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Prepend In [x] in traceback with "Input " to avoid messing doctest...
Matthias Bussonnier -
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@@ -1,1132 +1,1132 b''
1 1 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
2 2 """
3 3 Verbose and colourful traceback formatting.
4 4
5 5 **ColorTB**
6 6
7 7 I've always found it a bit hard to visually parse tracebacks in Python. The
8 8 ColorTB class is a solution to that problem. It colors the different parts of a
9 9 traceback in a manner similar to what you would expect from a syntax-highlighting
10 10 text editor.
11 11
12 12 Installation instructions for ColorTB::
13 13
14 14 import sys,ultratb
15 15 sys.excepthook = ultratb.ColorTB()
16 16
17 17 **VerboseTB**
18 18
19 19 I've also included a port of Ka-Ping Yee's "cgitb.py" that produces all kinds
20 20 of useful info when a traceback occurs. Ping originally had it spit out HTML
21 21 and intended it for CGI programmers, but why should they have all the fun? I
22 22 altered it to spit out colored text to the terminal. It's a bit overwhelming,
23 23 but kind of neat, and maybe useful for long-running programs that you believe
24 24 are bug-free. If a crash *does* occur in that type of program you want details.
25 25 Give it a shot--you'll love it or you'll hate it.
26 26
27 27 .. note::
28 28
29 29 The Verbose mode prints the variables currently visible where the exception
30 30 happened (shortening their strings if too long). This can potentially be
31 31 very slow, if you happen to have a huge data structure whose string
32 32 representation is complex to compute. Your computer may appear to freeze for
33 33 a while with cpu usage at 100%. If this occurs, you can cancel the traceback
34 34 with Ctrl-C (maybe hitting it more than once).
35 35
36 36 If you encounter this kind of situation often, you may want to use the
37 37 Verbose_novars mode instead of the regular Verbose, which avoids formatting
38 38 variables (but otherwise includes the information and context given by
39 39 Verbose).
40 40
41 41 .. note::
42 42
43 43 The verbose mode print all variables in the stack, which means it can
44 44 potentially leak sensitive information like access keys, or unencrypted
45 45 password.
46 46
47 47 Installation instructions for VerboseTB::
48 48
49 49 import sys,ultratb
50 50 sys.excepthook = ultratb.VerboseTB()
51 51
52 52 Note: Much of the code in this module was lifted verbatim from the standard
53 53 library module 'traceback.py' and Ka-Ping Yee's 'cgitb.py'.
54 54
55 55 Color schemes
56 56 -------------
57 57
58 58 The colors are defined in the class TBTools through the use of the
59 59 ColorSchemeTable class. Currently the following exist:
60 60
61 61 - NoColor: allows all of this module to be used in any terminal (the color
62 62 escapes are just dummy blank strings).
63 63
64 64 - Linux: is meant to look good in a terminal like the Linux console (black
65 65 or very dark background).
66 66
67 67 - LightBG: similar to Linux but swaps dark/light colors to be more readable
68 68 in light background terminals.
69 69
70 70 - Neutral: a neutral color scheme that should be readable on both light and
71 71 dark background
72 72
73 73 You can implement other color schemes easily, the syntax is fairly
74 74 self-explanatory. Please send back new schemes you develop to the author for
75 75 possible inclusion in future releases.
76 76
77 77 Inheritance diagram:
78 78
79 79 .. inheritance-diagram:: IPython.core.ultratb
80 80 :parts: 3
81 81 """
82 82
83 83 #*****************************************************************************
84 84 # Copyright (C) 2001 Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>
85 85 # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu>
86 86 #
87 87 # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
88 88 # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
89 89 #*****************************************************************************
90 90
91 91
92 92 import inspect
93 93 import linecache
94 94 import pydoc
95 95 import sys
96 96 import time
97 97 import traceback
98 98
99 99 import stack_data
100 100 from pygments.formatters.terminal256 import Terminal256Formatter
101 101 from pygments.styles import get_style_by_name
102 102
103 103 # IPython's own modules
104 104 from IPython import get_ipython
105 105 from IPython.core import debugger
106 106 from IPython.core.display_trap import DisplayTrap
107 107 from IPython.core.excolors import exception_colors
108 108 from IPython.utils import path as util_path
109 109 from IPython.utils import py3compat
110 110 from IPython.utils.terminal import get_terminal_size
111 111
112 112 import IPython.utils.colorable as colorable
113 113
114 114 # Globals
115 115 # amount of space to put line numbers before verbose tracebacks
116 116 INDENT_SIZE = 8
117 117
118 118 # Default color scheme. This is used, for example, by the traceback
119 119 # formatter. When running in an actual IPython instance, the user's rc.colors
120 120 # value is used, but having a module global makes this functionality available
121 121 # to users of ultratb who are NOT running inside ipython.
122 122 DEFAULT_SCHEME = 'NoColor'
123 123
124 124 # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
125 125 # Code begins
126 126
127 127 # Helper function -- largely belongs to VerboseTB, but we need the same
128 128 # functionality to produce a pseudo verbose TB for SyntaxErrors, so that they
129 129 # can be recognized properly by ipython.el's py-traceback-line-re
130 130 # (SyntaxErrors have to be treated specially because they have no traceback)
131 131
132 132
133 133 def _format_traceback_lines(lines, Colors, has_colors, lvals):
134 134 """
135 135 Format tracebacks lines with pointing arrow, leading numbers...
136 136
137 137 Parameters
138 138 ----------
139 139 lines : list[Line]
140 140 Colors
141 141 ColorScheme used.
142 142 lvals : str
143 143 Values of local variables, already colored, to inject just after the error line.
144 144 """
145 145 numbers_width = INDENT_SIZE - 1
146 146 res = []
147 147
148 148 for stack_line in lines:
149 149 if stack_line is stack_data.LINE_GAP:
150 150 res.append('%s (...)%s\n' % (Colors.linenoEm, Colors.Normal))
151 151 continue
152 152
153 153 line = stack_line.render(pygmented=has_colors).rstrip('\n') + '\n'
154 154 lineno = stack_line.lineno
155 155 if stack_line.is_current:
156 156 # This is the line with the error
157 157 pad = numbers_width - len(str(lineno))
158 158 num = '%s%s' % (debugger.make_arrow(pad), str(lineno))
159 159 start_color = Colors.linenoEm
160 160 else:
161 161 num = '%*s' % (numbers_width, lineno)
162 162 start_color = Colors.lineno
163 163
164 164 line = '%s%s%s %s' % (start_color, num, Colors.Normal, line)
165 165
166 166 res.append(line)
167 167 if lvals and stack_line.is_current:
168 168 res.append(lvals + '\n')
169 169 return res
170 170
171 171
172 172 def _format_filename(file, ColorFilename, ColorNormal):
173 173 """
174 174 Format filename lines with `In [n]` if it's the nth code cell or `File *.py` if it's a module.
175 175
176 176 Parameters
177 177 ----------
178 178 file : str
179 179 ColorFilename
180 180 ColorScheme's filename coloring to be used.
181 181 ColorNormal
182 182 ColorScheme's normal coloring to be used.
183 183 """
184 184 ipinst = get_ipython()
185 185
186 186 if ipinst is not None and file in ipinst.compile._filename_map:
187 187 file = "[%s]" % ipinst.compile._filename_map[file]
188 tpl_link = "In %s%%s%s" % (ColorFilename, ColorNormal)
188 tpl_link = "Input %sIn %%s%s" % (ColorFilename, ColorNormal)
189 189 else:
190 190 file = util_path.compress_user(
191 191 py3compat.cast_unicode(file, util_path.fs_encoding)
192 192 )
193 193 tpl_link = "File %s%%s%s" % (ColorFilename, ColorNormal)
194 194
195 195 return tpl_link % file
196 196
197 197 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
198 198 # Module classes
199 199 class TBTools(colorable.Colorable):
200 200 """Basic tools used by all traceback printer classes."""
