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1 1 =============
2 2 0.13 Series
3 3 =============
4 4
5 5 Release 0.13
6 6 ============
7 7
8 8 IPython 0.13 contains several major new features, as well as a large amount of
9 9 bug and regression fixes. The previous version (0.12) was released on December
10 10 19 2011, so this release cycle was roughly 6 months long, during which we
11 11 closed a total of 373 pull requests and 742 issues, with contributions from 62
12 12 authors comprising over 1740 commits.
13 13
14 14 The amount of work included in this release is so large, that we can only cover
15 15 here the main highlights; please see our :ref:`detailed release statistics
16 16 <issues_list_013>` for links to every issue and pull request closed on GitHub.
17 17
18 18
19 19 Major Notebook improvements: new user interface and more
20 20 --------------------------------------------------------
21 21
22 22 The IPython Notebook, which has proven since its release to be wildly popular,
23 23 has seen a massive amount of work in this release cycle, leading to a
24 24 significantly improved user experience as well as many new features.
25 25
26 26 The first user-visible change is a reorganization of the user interface; the
27 27 left panel has been removed and was replaced by a real menu system and a
28 28 toolbar with icons. Both the toolbar and the header above the menu can be
29 29 collapsed to leave an unobstructed working area:
30 30
31 31 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_spectrogram.png
32 32 :width: 460px
33 33 :alt: New user interface for Notebook
34 34 :align: center
35 35 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_spectrogram.png
36 36
37 37 The notebook handles very long outputs much better than before (this was a
38 38 serious usability issue when running processes that generated massive amounts
39 39 of output). Now, in the presence of outputs longer than ~100 lines, the
40 40 notebook will automatically collapse to a scrollable area and the entire left
41 41 part of this area controls the display: one click in this area will expand the
42 42 output region completely, and a double-click will hide it completely. This
43 43 figure shows both the scrolled and hidden modes:
44 44
45 45 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_long_out.png
46 46 :width: 460px
47 47 :alt: Scrolling and hiding of long output in the notebook.
48 48 :align: center
49 49 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_long_out.png
50 50
51 51 .. note::
52 52
53 53 The auto-folding of long outputs is disabled in Firefox due to bugs in its
54 54 scrolling behavior. See :ghpull:`2047` for details.
55 55
56 56 Uploading notebooks to the dashboard is now easier: in addition to drag and
57 57 drop (which can be finicky sometimes), you can now click on the upload text and
58 58 use a regular file dialog box to select notebooks to upload. Furthermore, the
59 59 notebook dashboard now auto-refreshes its contents and offers buttons to shut
60 60 down any running kernels (:ghpull:`1739`):
61 61
62 62 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_dashboard.png
63 63 :width: 460px
64 64 :alt: Improved dashboard
65 65 :align: center
66 66 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_dashboard.png
67 67
68 68
69 69 Cluster management
70 70 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
71 71
72 72 The notebook dashboard can now also start and stop clusters, and you can
73 73 override the number of engines started. There is a new tab in the dashboard
74 74 user interface:
75 75
76 76 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_dashboard_cluster.png
77 77 :width: 460px
78 78 :alt: Cluster management from the notebook dashboard
79 79 :align: center
80 80 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_dashboard_cluster.png
81 81
82 82 This tab allows you, for each profile you have configured, to start and stop a
83 83 cluster (and optionally override the default number of engines corresponding to
84 84 that configuration). While this hides all error reporting, once you have a
85 85 configuration that you know works smoothly, it is a very convenient interface
86 86 for controlling your parallel resources.
87 87
88 88
89 89 New notebook format
90 90 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
91 91
92 92 The notebooks saved now use version 3 of our format, which supports heading
93 93 levels as well as the concept of 'raw' text cells that are not rendered as
94 94 Markdown. These will be useful with converters_ we are developing, to pass raw
95 95 markup (say LaTeX). That conversion code is still under heavy development and
96 96 not quite ready for prime time, but we welcome help on this front so that we
97 97 can merge it for full production use as soon as possible.
