 660 Opening an IPython instance will give you full access to your data and
661 661 functions, and you can resume program execution once you are done with
662 662 the interactive part (perhaps to stop again later, as many times as
663 663 needed).
664 664
665 665 The following code snippet is the bare minimum you need to include in
666 666 your Python programs for this to work (detailed examples follow later)::
667 667
668 668 from IPython import embed
669 669
670 670 embed() # this call anywhere in your program will start IPython
671 671
672 .. note::
673
674 As of 0.13, you can embed an IPython *kernel*, for use with qtconsole,
675 etc. via ``IPython.embed_kernel()`` instead of ``IPython.embed()``.
676 It should function just the same as regular embed, but you connect
677 an external frontend rather than IPython starting up in the local
678 terminal.
679
672 680 You can run embedded instances even in code which is itself being run at
673 681 the IPython interactive prompt with '%run <filename>'. Since it's easy
674 682 to get lost as to where you are (in your top-level IPython or in your
675 683 embedded one), it's a good idea in such cases to set the in/out prompts
676 684 to something different for the embedded instances. The code examples
677 685 below illustrate this.
678 686
679 687 You can also have multiple IPython instances in your program and open
680 688 them separately, for example with different options for data
681 689 presentation. If you close and open the same instance multiple times,
682 690 its prompt counters simply continue from each execution to the next.
683 691
684 692 Please look at the docstrings in the :mod:`~IPython.frontend.terminal.embed`
685 693 module for more details on the use of this system.
686 694
687 695 The following sample file illustrating how to use the embedding
688 696 functionality is provided in the examples directory as example-embed.py.
689 697 It should be fairly self-explanatory:
690 698
691 699 .. literalinclude:: ../../examples/core/example-embed.py
692 700 :language: python
693 701
694 702 Once you understand how the system functions, you can use the following
695 703 code fragments in your programs which are ready for cut and paste:
696 704
697 705 .. literalinclude:: ../../examples/core/example-embed-short.py
698 706 :language: python
699 707
700 708 Using the Python debugger (pdb)
701 709 ===============================
702 710
703 711 Running entire programs via pdb
704 712 -------------------------------
705 713
706 714 pdb, the Python debugger, is a powerful interactive debugger which
707 715 allows you to step through code, set breakpoints, watch variables,
708 716 etc. IPython makes it very easy to start any script under the control
709 717 of pdb, regardless of whether you have wrapped it into a 'main()'
710 718 function or not. For this, simply type '%run -d myscript' at an
711 719 IPython prompt. See the %run command's documentation (via '%run?' or
712 720 in Sec. magic_ for more details, including how to control where pdb
713 721 will stop execution first.
714 722
715 723 For more information on the use of the pdb debugger, read the included
716 724 pdb.doc file (part of the standard Python distribution). On a stock
717 725 Linux system it is located at /usr/lib/python2.3/pdb.doc, but the
718 726 easiest way to read it is by using the help() function of the pdb module
719 727 as follows (in an IPython prompt)::
720 728
721 729 In [1]: import pdb
722 730 In [2]: pdb.help()
723 731
724 732 This will load the pdb.doc document in a file viewer for you automatically.
725 733
726 734
727 735 Automatic invocation of pdb on exceptions
728 736 -----------------------------------------
729 737
730 738 IPython, if started with the ``--pdb`` option (or if the option is set in
731 739 your config file) can call the Python pdb debugger every time your code
732 740 triggers an uncaught exception. This feature
733 741 can also be toggled at any time with the %pdb magic command. This can be
734 742 extremely useful in order to find the origin of subtle bugs, because pdb
735 743 opens up at the point in your code which triggered the exception, and
736 744 while your program is at this point 'dead', all the data is still
737 745 available and you can walk up and down the stack frame and understand
738 746 the origin of the problem.