201 201
202 202 # Number of frames to skip when reporting tracebacks
203 203 tb_offset = 0
204 204
205 205 def __init__(self, color_scheme='NoColor', call_pdb=False, ostream=None, parent=None, config=None):
206 206 # Whether to call the interactive pdb debugger after printing
207 207 # tracebacks or not
208 208 super(TBTools, self).__init__(parent=parent, config=config)
209 209 self.call_pdb = call_pdb
210 210
211 211 # Output stream to write to. Note that we store the original value in
212 212 # a private attribute and then make the public ostream a property, so
213 213 # that we can delay accessing sys.stdout until runtime. The way
214 214 # things are written now, the sys.stdout object is dynamically managed
215 215 # so a reference to it should NEVER be stored statically. This
216 216 # property approach confines this detail to a single location, and all
217 217 # subclasses can simply access self.ostream for writing.
218 218 self._ostream = ostream
219 219
220 220 # Create color table
221 221 self.color_scheme_table = exception_colors()
222 222
223 223 self.set_colors(color_scheme)
224 224 self.old_scheme = color_scheme # save initial value for toggles
225 225
226 226 if call_pdb:
227 227 self.pdb = debugger.Pdb()
228 228 else:
229 229 self.pdb = None
230 230
231 231 def _get_ostream(self):
232 232 """Output stream that exceptions are written to.
233 233
234 234 Valid values are:
235 235
236 236 - None: the default, which means that IPython will dynamically resolve
237 237 to sys.stdout. This ensures compatibility with most tools, including
238 238 Windows (where plain stdout doesn't recognize ANSI escapes).
239 239
240 240 - Any object with 'write' and 'flush' attributes.
241 241 """
242 242 return sys.stdout if self._ostream is None else self._ostream
243 243
244 244 def _set_ostream(self, val):
245 245 assert val is None or (hasattr(val, 'write') and hasattr(val, 'flush'))
246 246 self._ostream = val
247 247
248 248 ostream = property(_get_ostream, _set_ostream)
249 249
250 250 def get_parts_of_chained_exception(self, evalue):
251 251 def get_chained_exception(exception_value):
252 252 cause = getattr(exception_value, '__cause__', None)
253 253 if cause:
254 254 return cause
255 255 if getattr(exception_value, '__suppress_context__', False):
256 256 return None
257 257 return getattr(exception_value, '__context__', None)
258 258
259 259 chained_evalue = get_chained_exception(evalue)
260 260
261 261 if chained_evalue:
262 262 return chained_evalue.__class__, chained_evalue, chained_evalue.__traceback__
263 263
264 264 def prepare_chained_exception_message(self, cause):
265 265 direct_cause = "\nThe above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:\n"
266 266 exception_during_handling = "\nDuring handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:\n"
267 267
268 268 if cause:
269 269 message = [[direct_cause]]
270 270 else:
271 271 message = [[exception_during_handling]]
272 272 return message
273 273
274 274 @property
275 275 def has_colors(self):
276 276 return self.color_scheme_table.active_scheme_name.lower() != "nocolor"
277 277
278 278 def set_colors(self, *args, **kw):
279 279 """Shorthand access to the color table scheme selector method."""
280 280
281 281 # Set own color table
282 282 self.color_scheme_table.set_active_scheme(*args, **kw)
283 283 # for convenience, set Colors to the active scheme
284 284 self.Colors = self.color_scheme_table.active_colors
285 285 # Also set colors of debugger
286 286 if hasattr(self, 'pdb') and self.pdb is not None:
287 287 self.pdb.set_colors(*args, **kw)
288 288
289 289 def color_toggle(self):
290 290 """Toggle between the currently active color scheme and NoColor."""
291 291
292 292 if self.color_scheme_table.active_scheme_name == 'NoColor':
293 293 self.color_scheme_table.set_active_scheme(self.old_scheme)
294 294 self.Colors = self.color_scheme_table.active_colors
295 295 else:
296 296 self.old_scheme = self.color_scheme_table.active_scheme_name
297 297 self.color_scheme_table.set_active_scheme('NoColor')
298 298 self.Colors = self.color_scheme_table.active_colors
299 299
300 300 def stb2text(self, stb):
301 301 """Convert a structured traceback (a list) to a string."""
302 302 return '\n'.join(stb)
303 303
304 304 def text(self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset=None, context=5):
305 305 """Return formatted traceback.
306 306
307 307 Subclasses may override this if they add extra arguments.
308 308 """
309 309 tb_list = self.structured_traceback(etype, value, tb,
310 310 tb_offset, context)
311 311 return self.stb2text(tb_list)
312 312
313 313 def structured_traceback(self, etype, evalue, tb, tb_offset=None,
314 314 context=5, mode=None):
315 315 """Return a list of traceback frames.
316 316
317 317 Must be implemented by each class.
318 318 """
319 319 raise NotImplementedError()
320 320
321 321
322 322 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
323 323 class ListTB(TBTools):
324 324 """Print traceback information from a traceback list, with optional color.
325 325
326 326 Calling requires 3 arguments: (etype, evalue, elist)
327 327 as would be obtained by::
328 328
329 329 etype, evalue, tb = sys.exc_info()
330 330 if tb:
331 331 elist = traceback.extract_tb(tb)
332 332 else:
333 333 elist = None
334 334
335 335 It can thus be used by programs which need to process the traceback before
336 336 printing (such as console replacements based on the code module from the
337 337 standard library).
338 338
339 339 Because they are meant to be called without a full traceback (only a
340 340 list), instances of this class can't call the interactive pdb debugger."""
341 341
342 342 def __init__(self, color_scheme='NoColor', call_pdb=False, ostream=None, parent=None, config=None):
343 343 TBTools.__init__(self, color_scheme=color_scheme, call_pdb=call_pdb,
344 344 ostream=ostream, parent=parent,config=config)
345 345
346 346 def __call__(self, etype, value, elist):
347 347 self.ostream.flush()
348 348 self.ostream.write(self.text(etype, value, elist))
349 349 self.ostream.write('\n')
350 350
351 351 def _extract_tb(self, tb):
352 352 if tb:
353 353 return traceback.extract_tb(tb)
354 354 else:
355 355 return None
356 356
357 357 def structured_traceback(self, etype, evalue, etb=None, tb_offset=None,
358 358 context=5):
359 359 """Return a color formatted string with the traceback info.
360 360
361 361 Parameters
362 362 ----------
363 363 etype : exception type
364 364 Type of the exception raised.
365 365 evalue : object
366 366 Data stored in the exception
367 367 etb : object
368 368 If list: List of frames, see class docstring for details.
369 369 If Traceback: Traceback of the exception.
370 370 tb_offset : int, optional
371 371 Number of frames in the traceback to skip. If not given, the
372 372 instance evalue is used (set in constructor).
373 373 context : int, optional
374 374 Number of lines of context information to print.
375 375
376 376 Returns
377 377 -------
378 378 String with formatted exception.
379 379 """
380 380 # This is a workaround to get chained_exc_ids in recursive calls
381 381 # etb should not be a tuple if structured_traceback is not recursive
382 382 if isinstance(etb, tuple):
383 383 etb, chained_exc_ids = etb
384 384 else:
385 385 chained_exc_ids = set()
386 386
387 387 if isinstance(etb, list):
388 388 elist = etb
389 389 elif etb is not None:
390 390 elist = self._extract_tb(etb)
391 391 else:
392 392 elist = []
393 393 tb_offset = self.tb_offset if tb_offset is None else tb_offset
394 394 Colors = self.Colors
395 395 out_list = []
396 396 if elist:
397 397
398 398 if tb_offset and len(elist) > tb_offset:
399 399 elist = elist[tb_offset:]
400 400
401 401 out_list.append('Traceback %s(most recent call last)%s:' %
402 402 (Colors.normalEm, Colors.Normal) + '\n')
403 403 out_list.extend(self._format_list(elist))
404 404 # The exception info should be a single entry in the list.