98 98
99 99 .. _converters: https://github.com/ipython/nbconvert
100 100
101 101 .. note::
102 102
103 103 v3 notebooks can *not* be read by older versions of IPython, but we provide
104 104 a `simple script`_ that you can use in case you need to export a v3
105 105 notebook to share with a v2 user.
106 106
107 107 .. _simple script: https://gist.github.com/1935808
108 108
109 109
110 110 JavaScript refactoring
111 111 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
112 112
113 113 All the client-side JavaScript has been decoupled to ease reuse of parts of the
114 114 machinery without having to build a full-blown notebook. This will make it much
115 115 easier to communicate with an IPython kernel from existing web pages and to
116 116 integrate single cells into other sites, without loading the full notebook
117 117 document-like UI. :ghpull:`1711`.
118 118
119 119 This refactoring also enables the possibility of writing dynamic javascript
120 120 widgets that are returned from Python code and that present an interactive view
121 121 to the user, with callbacks in Javascript executing calls to the Kernel. This
122 122 will enable many interactive elements to be added by users in notebooks.
123 123
124 124 An example of this capability has been provided as a proof of concept in
125 125 :file:`docs/examples/widgets` that lets you directly communicate with one or more
126 126 parallel engines, acting as a mini-console for parallel debugging and
127 127 introspection.
128 128
129 129
130 130 Improved tooltips
131 131 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
132 132
133 133 The object tooltips have gained some new functionality. By pressing tab several
134 134 times, you can expand them to see more of a docstring, keep them visible as you
135 135 fill in a function's parameters, or transfer the information to the pager at the
136 136 bottom of the screen. For the details, look at the example notebook
137 137 :file:`01_notebook_introduction.ipynb`.
138 138
139 139 .. figure:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_tooltip.png
140 140 :width: 460px
141 141 :alt: Improved tooltips in the notebook.
142 142 :align: center
143 143 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_tooltip.png
144 144
145 145 The new notebook tooltips.
146 146
147 147 Other improvements to the Notebook
148 148 ----------------------------------
149 149
150 150 * The notebook pager (the area at the bottom) is now resizeable by dragging its
151 151 divider handle, a feature that had been requested many times by just about
152 152 anyone who had used the notebook system. :ghpull:`1705`.
153 153
154 154 * If a notebook directory is specified with ``--notebook-dir`` (or with the
155 155 corresponding configuration flag ``NotebookManager.notebook_dir``), all
156 156 kernels start in this directory.
157 157
158 158 * It is now possible to open notebooks directly from the command line; for
159 159 example: ``ipython notebook path/`` will automatically set ``path/`` as the
160 160 notebook directory, and ``ipython notebook path/foo.ipynb`` will further
161 161 start with the ``foo.ipynb`` notebook opened. :ghpull:`1686`.
162 162
163 163 * Fix codemirror clearing of cells with ``Ctrl-Z``; :ghpull:`1965`.
164 164
165 165 * Text (markdown) cells now line wrap correctly in the notebook, making them
166 166 much easier to edit :ghpull:`1330`.
167 167
168 168 * PNG and JPEG figures returned from plots can be interactively resized in the
169 169 notebook, by dragging them from their lower left corner. :ghpull:`1832`.
170 170
171 171 * Clear In[] prompt numbers on "Clear All Output". For more
172 172 version-control-friendly `.ipynb` files, this strips the `In[]` prompt
173 173 numbers when doing a "Clear all output". This reduces the amount of noise in
174 174 commit-to-commit diffs that would otherwise show the (highly variable) prompt
175 175 number changes. :ghpull:`1621`.
176 176
177 177 * The notebook server now requires *two* consecutive ``Ctrl-C`` to stop within 5
178 178 seconds (or an interactive confirmation). This makes it less likely that you
179 179 will accidentally kill a long-running server by typing ``Ctrl-C`` in the
180 180 wrong terminal. :ghpull:`1609`.
181 181
182 182 * Using ``Ctrl-S`` (or ``Cmd-S`` on a Mac) actually saves the notebook rather
183 183 than providing the fairly useless browser html save dialog. :ghpull:`1334`.