739 747
740 748 Furthermore, you can use these debugging facilities both with the
741 749 embedded IPython mode and without IPython at all. For an embedded shell
742 750 (see sec. Embedding_), simply call the constructor with
743 751 ``--pdb`` in the argument string and pdb will automatically be called if an
744 752 uncaught exception is triggered by your code.
745 753
746 754 For stand-alone use of the feature in your programs which do not use
747 755 IPython at all, put the following lines toward the top of your 'main'
748 756 routine::
749 757
750 758 import sys
751 759 from IPython.core import ultratb
752 760 sys.excepthook = ultratb.FormattedTB(mode='Verbose',
753 761 color_scheme='Linux', call_pdb=1)
754 762
755 763 The mode keyword can be either 'Verbose' or 'Plain', giving either very
756 764 detailed or normal tracebacks respectively. The color_scheme keyword can
757 765 be one of 'NoColor', 'Linux' (default) or 'LightBG'. These are the same
758 766 options which can be set in IPython with ``--colors`` and ``--xmode``.
759 767
760 768 This will give any of your programs detailed, colored tracebacks with
761 769 automatic invocation of pdb.
762 770
763 771
764 772 Extensions for syntax processing
765 773 ================================
766 774
767 775 This isn't for the faint of heart, because the potential for breaking
768 776 things is quite high. But it can be a very powerful and useful feature.
769 777 In a nutshell, you can redefine the way IPython processes the user input
770 778 line to accept new, special extensions to the syntax without needing to
771 779 change any of IPython's own code.
772 780
773 781 In the IPython/extensions directory you will find some examples
774 782 supplied, which we will briefly describe now. These can be used 'as is'
775 783 (and both provide very useful functionality), or you can use them as a
776 784 starting point for writing your own extensions.
777 785
778 786 .. _pasting_with_prompts:
779 787
780 788 Pasting of code starting with Python or IPython prompts
781 789 -------------------------------------------------------
782 790
783 791 IPython is smart enough to filter out input prompts, be they plain Python ones
784 792 (``>>>`` and ``...``) or IPython ones (``In [N]:`` and `` ...:``). You can
785 793 therefore copy and paste from existing interactive sessions without worry.
786 794
787 795 The following is a 'screenshot' of how things work, copying an example from the
788 796 standard Python tutorial::
789 797
790 798 In [1]: >>> # Fibonacci series:
791 799
792 800 In [2]: ... # the sum of two elements defines the next
793 801
794 802 In [3]: ... a, b = 0, 1
795 803
796 804 In [4]: >>> while b < 10:
797 805 ...: ... print b
798 806 ...: ... a, b = b, a+b
799 807 ...:
800 808 1
801 809 1
802 810 2
803 811 3
804 812 5
805 813 8
806 814
807 815 And pasting from IPython sessions works equally well::
808 816
809 817 In [1]: In [5]: def f(x):
810 818 ...: ...: "A simple function"
811 819 ...: ...: return x**2
812 820 ...: ...:
813 821
814 822 In [2]: f(3)
815 823 Out[2]: 9
816 824
817 825 .. _gui_support:
818 826
819 827 GUI event loop support
820 828 ======================
821 829
822 830 .. versionadded:: 0.11
823 831 The ``%gui`` magic and :mod:`IPython.lib.inputhook`.
824 832
825 833 IPython has excellent support for working interactively with Graphical User
826 834 Interface (GUI) toolkits, such as wxPython, PyQt4/PySide, PyGTK and Tk. This is
827 835 implemented using Python's builtin ``PyOSInputHook`` hook. This implementation
828 836 is extremely robust compared to our previous thread-based version. The
829 837 advantages of this are:
830 838
831 839 * GUIs can be enabled and disabled dynamically at runtime.
832 840 * The active GUI can be switched dynamically at runtime.
833 841 * In some cases, multiple GUIs can run simultaneously with no problems.
834 842 * There is a developer API in :mod:`IPython.lib.inputhook` for customizing
835 843 all of these things.