405 405 lines = ''.join(self._format_exception_only(etype, evalue))
406 406 out_list.append(lines)
407 407
408 408 exception = self.get_parts_of_chained_exception(evalue)
409 409
410 410 if exception and not id(exception[1]) in chained_exc_ids:
411 411 chained_exception_message = self.prepare_chained_exception_message(
412 412 evalue.__cause__)[0]
413 413 etype, evalue, etb = exception
414 414 # Trace exception to avoid infinite 'cause' loop
415 415 chained_exc_ids.add(id(exception[1]))
416 416 chained_exceptions_tb_offset = 0
417 417 out_list = (
418 418 self.structured_traceback(
419 419 etype, evalue, (etb, chained_exc_ids),
420 420 chained_exceptions_tb_offset, context)
421 421 + chained_exception_message
422 422 + out_list)
423 423
424 424 return out_list
425 425
426 426 def _format_list(self, extracted_list):
427 427 """Format a list of traceback entry tuples for printing.
428 428
429 429 Given a list of tuples as returned by extract_tb() or
430 430 extract_stack(), return a list of strings ready for printing.
431 431 Each string in the resulting list corresponds to the item with the
432 432 same index in the argument list. Each string ends in a newline;
433 433 the strings may contain internal newlines as well, for those items
434 434 whose source text line is not None.
435 435
436 436 Lifted almost verbatim from traceback.py
437 437 """
438 438
439 439 Colors = self.Colors
440 440 list = []
441 441 for filename, lineno, name, line in extracted_list[:-1]:
442 442 item = " %s, line %s%d%s, in %s%s%s\n" % (
443 443 _format_filename(filename, Colors.filename, Colors.Normal),
444 444 Colors.lineno,
445 445 lineno,
446 446 Colors.Normal,
447 447 Colors.name,
448 448 name,
449 449 Colors.Normal,
450 450 )
451 451 if line:
452 452 item += ' %s\n' % line.strip()
453 453 list.append(item)
454 454 # Emphasize the last entry
455 455 filename, lineno, name, line = extracted_list[-1]
456 456 item = "%s %s, line %s%d%s, in %s%s%s%s\n" % (
457 457 Colors.normalEm,
458 458 _format_filename(filename, Colors.filenameEm, Colors.normalEm),
459 459 Colors.linenoEm,
460 460 lineno,
461 461 Colors.normalEm,
462 462 Colors.nameEm,
463 463 name,
464 464 Colors.normalEm,
465 465 Colors.Normal,
466 466 )
467 467 if line:
468 468 item += '%s %s%s\n' % (Colors.line, line.strip(),
469 469 Colors.Normal)
470 470 list.append(item)
471 471 return list
472 472
473 473 def _format_exception_only(self, etype, value):
474 474 """Format the exception part of a traceback.
475 475
476 476 The arguments are the exception type and value such as given by
477 477 sys.exc_info()[:2]. The return value is a list of strings, each ending
478 478 in a newline. Normally, the list contains a single string; however,
479 479 for SyntaxError exceptions, it contains several lines that (when
480 480 printed) display detailed information about where the syntax error
481 481 occurred. The message indicating which exception occurred is the
482 482 always last string in the list.
483 483
484 484 Also lifted nearly verbatim from traceback.py
485 485 """
486 486 have_filedata = False
487 487 Colors = self.Colors
488 488 list = []
489 489 stype = py3compat.cast_unicode(Colors.excName + etype.__name__ + Colors.Normal)
490 490 if value is None:
491 491 # Not sure if this can still happen in Python 2.6 and above
492 492 list.append(stype + '\n')
493 493 else:
494 494 if issubclass(etype, SyntaxError):
495 495 have_filedata = True
496 496 if not value.filename: value.filename = "<string>"
497 497 if value.lineno:
498 498 lineno = value.lineno
499 499 textline = linecache.getline(value.filename, value.lineno)
500 500 else:
501 501 lineno = "unknown"
502 502 textline = ""
503 503 list.append(
504 504 "%s %s, line %s%s%s\n"
505 505 % (
506 506 Colors.normalEm,
507 507 _format_filename(
508 508 value.filename, Colors.filenameEm, Colors.normalEm
509 509 ),
510 510 Colors.linenoEm,
511 511 lineno,
512 512 Colors.Normal,
513 513 )
514 514 )
515 515 if textline == "":
516 516 textline = py3compat.cast_unicode(value.text, "utf-8")
517 517
518 518 if textline is not None:
519 519 i = 0
520 520 while i < len(textline) and textline[i].isspace():
521 521 i += 1
522 522 list.append('%s %s%s\n' % (Colors.line,
523 523 textline.strip(),
524 524 Colors.Normal))
525 525 if value.offset is not None:
526 526 s = ' '
527 527 for c in textline[i:value.offset - 1]:
528 528 if c.isspace():
529 529 s += c
530 530 else:
531 531 s += ' '
532 532 list.append('%s%s^%s\n' % (Colors.caret, s,
533 533 Colors.Normal))
534 534
535 535 try:
536 536 s = value.msg
537 537 except Exception:
538 538 s = self._some_str(value)
539 539 if s:
540 540 list.append('%s%s:%s %s\n' % (stype, Colors.excName,
541 541 Colors.Normal, s))
542 542 else:
543 543 list.append('%s\n' % stype)
544 544
545 545 # sync with user hooks
546 546 if have_filedata:
547 547 ipinst = get_ipython()
548 548 if ipinst is not None:
549 549 ipinst.hooks.synchronize_with_editor(value.filename, value.lineno, 0)
550 550
551 551 return list
552 552
553 553 def get_exception_only(self, etype, value):
554 554 """Only print the exception type and message, without a traceback.
555 555
556 556 Parameters
557 557 ----------
558 558 etype : exception type
559 559 value : exception value
560 560 """
561 561 return ListTB.structured_traceback(self, etype, value)
562 562
563 563 def show_exception_only(self, etype, evalue):
564 564 """Only print the exception type and message, without a traceback.
565 565
566 566 Parameters
567 567 ----------
568 568 etype : exception type
569 569 evalue : exception value
570 570 """
571 571 # This method needs to use __call__ from *this* class, not the one from
572 572 # a subclass whose signature or behavior may be different
573 573 ostream = self.ostream
574 574 ostream.flush()
575 575 ostream.write('\n'.join(self.get_exception_only(etype, evalue)))
576 576 ostream.flush()
577 577
578 578 def _some_str(self, value):
579 579 # Lifted from traceback.py
580 580 try:
581 581 return py3compat.cast_unicode(str(value))
582 582 except:
583 583 return u'<unprintable %s object>' % type(value).__name__
584 584
585 585
586 586 #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
587 587 class VerboseTB(TBTools):
588 588 """A port of Ka-Ping Yee's cgitb.py module that outputs color text instead
589 589 of HTML. Requires inspect and pydoc. Crazy, man.
590 590
591 591 Modified version which optionally strips the topmost entries from the
592 592 traceback, to be used with alternate interpreters (because their own code
593 593 would appear in the traceback)."""
594 594
595 595 def __init__(self, color_scheme='Linux', call_pdb=False, ostream=None,
596 596 tb_offset=0, long_header=False, include_vars=True,
597 597 check_cache=None, debugger_cls = None,
598 598 parent=None, config=None):
599 599 """Specify traceback offset, headers and color scheme.
600 600
601 601 Define how many frames to drop from the tracebacks. Calling it with
602 602 tb_offset=1 allows use of this handler in interpreters which will have
603 603 their own code at the top of the traceback (VerboseTB will first
604 604 remove that frame before printing the traceback info)."""
605 605 TBTools.__init__(self, color_scheme=color_scheme, call_pdb=call_pdb,
606 606 ostream=ostream, parent=parent, config=config)
607 607 self.tb_offset = tb_offset
608 608 self.long_header = long_header
609 609 self.include_vars = include_vars
610 610 # By default we use linecache.checkcache, but the user can provide a
611 611 # different check_cache implementation. This is used by the IPython
612 612 # kernel to provide tracebacks for interactive code that is cached,
613 613 # by a compiler instance that flushes the linecache but preserves its
614 614 # own code cache.