184 184
185 185 * Allow accessing local files from the notebook (in urls), by serving any local
186 186 file as the url ``files/<relativepath>``. This makes it possible to, for
187 187 example, embed local images in a notebook. :ghpull:`1211`.
188 188
189 189
190 190 Cell magics
191 191 -----------
192 192
193 193 We have completely refactored the magic system, finally moving the magic
194 194 objects to standalone, independent objects instead of being the mixin class
195 195 we'd had since the beginning of IPython (:ghpull:`1732`). Now, a separate base
196 196 class is provided in :class:`IPython.core.magic.Magics` that users can subclass
197 197 to create their own magics. Decorators are also provided to create magics from
198 198 simple functions without the need for object orientation.
199 199
200 200 All builtin magics now exist in a few subclasses that group together related
201 201 functionality, and the new :mod:`IPython.core.magics` package has been created
202 202 to organize this into smaller files.
203 203
204 204 This cleanup was the last major piece of deep refactoring needed from the
205 205 original 2001 codebase.
206 206
207 207 We have also introduced a new type of magic function, prefixed with `%%`
208 208 instead of `%`, which operates at the whole-cell level. A cell magic receives
209 209 two arguments: the line it is called on (like a line magic) and the body of the
210 210 cell below it.
211 211
212 212 Cell magics are most natural in the notebook, but they also work in the
213 213 terminal and qt console, with the usual approach of using a blank line to
214 214 signal cell termination.
215 215
216 216 For example, to time the execution of several statements::
217 217
218 218 %%timeit x = 0 # setup
219 219 for i in range(100000):
220 220 x += i**2
221 221
222 222 This is particularly useful to integrate code in another language, and cell
223 223 magics already exist for shell scripts, Cython, R and Octave. Using ``%%script
224 224 /usr/bin/foo``, you can run a cell in any interpreter that accepts code via
225 225 stdin.
226 226
227 227 Another handy cell magic makes it easy to write short text files: ``%%file
228 228 ~/save/to/here.txt``.
229 229
230 230 The following cell magics are now included by default; all those that use
231 231 special interpreters (Perl, Ruby, bash, etc., assume you have the requisite
232 232 interpreter installed):
233 233
234 234 * ``%%!``: run cell body with the underlying OS shell; this is similar to
235 235 prefixing every line in the cell with ``!``.
236 236
237 237 * ``%%bash``: run cell body under bash.
238 238
239 239 * ``%%capture``: capture the output of the code in the cell (and stderr as
240 240 well). Useful to run codes that produce too much output that you don't even
241 241 want scrolled.
242 242
243 243 * ``%%file``: save cell body as a file.
244 244
245 245 * ``%%perl``: run cell body using Perl.
246 246
247 247 * ``%%prun``: run cell body with profiler (cell extension of ``%prun``).
248 248
249 249 * ``%%python3``: run cell body using Python 3.
250 250
251 251 * ``%%ruby``: run cell body using Ruby.
252 252
253 253 * ``%%script``: run cell body with the script specified in the first line.
254 254
255 255 * ``%%sh``: run cell body using sh.
256 256
257 257 * ``%%sx``: capture cell output running the code with the system shell (cell
258 258 extension of ``%sx``).
259 259
260 260 * ``%%system``: run cell with system shell (``%%!`` is an alias to this).
261 261
262 262 * ``%%timeit``: time the execution of the cell (extension of ``%timeit``).