836 844
837 845 For users, enabling GUI event loop integration is simple. You simple use the
838 846 ``%gui`` magic as follows::
839 847
840 848 %gui [GUINAME]
841 849
842 850 With no arguments, ``%gui`` removes all GUI support. Valid ``GUINAME``
843 851 arguments are ``wx``, ``qt``, ``gtk`` and ``tk``.
844 852
845 853 Thus, to use wxPython interactively and create a running :class:`wx.App`
846 854 object, do::
847 855
848 856 %gui wx
849 857
850 858 For information on IPython's Matplotlib integration (and the ``pylab`` mode)
851 859 see :ref:`this section <matplotlib_support>`.
852 860
853 861 For developers that want to use IPython's GUI event loop integration in the
854 862 form of a library, these capabilities are exposed in library form in the
855 863 :mod:`IPython.lib.inputhook` and :mod:`IPython.lib.guisupport` modules.
856 864 Interested developers should see the module docstrings for more information,
857 865 but there are a few points that should be mentioned here.
858 866
859 867 First, the ``PyOSInputHook`` approach only works in command line settings
860 868 where readline is activated. The integration with various eventloops
861 869 is handled somewhat differently (and more simply) when using the standalone
862 870 kernel, as in the qtconsole and notebook.
863 871
864 872 Second, when using the ``PyOSInputHook`` approach, a GUI application should
865 873 *not* start its event loop. Instead all of this is handled by the
866 874 ``PyOSInputHook``. This means that applications that are meant to be used both
867 875 in IPython and as standalone apps need to have special code to detects how the
868 876 application is being run. We highly recommend using IPython's support for this.
869 877 Since the details vary slightly between toolkits, we point you to the various
870 878 examples in our source directory :file:`docs/examples/lib` that demonstrate
871 879 these capabilities.
872 880
873 881 .. warning::
874 882
875 883 The WX version of this is currently broken. While ``--pylab=wx`` works
876 884 fine, standalone WX apps do not. See
877 885 https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/645 for details of our progress on
878 886 this issue.
879 887
880 888
881 889 Third, unlike previous versions of IPython, we no longer "hijack" (replace
882 890 them with no-ops) the event loops. This is done to allow applications that
883 891 actually need to run the real event loops to do so. This is often needed to
884 892 process pending events at critical points.
885 893
886 894 Finally, we also have a number of examples in our source directory
887 895 :file:`docs/examples/lib` that demonstrate these capabilities.
888 896
889 897 PyQt and PySide
890 898 ---------------
891 899
892 900 .. attempt at explanation of the complete mess that is Qt support
893 901
894 902 When you use ``--gui=qt`` or ``--pylab=qt``, IPython can work with either
895 903 PyQt4 or PySide. There are three options for configuration here, because
896 904 PyQt4 has two APIs for QString and QVariant - v1, which is the default on
897 905 Python 2, and the more natural v2, which is the only API supported by PySide.
898 906 v2 is also the default for PyQt4 on Python 3. IPython's code for the QtConsole
899 907 uses v2, but you can still use any interface in your code, since the
900 908 Qt frontend is in a different process.
901 909
902 910 The default will be to import PyQt4 without configuration of the APIs, thus
903 911 matching what most applications would expect. It will fall back of PySide if
904 912 PyQt4 is unavailable.
905 913
906 914 If specified, IPython will respect the environment variable ``QT_API`` used
907 915 by ETS. ETS 4.0 also works with both PyQt4 and PySide, but it requires
908 916 PyQt4 to use its v2 API. So if ``QT_API=pyside`` PySide will be used,
909 917 and if ``QT_API=pyqt`` then PyQt4 will be used *with the v2 API* for
910 918 QString and QVariant, so ETS codes like MayaVi will also work with IPython.
911 919
912 920 If you launch IPython in pylab mode with ``ipython --pylab=qt``, then IPython
913 921 will ask matplotlib which Qt library to use (only if QT_API is *not set*), via
914 922 the 'backend.qt4' rcParam. If matplotlib is version 1.0.1 or older, then
915 923 IPython will always use PyQt4 without setting the v2 APIs, since neither v2
916 924 PyQt nor PySide work.