615 615 if check_cache is None:
616 616 check_cache = linecache.checkcache
617 617 self.check_cache = check_cache
618 618
619 619 self.debugger_cls = debugger_cls or debugger.Pdb
620 620 self.skip_hidden = True
621 621
622 622 def format_record(self, frame_info):
623 623 """Format a single stack frame"""
624 624 Colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
625 625 ColorsNormal = Colors.Normal # used a lot
626 626
627 627 if isinstance(frame_info, stack_data.RepeatedFrames):
628 628 return ' %s[... skipping similar frames: %s]%s\n' % (
629 629 Colors.excName, frame_info.description, ColorsNormal)
630 630
631 631 indent = ' ' * INDENT_SIZE
632 632 em_normal = '%s\n%s%s' % (Colors.valEm, indent, ColorsNormal)
633 633 tpl_call = 'in %s%%s%s%%s%s' % (Colors.vName, Colors.valEm,
634 634 ColorsNormal)
635 635 tpl_call_fail = 'in %s%%s%s(***failed resolving arguments***)%s' % \
636 636 (Colors.vName, Colors.valEm, ColorsNormal)
637 637 tpl_name_val = '%%s %s= %%s%s' % (Colors.valEm, ColorsNormal)
638 638
639 639 link = _format_filename(frame_info.filename, Colors.filenameEm, ColorsNormal)
640 640 args, varargs, varkw, locals_ = inspect.getargvalues(frame_info.frame)
641 641
642 642 func = frame_info.executing.code_qualname()
643 643 if func == '<module>':
644 644 call = tpl_call % (func, '')
645 645 else:
646 646 # Decide whether to include variable details or not
647 647 var_repr = eqrepr if self.include_vars else nullrepr
648 648 try:
649 649 call = tpl_call % (func, inspect.formatargvalues(args,
650 650 varargs, varkw,
651 651 locals_, formatvalue=var_repr))
652 652 except KeyError:
653 653 # This happens in situations like errors inside generator
654 654 # expressions, where local variables are listed in the
655 655 # line, but can't be extracted from the frame. I'm not
656 656 # 100% sure this isn't actually a bug in inspect itself,
657 657 # but since there's no info for us to compute with, the
658 658 # best we can do is report the failure and move on. Here
659 659 # we must *not* call any traceback construction again,
660 660 # because that would mess up use of %debug later on. So we
661 661 # simply report the failure and move on. The only
662 662 # limitation will be that this frame won't have locals
663 663 # listed in the call signature. Quite subtle problem...
664 664 # I can't think of a good way to validate this in a unit
665 665 # test, but running a script consisting of:
666 666 # dict( (k,v.strip()) for (k,v) in range(10) )
667 667 # will illustrate the error, if this exception catch is
668 668 # disabled.
669 669 call = tpl_call_fail % func
670 670
671 671 lvals = ''
672 672 lvals_list = []
673 673 if self.include_vars:
674 674 try:
675 675 # we likely want to fix stackdata at some point, but
676 676 # still need a workaround.
677 677 fibp = frame_info.variables_in_executing_piece
678 678 for var in fibp:
679 679 lvals_list.append(tpl_name_val % (var.name, repr(var.value)))
680 680 except Exception:
681 681 lvals_list.append(
682 682 "Exception trying to inspect frame. No more locals available."
683 683 )
684 684 if lvals_list:
685 685 lvals = '%s%s' % (indent, em_normal.join(lvals_list))
686 686
687 687 result = "%s, %s\n" % (link, call)
688 688
689 689 result += ''.join(_format_traceback_lines(frame_info.lines, Colors, self.has_colors, lvals))
690 690 return result
691 691
692 692 def prepare_header(self, etype, long_version=False):
693 693 colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
694 694 colorsnormal = colors.Normal # used a lot
695 695 exc = '%s%s%s' % (colors.excName, etype, colorsnormal)
696 696 width = min(75, get_terminal_size()[0])
697 697 if long_version:
698 698 # Header with the exception type, python version, and date
699 699 pyver = 'Python ' + sys.version.split()[0] + ': ' + sys.executable
700 700 date = time.ctime(time.time())
701 701
702 702 head = '%s%s%s\n%s%s%s\n%s' % (colors.topline, '-' * width, colorsnormal,
703 703 exc, ' ' * (width - len(str(etype)) - len(pyver)),
704 704 pyver, date.rjust(width) )
705 705 head += "\nA problem occurred executing Python code. Here is the sequence of function" \
706 706 "\ncalls leading up to the error, with the most recent (innermost) call last."
707 707 else:
708 708 # Simplified header
709 709 head = '%s%s' % (exc, 'Traceback (most recent call last)'. \
710 710 rjust(width - len(str(etype))) )
711 711
712 712 return head
713 713
714 714 def format_exception(self, etype, evalue):
715 715 colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
716 716 colorsnormal = colors.Normal # used a lot
717 717 # Get (safely) a string form of the exception info
718 718 try:
719 719 etype_str, evalue_str = map(str, (etype, evalue))
720 720 except:
721 721 # User exception is improperly defined.
722 722 etype, evalue = str, sys.exc_info()[:2]
723 723 etype_str, evalue_str = map(str, (etype, evalue))
724 724 # ... and format it
725 725 return ['%s%s%s: %s' % (colors.excName, etype_str,
726 726 colorsnormal, py3compat.cast_unicode(evalue_str))]
727 727
728 728 def format_exception_as_a_whole(self, etype, evalue, etb, number_of_lines_of_context, tb_offset):
729 729 """Formats the header, traceback and exception message for a single exception.
730 730
731 731 This may be called multiple times by Python 3 exception chaining
732 732 (PEP 3134).
733 733 """
734 734 # some locals
735 735 orig_etype = etype
736 736 try:
737 737 etype = etype.__name__
738 738 except AttributeError:
739 739 pass
740 740
741 741 tb_offset = self.tb_offset if tb_offset is None else tb_offset
742 742 head = self.prepare_header(etype, self.long_header)
743 743 records = self.get_records(etb, number_of_lines_of_context, tb_offset)
744 744
745 745 frames = []
746 746 skipped = 0
747 747 lastrecord = len(records) - 1
748 748 for i, r in enumerate(records):
749 749 if not isinstance(r, stack_data.RepeatedFrames) and self.skip_hidden:
750 750 if r.frame.f_locals.get("__tracebackhide__", 0) and i != lastrecord:
751 751 skipped += 1
752 752 continue
753 753 if skipped:
754 754 Colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
755 755 ColorsNormal = Colors.Normal # used a lot
756 756 frames.append(
757 757 " %s[... skipping hidden %s frame]%s\n"
758 758 % (Colors.excName, skipped, ColorsNormal)
759 759 )
760 760 skipped = 0
761 761 frames.append(self.format_record(r))
762 762 if skipped:
763 763 Colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
764 764 ColorsNormal = Colors.Normal # used a lot
765 765 frames.append(
766 766 " %s[... skipping hidden %s frame]%s\n"
767 767 % (Colors.excName, skipped, ColorsNormal)
768 768 )
769 769
770 770 formatted_exception = self.format_exception(etype, evalue)
771 771 if records:
772 772 frame_info = records[-1]
773 773 ipinst = get_ipython()
774 774 if ipinst is not None:
775 775 ipinst.hooks.synchronize_with_editor(frame_info.filename, frame_info.lineno, 0)
776 776
777 777 return [[head] + frames + [''.join(formatted_exception[0])]]
778 778
779 779 def get_records(self, etb, number_of_lines_of_context, tb_offset):
780 780 context = number_of_lines_of_context - 1
781 781 after = context // 2
782 782 before = context - after
783 783 if self.has_colors:
784 784 style = get_style_by_name('default')
785 785 style = stack_data.style_with_executing_node(style, 'bg:#00005f')
786 786 formatter = Terminal256Formatter(style=style)
787 787 else:
788 788 formatter = None
789 789 options = stack_data.Options(
790 790 before=before,
791 791 after=after,
792 792 pygments_formatter=formatter,
793 793 )
794 794 return list(stack_data.FrameInfo.stack_data(etb, options=options))[tb_offset:]
795 795
796 796 def structured_traceback(self, etype, evalue, etb, tb_offset=None,
797 797 number_of_lines_of_context=5):
798 798 """Return a nice text document describing the traceback."""