263 263
264 264 This is what some of the script-related magics look like in action:
265 265
266 266 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_script_cells.png
267 267 :width: 460px
268 268 :alt: Cluster management from the notebook dashboard
269 269 :align: center
270 270 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_script_cells.png
271 271
272 272 In addition, we have also a number of :ref:`extensions <extensions_overview>`
273 273 that provide specialized magics. These typically require additional software
274 274 to run and must be manually loaded via ``%load_ext <extension name>``, but are
275 275 extremely useful. The following extensions are provided:
276 276
277 Cython magics (extension :ref:`octavemagic <extensions_cythonmagic>`)
277 **Cython magics (extension :ref:`cythonmagic <extensions_cythonmagic>`)**
278 278 This extension provides magics to automatically build and compile Python
279 279 extension modules using the Cython_ language. You must install Cython
280 280 separately, as well as a C compiler, for this to work. The examples
281 281 directory in the source distribution ships with a full notebook
282 282 demonstrating these capabilities:
283 283
284 284 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_cythonmagic.png
285 285 :width: 460px
286 286 :alt: Cython magic
287 287 :align: center
288 288 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_cythonmagic.png
289 289
290 290 .. _cython: http://cython.org
291 291
292 Octave magics (extension :ref:`octavemagic <extensions_octavemagic>`)
292 **Octave magics (extension :ref:`octavemagic <extensions_octavemagic>`)**
293 293 This extension provides several magics that support calling code written in
294 294 the Octave_ language for numerical computing. You can execute single-lines
295 295 or whole blocks of Octave code, capture both output and figures inline
296 296 (just like matplotlib plots), and have variables automatically converted
297 297 between the two languages. To use this extension, you must have Octave
298 298 installed as well as the oct2py_ and h5py_ packages. The examples
299 299 directory in the source distribution ships with a full notebook
300 300 demonstrating these capabilities:
301 301
302 302 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_octavemagic.png
303 303 :width: 460px
304 304 :alt: Octave magic
305 305 :align: center
306 306 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_octavemagic.png
307 307
308 308 .. _octave: http://www.gnu.org/software/octave
309 309 .. _oct2py: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/oct2py
310 310 .. _h5py: http://code.google.com/p/h5py
311 311
312
313 R magics (extension :ref:`rmagic <extensions_rmagic>`)
312 **R magics (extension :ref:`rmagic <extensions_rmagic>`)**
314 313 This extension provides several magics that support calling code written in
315 314 the R_ language for statistical data analysis. You can execute
316 315 single-lines or whole blocks of R code, capture both output and figures
317 316 inline (just like matplotlib plots), and have variables automatically
318 317 converted between the two languages. To use this extension, you must have
319 318 R installed as well as the rpy2_ package that bridges Python and R. The
320 319 examples directory in the source distribution ships with a full notebook
321 320 demonstrating these capabilities:
322 321
323 322 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_rmagic.png
324 323 :width: 460px
325 324 :alt: R magic
326 325 :align: center
327 326 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_notebook_rmagic.png
328 327
329 328 .. _R: http://www.r-project.org
330 329 .. _rpy2: http://rpy.sourceforge.net/rpy2.html
331 330
332 331
333 332 Tab completer improvements
334 333 --------------------------
335 334
336 335 Useful tab-completion based on live inspection of objects is one of the most
337 336 popular features of IPython. To make this process even more user-friendly, the
338 337 completers of both the Qt console and the Notebook have been reworked.
339 338
340 339 The Qt console comes with a new ncurses-like tab completer, activated by
341 340 default, which lets you cycle through the available completions by pressing tab,
342 341 or select a completion with the arrow keys (:ghpull:`1851`).
343 342
344 343 .. figure:: ../_static/ipy_013_qtconsole_completer.png
345 344 :width: 460px
346 345 :alt: ncurses-like completer, with highlighted selection.
347 346 :align: center
348 347 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_qtconsole_completer.png
349 348
350 349 The new improved Qt console's ncurses-like completer allows to easily
351 350 navigate thought long list of completions.
352 351
353 352 In the notebook, completions are now sourced both from object introspection and
354 353 analysis of surrounding code, so limited completions can be offered for
355 354 variables defined in the current cell, or while the kernel is busy
356 355 (:ghpull:`1711`).
357 356
358 357
359 358 We have implemented a new configurable flag to control tab completion on
360 359 modules that provide the ``__all__`` attribute::
361 360
362 361 IPCompleter.limit_to__all__= Boolean
363 362
364 363 This instructs the completer to honor ``__all__`` for the completion.
365 364 Specifically, when completing on ``object.<tab>``, if True: only those names
366 365 in ``obj.__all__`` will be included. When False [default]: the ``__all__``
367 366 attribute is ignored. :ghpull:`1529`.