917 925
918 926 .. warning::
919 927
920 928 Note that this means for ETS 4 to work with PyQt4, ``QT_API`` *must* be set
921 929 to work with IPython's qt integration, because otherwise PyQt4 will be
922 930 loaded in an incompatible mode.
923 931
924 932 It also means that you must *not* have ``QT_API`` set if you want to
925 933 use ``--gui=qt`` with code that requires PyQt4 API v1.
926 934
927 935
928 936 .. _matplotlib_support:
929 937
930 938 Plotting with matplotlib
931 939 ========================
932 940
933 941 `Matplotlib`_ provides high quality 2D and 3D plotting for Python. Matplotlib
934 942 can produce plots on screen using a variety of GUI toolkits, including Tk,
935 943 PyGTK, PyQt4 and wxPython. It also provides a number of commands useful for
936 944 scientific computing, all with a syntax compatible with that of the popular
937 945 Matlab program.
938 946
939 947 To start IPython with matplotlib support, use the ``--pylab`` switch. If no
940 948 arguments are given, IPython will automatically detect your choice of
941 949 matplotlib backend. You can also request a specific backend with
942 950 ``--pylab=backend``, where ``backend`` must be one of: 'tk', 'qt', 'wx', 'gtk',
943 951 'osx'.
944 952
945 953 .. _Matplotlib: http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net
946 954
947 955 .. _interactive_demos:
948 956
949 957 Interactive demos with IPython
950 958 ==============================
951 959
952 960 IPython ships with a basic system for running scripts interactively in
953 961 sections, useful when presenting code to audiences. A few tags embedded
954 962 in comments (so that the script remains valid Python code) divide a file
955 963 into separate blocks, and the demo can be run one block at a time, with
956 964 IPython printing (with syntax highlighting) the block before executing
957 965 it, and returning to the interactive prompt after each block. The
958 966 interactive namespace is updated after each block is run with the
959 967 contents of the demo's namespace.
960 968
961 969 This allows you to show a piece of code, run it and then execute
962 970 interactively commands based on the variables just created. Once you
963 971 want to continue, you simply execute the next block of the demo. The
964 972 following listing shows the markup necessary for dividing a script into
965 973 sections for execution as a demo:
966 974
967 975 .. literalinclude:: ../../examples/lib/example-demo.py
968 976 :language: python
969 977
970 978 In order to run a file as a demo, you must first make a Demo object out
971 979 of it. If the file is named myscript.py, the following code will make a
972 980 demo::
973 981
974 982 from IPython.lib.demo import Demo
975 983
976 984 mydemo = Demo('myscript.py')
977 985
978 986 This creates the mydemo object, whose blocks you run one at a time by
979 987 simply calling the object with no arguments. If you have autocall active
980 988 in IPython (the default), all you need to do is type::
981 989
982 990 mydemo
983 991
984 992 and IPython will call it, executing each block. Demo objects can be
985 993 restarted, you can move forward or back skipping blocks, re-execute the
986 994 last block, etc. Simply use the Tab key on a demo object to see its
987 995 methods, and call '?' on them to see their docstrings for more usage
988 996 details. In addition, the demo module itself contains a comprehensive
989 997 docstring, which you can access via::
990 998
991 999 from IPython.lib import demo
992 1000
993 1001 demo?
994 1002
995 1003 Limitations: It is important to note that these demos are limited to
996 1004 fairly simple uses. In particular, you cannot break up sections within
997 1005 indented code (loops, if statements, function definitions, etc.)
998 1006 Supporting something like this would basically require tracking the
999 1007 internal execution state of the Python interpreter, so only top-level
1000 1008 divisions are allowed. If you want to be able to open an IPython
1001 1009 instance at an arbitrary point in a program, you can use IPython's
1002 1010 embedding facilities, see :func:`IPython.embed` for details.
1003 1011
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