799 799
800 800 formatted_exception = self.format_exception_as_a_whole(etype, evalue, etb, number_of_lines_of_context,
801 801 tb_offset)
802 802
803 803 colors = self.Colors # just a shorthand + quicker name lookup
804 804 colorsnormal = colors.Normal # used a lot
805 805 head = '%s%s%s' % (colors.topline, '-' * min(75, get_terminal_size()[0]), colorsnormal)
806 806 structured_traceback_parts = [head]
807 807 chained_exceptions_tb_offset = 0
808 808 lines_of_context = 3
809 809 formatted_exceptions = formatted_exception
810 810 exception = self.get_parts_of_chained_exception(evalue)
811 811 if exception:
812 812 formatted_exceptions += self.prepare_chained_exception_message(evalue.__cause__)
813 813 etype, evalue, etb = exception
814 814 else:
815 815 evalue = None
816 816 chained_exc_ids = set()
817 817 while evalue:
818 818 formatted_exceptions += self.format_exception_as_a_whole(etype, evalue, etb, lines_of_context,
819 819 chained_exceptions_tb_offset)
820 820 exception = self.get_parts_of_chained_exception(evalue)
821 821
822 822 if exception and not id(exception[1]) in chained_exc_ids:
823 823 chained_exc_ids.add(id(exception[1])) # trace exception to avoid infinite 'cause' loop
824 824 formatted_exceptions += self.prepare_chained_exception_message(evalue.__cause__)
825 825 etype, evalue, etb = exception
826 826 else:
827 827 evalue = None
828 828
829 829 # we want to see exceptions in a reversed order:
830 830 # the first exception should be on top
831 831 for formatted_exception in reversed(formatted_exceptions):
832 832 structured_traceback_parts += formatted_exception
833 833
834 834 return structured_traceback_parts
835 835
836 836 def debugger(self, force=False):
837 837 """Call up the pdb debugger if desired, always clean up the tb
838 838 reference.
839 839
840 840 Keywords:
841 841
842 842 - force(False): by default, this routine checks the instance call_pdb
843 843 flag and does not actually invoke the debugger if the flag is false.
844 844 The 'force' option forces the debugger to activate even if the flag
845 845 is false.
846 846
847 847 If the call_pdb flag is set, the pdb interactive debugger is
848 848 invoked. In all cases, the self.tb reference to the current traceback
849 849 is deleted to prevent lingering references which hamper memory
850 850 management.
851 851
852 852 Note that each call to pdb() does an 'import readline', so if your app
853 853 requires a special setup for the readline completers, you'll have to
854 854 fix that by hand after invoking the exception handler."""
855 855
856 856 if force or self.call_pdb:
857 857 if self.pdb is None:
858 858 self.pdb = self.debugger_cls()
859 859 # the system displayhook may have changed, restore the original
860 860 # for pdb
861 861 display_trap = DisplayTrap(hook=sys.__displayhook__)
862 862 with display_trap:
863 863 self.pdb.reset()
864 864 # Find the right frame so we don't pop up inside ipython itself
865 865 if hasattr(self, 'tb') and self.tb is not None:
866 866 etb = self.tb
867 867 else:
868 868 etb = self.tb = sys.last_traceback
869 869 while self.tb is not None and self.tb.tb_next is not None:
870 870 self.tb = self.tb.tb_next
871 871 if etb and etb.tb_next:
872 872 etb = etb.tb_next
873 873 self.pdb.botframe = etb.tb_frame
874 874 self.pdb.interaction(None, etb)
875 875
876 876 if hasattr(self, 'tb'):
877 877 del self.tb
878 878
879 879 def handler(self, info=None):
880 880 (etype, evalue, etb) = info or sys.exc_info()
881 881 self.tb = etb
882 882 ostream = self.ostream
883 883 ostream.flush()
884 884 ostream.write(self.text(etype, evalue, etb))
885 885 ostream.write('\n')
886 886 ostream.flush()
887 887
888 888 # Changed so an instance can just be called as VerboseTB_inst() and print
889 889 # out the right info on its own.
890 890 def __call__(self, etype=None, evalue=None, etb=None):
891 891 """This hook can replace sys.excepthook (for Python 2.1 or higher)."""
892 892 if etb is None:
893 893 self.handler()
894 894 else:
895 895 self.handler((etype, evalue, etb))
896 896 try:
897 897 self.debugger()
898 898 except KeyboardInterrupt:
899 899 print("\nKeyboardInterrupt")
900 900
901 901
902 902 #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
903 903 class FormattedTB(VerboseTB, ListTB):
904 904 """Subclass ListTB but allow calling with a traceback.
905 905
906 906 It can thus be used as a sys.excepthook for Python > 2.1.
907 907
908 908 Also adds 'Context' and 'Verbose' modes, not available in ListTB.
909 909
910 910 Allows a tb_offset to be specified. This is useful for situations where
911 911 one needs to remove a number of topmost frames from the traceback (such as
912 912 occurs with python programs that themselves execute other python code,
913 913 like Python shells). """
914 914
915 915 def __init__(self, mode='Plain', color_scheme='Linux', call_pdb=False,
916 916 ostream=None,
917 917 tb_offset=0, long_header=False, include_vars=False,
918 918 check_cache=None, debugger_cls=None,
919 919 parent=None, config=None):
920 920
921 921 # NEVER change the order of this list. Put new modes at the end:
922 922 self.valid_modes = ['Plain', 'Context', 'Verbose', 'Minimal']
923 923 self.verbose_modes = self.valid_modes[1:3]
924 924
925 925 VerboseTB.__init__(self, color_scheme=color_scheme, call_pdb=call_pdb,
926 926 ostream=ostream, tb_offset=tb_offset,
927 927 long_header=long_header, include_vars=include_vars,
928 928 check_cache=check_cache, debugger_cls=debugger_cls,
929 929 parent=parent, config=config)
930 930
931 931 # Different types of tracebacks are joined with different separators to
932 932 # form a single string. They are taken from this dict
933 933 self._join_chars = dict(Plain='', Context='\n', Verbose='\n',
934 934 Minimal='')
935 935 # set_mode also sets the tb_join_char attribute
936 936 self.set_mode(mode)
937 937
938 938 def structured_traceback(self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset=None, number_of_lines_of_context=5):
939 939 tb_offset = self.tb_offset if tb_offset is None else tb_offset
940 940 mode = self.mode
941 941 if mode in self.verbose_modes:
942 942 # Verbose modes need a full traceback
943 943 return VerboseTB.structured_traceback(
944 944 self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset, number_of_lines_of_context
945 945 )
946 946 elif mode == 'Minimal':
947 947 return ListTB.get_exception_only(self, etype, value)
948 948 else:
949 949 # We must check the source cache because otherwise we can print
950 950 # out-of-date source code.
951 951 self.check_cache()
952 952 # Now we can extract and format the exception
953 953 return ListTB.structured_traceback(
954 954 self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset, number_of_lines_of_context
955 955 )
956 956
957 957 def stb2text(self, stb):
958 958 """Convert a structured traceback (a list) to a string."""
959 959 return self.tb_join_char.join(stb)
960 960
961 961
962 962 def set_mode(self, mode=None):
963 963 """Switch to the desired mode.
964 964
965 965 If mode is not specified, cycles through the available modes."""
966 966
967 967 if not mode:
968 968 new_idx = (self.valid_modes.index(self.mode) + 1 ) % \
969 969 len(self.valid_modes)
970 970 self.mode = self.valid_modes[new_idx]
971 971 elif mode not in self.valid_modes:
972 972 raise ValueError('Unrecognized mode in FormattedTB: <' + mode + '>\n'
973 973 'Valid modes: ' + str(self.valid_modes))
974 974 else:
975 975 self.mode = mode
976 976 # include variable details only in 'Verbose' mode
977 977 self.include_vars = (self.mode == self.valid_modes[2])
978 978 # Set the join character for generating text tracebacks
979 979 self.tb_join_char = self._join_chars[self.mode]
980 980
981 981 # some convenient shortcuts
982 982 def plain(self):
983 983 self.set_mode(self.valid_modes[0])
984 984
985 985 def context(self):
986 986 self.set_mode(self.valid_modes[1])
987 987
988 988 def verbose(self):
989 989 self.set_mode(self.valid_modes[2])
990 990
991 991 def minimal(self):
992 992 self.set_mode(self.valid_modes[3])
993 993
994 994
995 995 #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
996 996 class AutoFormattedTB(FormattedTB):
997 997 """A traceback printer which can be called on the fly.
998 998
999 999 It will find out about exceptions by itself.
1000 1000
1001 1001 A brief example::
1002 1002
1003 1003 AutoTB = AutoFormattedTB(mode = 'Verbose',color_scheme='Linux')
1004 1004 try:
1005 1005 ...
1006 1006 except:
1007 1007 AutoTB() # or AutoTB(out=logfile) where logfile is an open file object
1008 1008 """
1009 1009
1010 1010 def __call__(self, etype=None, evalue=None, etb=None,
1011 1011 out=None, tb_offset=None):
1012 1012 """Print out a formatted exception traceback.
1013 1013
1014 1014 Optional arguments:
1015 1015 - out: an open file-like object to direct output to.
1016 1016
1017 1017 - tb_offset: the number of frames to skip over in the stack, on a
1018 1018 per-call basis (this overrides temporarily the instance's tb_offset
1019 1019 given at initialization time."""
1020 1020
1021 1021 if out is None:
1022 1022 out = self.ostream
1023 1023 out.flush()
1024 1024 out.write(self.text(etype, evalue, etb, tb_offset))
1025 1025 out.write('\n')
1026 1026 out.flush()
1027 1027 # FIXME: we should remove the auto pdb behavior from here and leave
1028 1028 # that to the clients.
1029 1029 try:
1030 1030 self.debugger()
1031 1031 except KeyboardInterrupt:
1032 1032 print("\nKeyboardInterrupt")
1033 1033
1034 1034 def structured_traceback(self, etype=None, value=None, tb=None,
1035 1035 tb_offset=None, number_of_lines_of_context=5):
1036 1036 if etype is None:
1037 1037 etype, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
1038 1038 if isinstance(tb, tuple):
1039 1039 # tb is a tuple if this is a chained exception.
1040 1040 self.tb = tb[0]
1041 1041 else:
1042 1042 self.tb = tb
1043 1043 return FormattedTB.structured_traceback(
1044 1044 self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset, number_of_lines_of_context)
1045 1045
1046 1046
1047 1047 #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1048 1048
1049 1049 # A simple class to preserve Nathan's original functionality.
1050 1050 class ColorTB(FormattedTB):
1051 1051 """Shorthand to initialize a FormattedTB in Linux colors mode."""
1052 1052
1053 1053 def __init__(self, color_scheme='Linux', call_pdb=0, **kwargs):
1054 1054 FormattedTB.__init__(self, color_scheme=color_scheme,
1055 1055 call_pdb=call_pdb, **kwargs)
1056 1056
1057 1057
1058 1058 class SyntaxTB(ListTB):
1059 1059 """Extension which holds some state: the last exception value"""
1060 1060
1061 1061 def __init__(self, color_scheme='NoColor', parent=None, config=None):
1062 1062 ListTB.__init__(self, color_scheme, parent=parent, config=config)
1063 1063 self.last_syntax_error = None
1064 1064
1065 1065 def __call__(self, etype, value, elist):
1066 1066 self.last_syntax_error = value
1067 1067
1068 1068 ListTB.__call__(self, etype, value, elist)
1069 1069
1070 1070 def structured_traceback(self, etype, value, elist, tb_offset=None,
1071 1071 context=5):
1072 1072 # If the source file has been edited, the line in the syntax error can
1073 1073 # be wrong (retrieved from an outdated cache). This replaces it with
1074 1074 # the current value.
1075 1075 if isinstance(value, SyntaxError) \
1076 1076 and isinstance(value.filename, str) \
1077 1077 and isinstance(value.lineno, int):
1078 1078 linecache.checkcache(value.filename)
1079 1079 newtext = linecache.getline(value.filename, value.lineno)
1080 1080 if newtext:
1081 1081 value.text = newtext
1082 1082 self.last_syntax_error = value
1083 1083 return super(SyntaxTB, self).structured_traceback(etype, value, elist,
1084 1084 tb_offset=tb_offset, context=context)
1085 1085
1086 1086 def clear_err_state(self):
1087 1087 """Return the current error state and clear it"""
1088 1088 e = self.last_syntax_error
1089 1089 self.last_syntax_error = None
1090 1090 return e
1091 1091
1092 1092 def stb2text(self, stb):
1093 1093 """Convert a structured traceback (a list) to a string."""
1094 1094 return ''.join(stb)
1095 1095
1096 1096
1097 1097 # some internal-use functions
1098 1098 def text_repr(value):
1099 1099 """Hopefully pretty robust repr equivalent."""
1100 1100 # this is pretty horrible but should always return *something*
1101 1101 try:
1102 1102 return pydoc.text.repr(value)
1103 1103 except KeyboardInterrupt:
1104 1104 raise
1105 1105 except:
1106 1106 try:
1107 1107 return repr(value)
1108 1108 except KeyboardInterrupt:
1109 1109 raise
1110 1110 except:
1111 1111 try:
1112 1112 # all still in an except block so we catch
1113 1113 # getattr raising
1114 1114 name = getattr(value, '__name__', None)
1115 1115 if name:
1116 1116 # ick, recursion
1117 1117 return text_repr(name)
1118 1118 klass = getattr(value, '__class__', None)
1119 1119 if klass:
1120 1120 return '%s instance' % text_repr(klass)
1121 1121 except KeyboardInterrupt:
1122 1122 raise
1123 1123 except:
1124 1124 return 'UNRECOVERABLE REPR FAILURE'
1125 1125
1126 1126
1127 1127 def eqrepr(value, repr=text_repr):
1128 1128 return '=%s' % repr(value)
1129 1129
1130 1130
1131 1131 def nullrepr(value, repr=text_repr):
1132 1132 return ''
@@ -1,437 +1,444 b''
1 1 =====================
2 2 Development version
3 3 =====================
4 4
5 5 This document describes in-flight development work.
6 6
7 7 .. warning::
8 8
9 9 Please do not edit this file by hand (doing so will likely cause merge
10 10 conflicts for other Pull Requests). Instead, create a new file in the
11 11 `docs/source/whatsnew/pr` folder
12 12
13 13
14 14 Released .... ...., 2019
15 15
16 16
17 17 Need to be updated:
18 18
19 19 .. toctree::
20 20 :maxdepth: 2
21 21 :glob:
22 22
23 23 pr/*
24 24
25 25 IPython 8.0 is bringing a large number of new features and improvements to both the
26 26 user of the terminal and of the kernel via Jupyter. The removal of compatibility
27 27 with older version of Python is also the opportunity to do a couple of
28 28 performance improvement in particular with respect to startup time.
29 29 The 8.x branch started diverging from its predecessor around IPython 7.12
30 30 (January 2020).
31 31
32 32 This release contains 250+ Pull Requests, in addition to many of the features
33 33 and backports that have made it to the 7.x branch. All PRs that went into this
34 34 released are properly tagged with the 8.0 milestone if you wish to have a more
35 35 in depth look at the changes.
36 36
37 37 Please fell free to send pull-requests to updates those notes after release,
38 38 I have likely forgotten a few things reviewing 250+ PRs.
39 39
40 40 Dependencies changes/downstream packaging
41 41 -----------------------------------------
42 42
43 43 Note that most of our building step have been changes to be (mostly) declarative
44 44 and follow PEP 517, we are trying to completely remove ``setup.py`` (:ghpull:`13238`) and are
45 45 looking for help to do so.
46 46
47 47 - Minimum supported ``traitlets`` version if now 5+
48 48 - we now require ``stack_data``
49 49 - Minimal Python is now 3.8
50 50 - ``nose`` is not a testing requirement anymore
51 51 - ``pytest`` replaces nose.
52 52 - ``iptest``/``iptest3`` cli entrypoints do not exists anymore.
53 53 - minimum officially support ``numpy`` version has been bumped, but this should
54 54 not have much effect on packaging.
55 55
56 56
57 57 Deprecation and removal
58 58 -----------------------
59 59
60 60 We removed almost all features, arguments, functions, and modules that were
61 61 marked as deprecated between IPython 1.0 and 5.0. As reminder 5.0 was released
62 62 in 2016, and 1.0 in 2013. Last release of the 5 branch was 5.10.0, in may 2020.
63 63 The few remaining deprecated features we left have better deprecation warnings
64 64 or have been turned into explicit errors for better error messages.
65 65
66 66 I will use this occasion to add the following requests to anyone emitting a
67 67 deprecation warning:
68 68
69 69 - Please at at least ``stacklevel=2`` so that the warning is emitted into the
70 70 caller context, and not the callee one.
71 71 - Please add **since which version** something is deprecated.
72 72
73 73 As a side note it is much easier to deal with conditional comparing to versions
74 74 numbers than ``try/except`` when a functionality change with version.
75 75
76 76 I won't list all the removed features here, but modules like ``IPython.kernel``,
77 77 which was just a shim module around ``ipykernel`` for the past 8 years have been
78 78 remove, and so many other similar things that pre-date the name **Jupyter**
79 79 itself.
80 80
81 81 We no longer need to add ``IPyhton.extensions`` to the PYTHONPATH because that is being
82 82 handled by ``load_extension``.
83 83
84 84 We are also removing ``Cythonmagic``, ``sympyprinting`` and ``rmagic`` as they are now in
85 85 other packages and no longer need to be inside IPython.
86 86
87 87
88 88 Documentation
89 89 -------------
90 90
91 91 Majority of our docstrings have now been reformatted and automatically fixed by
92 92 the experimental `VΓ©lin <https://pypi.org/project/velin/>`_ project, to conform
93 93 to numpydoc.
94 94
95 Type annotations
96 ----------------
97
98 While IPython itself is highly dynamic and can't be completely typed, many of
99 the function now have type annotation, and part of the codebase and now checked
100 by mypy.
101
95 102
96 103 Featured changes
97 104 ----------------
98 105
99 106 Here is a features list of changes in IPython 8.0. This is of course non-exhaustive.
100 107 Please note as well that many features have been added in the 7.x branch as well
101 108 (and hence why you want to read the 7.x what's new notes), in particular
102 109 features contributed by QuantStack (with respect to debugger protocol, and Xeus
103 110 Python), as well as many debugger features that I was please to implement as
104 111 part of my work at QuanSight and Sponsored by DE Shaw.
105 112
106 113 Better Tracebacks
107 114 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
108 115
109 116 The first on is the integration of the ``stack_data`` package;
110 117 which provide smarter informations in traceback; in particular it will highlight
111 118 the AST node where an error occurs which can help to quickly narrow down errors.
112 119
113 120 For example in the following snippet::
114 121
115 122 def foo(i):
116 123 x = [[[0]]]
117 124 return x[0][i][0]
118 125
119 126
120 127 def bar():
121 128 return foo(0) + foo(
122 129 1
123 130 ) + foo(2)
124 131
125 132
126 133 Calling ``bar()`` would raise an ``IndexError`` on the return line of ``foo``,
127 134 IPython 8.0 is capable of telling you, where the index error occurs::
128 135
129 136 return x[0][i][0]
130 137 ^
131 138 Autosuggestons
132 139 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
133 140
134 141 Autosuggestion is a very useful feature available in `fish <https://fishshell.com/>`__, `zsh <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z_shell>`__, and `prompt-toolkit <https://python-prompt-toolkit.readthedocs.io/en/master/pages/asking_for_input.html#auto-suggestion>`__.
135 142
136 143 `Ptpython <https://github.com/prompt-toolkit/ptpython#ptpython>`__ allows users to enable this feature in
137 144 `ptpython/config.py <https://github.com/prompt-toolkit/ptpython/blob/master/examples/ptpython_config/config.py#L90>`__.
138 145
139 146 This feature allows users to accept autosuggestions with ctrl e, ctrl f,
140 147 or right arrow as described below.
141 148
142 149 1. Start ipython
143 150
144 151 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_prompt_no_text.png
145 152
146 153 2. Run ``print("hello")``
147 154
148 155 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_print_hello_suggest.png
149 156
150 157 3. Press p to see the autosuggestion
151 158
152 159 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_print_hello_suggest.png
153 160
154 161 4. Press ctrl f, or ctrl e, or right arrow to accept the suggestion
155 162
156 163 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_print_hello.png
157 164
158 165 You can also complete word by word:
159 166
160 167 1. Run ``def say_hello(): print("hello")``
161 168
162 169 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_second_prompt.png
163 170
164 171 2. Press d to see the autosuggestion
165 172
166 173 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_d_phantom.png
167 174
168 175 3. Press alt f to accept the first word of the suggestion
169 176
170 177 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_def_phantom.png
171 178
172 179 Importantly, this feature does not interfere with tab completion:
173 180
174 181 1. After running ``def say_hello(): print("hello")``, press d
175 182
176 183 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/audo_suggest_d_phantom.png
177 184
178 185 2. Press Tab to start tab completion
179 186
180 187 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_d_completions.png
181 188
182 189 3A. Press Tab again to select the first option
183 190
184 191 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_def_completions.png
185 192
186 193 3B. Press alt f to accept to accept the first word of the suggestion
187 194
188 195 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_def_phantom.png
189 196
190 197 3C. Press ctrl f or ctrl e to accept the entire suggestion
191 198
192 199 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/auto_suggest_match_parens.png
193 200
194 201 To install a version of ipython with autosuggestions enabled, run:
195 202
196 203 ``pip install git+https://github.com/mskar/ipython@auto_suggest``
197 204
198 205 Currently, autosuggestions are only shown in the emacs or vi insert editing modes:
199 206
200 207 - The ctrl e, ctrl f, and alt f shortcuts work by default in emacs mode.
201 208 - To use these shortcuts in vi insert mode, you will have to create `custom keybindings in your config.py <https://github.com/mskar/setup/commit/2892fcee46f9f80ef7788f0749edc99daccc52f4/>`__.
202 209
203 210
204 211 Show pinfo information in ipdb using "?" and "??"
205 212 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
206 213
207 214 In IPDB, it is now possible to show the information about an object using "?"
208 215 and "??", in much the same way it can be done when using the IPython prompt::
209 216
210 217 ipdb> partial?
211 218 Init signature: partial(self, /, *args, **kwargs)
212 219 Docstring:
213 220 partial(func, *args, **keywords) - new function with partial application
214 221 of the given arguments and keywords.
215 222 File: ~/.pyenv/versions/3.8.6/lib/python3.8/functools.py
216 223 Type: type
217 224 Subclasses:
218 225
219 226 Previously, "pinfo" or "pinfo2" command had to be used for this purpose.
220 227
221 228
222 229 Autoreload 3 feature
223 230 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
224 231
225 232 Example: When an IPython session is ran with the 'autoreload' extension loaded,
226 233 you will now have the option '3' to select which means the following:
227 234
228 235 1. replicate all functionality from option 2
229 236 2. autoload all new funcs/classes/enums/globals from the module when they're added
230 237 3. autoload all newly imported funcs/classes/enums/globals from external modules
231 238
232 239 Try ``%autoreload 3`` in an IPython session after running ``%load_ext autoreload``
233 240
234 241 For more information please see unit test -
235 242 extensions/tests/test_autoreload.py : 'test_autoload_newly_added_objects'
236 243
237 244
238 245
239 246
240 247 History Range Glob feature
241 248 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
242 249
243 250 Previously, when using ``%history``, users could specify either
244 251 a range of sessions and lines, for example:
245 252
246 253 .. code-block:: python
247 254
248 255 ~8/1-~6/5 # see history from the first line of 8 sessions ago,
249 256 # to the fifth line of 6 sessions ago.``
250 257
251 258 Or users could specify a glob pattern:
252 259
253 260 .. code-block:: python
254 261
255 262 -g <pattern> # glob ALL history for the specified pattern.
256 263
257 264 However users could *not* specify both.
258 265
259 266 If a user *did* specify both a range and a glob pattern,
260 267 then the glob pattern would be used (globbing *all* history) *and the range would be ignored*.
261 268
262 269 With this enhancement, if a user specifies both a range and a glob pattern, then the glob pattern will be applied to the specified range of history.
263 270
264 271 Don't start a multi line cell with sunken parenthesis
265 272 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
266 273
267 274 From now on IPython will not ask for the next line of input when given a single
268 275 line with more closing than opening brackets. For example, this means that if
269 276 you (mis)type ']]' instead of '[]', a ``SyntaxError`` will show up, instead of
270 277 the ``...:`` prompt continuation.
271 278
272 279 IPython shell for ipdb interact
273 280 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
274 281
275 282 The ipdb ``interact`` starts an IPython shell instead of Python's built-in ``code.interact()``.
276 283
277 284 Automatic Vi prompt stripping
278 285 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
279 286
280 287 When pasting code into IPython, it will strip the leading prompt characters if
281 288 there are any. For example, you can paste the following code into the console -
282 289 it will still work, even though each line is prefixed with prompts (`In`,
283 290 `Out`)::
284 291
285 292 In [1]: 2 * 2 == 4
286 293 Out[1]: True
287 294
288 295 In [2]: print("This still works as pasted")
289 296
290 297
291 298 Previously, this was not the case for the Vi-mode prompts::
292 299
293 300 In [1]: [ins] In [13]: 2 * 2 == 4
294 301 ...: Out[13]: True
295 302 ...:
296 303 File "<ipython-input-1-727bb88eaf33>", line 1
297 304 [ins] In [13]: 2 * 2 == 4
298 305 ^
299 306 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
300 307
301 308 This is now fixed, and Vi prompt prefixes - ``[ins]`` and ``[nav]`` - are
302 309 skipped just as the normal ``In`` would be.
303 310
304 311 IPython shell can be started in the Vi mode using ``ipython
305 312 --TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode=vi``
306 313
307 314 Empty History Ranges
308 315 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
309 316
310 317 A number of magics that take history ranges can now be used with an empty
311 318 range. These magics are:
312 319
313 320 * ``%save``
314 321 * ``%load``
315 322 * ``%pastebin``
316 323 * ``%pycat``
317 324
318 325 Using them this way will make them take the history of the current session up
319 326 to the point of the magic call (such that the magic itself will not be
320 327 included).
321 328
322 329 Therefore it is now possible to save the whole history to a file using simple
323 330 ``%save <filename>``, load and edit it using ``%load`` (makes for a nice usage
324 331 when followed with :kbd:`F2`), send it to dpaste.org using ``%pastebin``, or
325 332 view the whole thing syntax-highlighted with a single ``%pycat``.
326 333
327 334 Traceback improvements
328 335 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
329 336
330 337
331 338 UPDATE THIS IN INPUT.
332 339
333 340 Previously, error tracebacks for errors happening in code cells were showing a hash, the one used for compiling the Python AST::
334 341
335 342 In [1]: def foo():
336 343 ...: return 3 / 0
337 344 ...:
338 345
339 346 In [2]: foo()
340 347 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
341 348 ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
342 349 <ipython-input-2-c19b6d9633cf> in <module>
343 350 ----> 1 foo()
344 351
345 352 <ipython-input-1-1595a74c32d5> in foo()
346 353 1 def foo():
347 354 ----> 2 return 3 / 0
348 355 3
349 356
350 357 ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
351 358
352 359 The error traceback is now correctly formatted, showing the cell number in which the error happened::
353 360
354 361 In [1]: def foo():
355 362 ...: return 3 / 0
356 363 ...:
357 364
358 In [2]: foo()
365 Input In [2]: foo()
359 366 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
360 367 ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
361 In [2], in <module>
368 input In [2], in <module>
362 369 ----> 1 foo()
363 370
364 In [1], in foo()
371 Input In [1], in foo()
365 372 1 def foo():
366 373 ----> 2 return 3 / 0
367 374
368 375 ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
369 376
370 377 Miscellaneous
371 378 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
372 379
373 380 - ``~`` is now expanded when part of a path in most magics :ghpull:`13385`
374 381 - ``%/%%timeit`` magic now adds comma every thousands to make reading long number easier :ghpull:`13379`
375 382 - ``"info"`` messages can now be customised to hide some fields :ghpull:`13343`
376 383 - ``collections.UserList`` now pretty-prints :ghpull:`13320`
377 384 - The debugger now have a persistent history, which should make it less
378 385 annoying to retype commands :ghpull:`13246`
379 386 - ``!pip`` ``!conda`` ``!cd`` or ``!ls`` are likely doing the wrong thing, we
380 387 now warn users if they use it. :ghpull:`12954`
381 388 - make ``%precision`` work for ``numpy.float64`` type :ghpull:`12902`
382 389
383 390
384 391
385 392
386 393 Numfocus Small Developer Grant
387 394 ------------------------------
388 395
389 396 To prepare for Python 3.10 we have also started working on removing reliance and
390 397 any dependency that is not Python 3.10 compatible; that include migrating our
391 398 test suite to pytest, and starting to remove nose. This also mean that the
392 399 ``iptest`` command is now gone, and all testing is via pytest.
393 400
394 401 This was in bog part thanks the NumFOCUS Small Developer grant, we were able to
395 402 allocate 4000 to hire `Nikita Kniazev @Kojoley <https://github.com/Kojoley>`__
396 403 who did a fantastic job at updating our code base, migrating to pytest, pushing
397 404 our coverage, and fixing a large number of bugs. I highly recommend contacting
398 405 them if you need help with C++ and Python projects
399 406
400 407 You can find all relevant issues and PRs with the SDG 2021 tag:
401 408
402 409 https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues?q=label%3A%22Numfocus+SDG+2021%22+
403 410
404 411 Removing support for Older Python
405 412 ---------------------------------
406 413
407 414
408 415 We are also removing support for Python up to 3.7 allowing internal code to use more
409 416 efficient ``pathlib``, and make better use of type annotations.
410 417
411 418 .. image:: ../_images/8.0/pathlib_pathlib_everywhere.jpg
412 419 :alt: "Meme image of Toy story with Woody and Buzz, with the text 'pathlib, pathlib everywhere'"
413 420
414 421
415 422 IMAGE : Pathlib, pathlib everywhere.
416 423
417 424 We have about 34 PRs only to update some logic tu update some function from managing strings to
418 425 using Pathlib.
419 426
420 427 The completer has also seen significant updates and make use of newer Jedi API
421 428 offering faster and more reliable tab completion.
422 429
423 430 For the terminal users this also enable the auto-suggestion feature, described
424 431 below, which show "ghost text" ahead of your cursor you can accept without
425 432 having to press the tab key or ask the completer to suggest completions.
426 433
427 434
428 435
429 436 .. DO NOT EDIT THIS LINE BEFORE RELEASE. FEATURE INSERTION POINT.
430 437
431 438 As a reminder, IPython master has diverged from the 7.x branch, thus master may
432 439 have more feature and API changes.
433 440
434 441 Backwards incompatible changes
435 442 ------------------------------
436 443
437 444 .. DO NOT EDIT THIS LINE BEFORE RELEASE. INCOMPAT INSERTION POINT.
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