368 367
369 368
370 369 Improvements to the Qt console
371 370 ------------------------------
372 371
373 * changes for easier integration into other projects such as Spyder_.
372 The Qt console continues to receive improvements and refinements, despite the
373 fact that it is by now a fairly mature and robust component. Lots of small
374 polish has gone into it, here are a few highlights:
375
376 * A number of changes were made to the underlying code for easier integration
377 into other projects such as Spyder_ (:ghpull:`2007`, :ghpull:`2024`).
374 378
375 379 * Improved menus with a new Magic menu that is organized by magic groups (this
376 380 was made possible by the reorganization of the magic system
377 381 internals). :ghpull:`1782`.
378 382
379 383 * Allow for restarting kernels without clearing the qtconsole, while leaving a
380 384 visible indication that the kernel has restarted. :ghpull:`1681`.
381 385
382 * Allow the native display of jpeg image in the qtconsole. :ghpull:`1643`.
386 * Allow the native display of jpeg images in the qtconsole. :ghpull:`1643`.
383 387
384 388 .. _spyder: https://code.google.com/p/spyderlib
385 389
386 390
387 391
388 392 Parallel
389 393 --------
390 394
391 395 The parallel tools have been improved and fine-tuned on multiple fronts. Now,
392 396 the creation of an :class:`IPython.parallel.Client` object automatically
393 397 activates a line and cell magic function ``px`` that sends its code to all the
394 398 engines. Further magics can be easily created with the :meth:`.Client.activate`
395 399 method, to conveniently execute code on any subset of engines. :ghpull:`1893`.
396 400
397 401 The ``%%px`` cell magic can also be given an optional targets argument, as well
398 402 as a ``--out`` argument for storing its output.
399 403
400 404 A new magic has also been added, ``%pxconfig``, that lets you configure various
401 405 defaults of the parallel magics. As usual, type ``%pxconfig?`` for details.
402 406
403 407 The exception reporting in parallel contexts has been improved to be easier to
404 408 read. Now, IPython directly reports the remote exceptions without showing any
405 409 of the internal execution parts:
406 410
407 411 .. image:: ../_static/ipy_013_par_tb.png
408 412 :width: 460px
409 413 :alt: Improved parallel exceptions.
410 414 :align: center
411 415 :target: ../_static/ipy_013_par_tb.png
412 416
413
414 417 The parallel tools now default to using ``NoDB`` as the storage backend for
415 418 intermediate results. This means that the default usage case will have a
416 419 significantly reduced memory footprint, though certain advanced features are
417 420 not available with this backend. For more details, see :ref:`parallel_db`.
418 421
419 422 The parallel magics now display all output, so you can do parallel plotting or
420 423 other actions with complex display. The ``px`` magic has now both line and cell
421 424 modes, and in cell mode finer control has been added about how to collate
422 425 output from multiple engines. :ghpull:`1768`.
423 426
424 Incremental improvements to SSH launchers:
427 There have also been incremental improvements to the SSH launchers:
425 428
426 429 * add to_send/fetch steps for moving connection files around.
427 430
428 431 * add SSHProxyEngineSetLauncher, for invoking to `ipcluster engines` on a
429 432 remote host. This can be used to start a set of engines via PBS/SGE/MPI
430 433 *remotely*.
431 434
432 435 This makes the SSHLauncher usable on machines without shared filesystems.
433
434 When sending files, the destination directory must *already exist* - that is,
435 `ipython profile create` may be necessary on the remote system, before the
436 security dir exists for putting the connection file the first
437 time. :ghpull:`1634`.
438 436
439 Add sugar methods/properties to AsyncResult that are generically useful
440 (:ghpull:`1548`):
437 A number of 'sugar' methods/properties were added to AsyncResult that are
438 quite useful (:ghpull:`1548`) for everday work:
441 439
442 440 * ``ar.wall_time`` = received - submitted
443 441 * ``ar.serial_time`` = sum of serial computation time
444 442 * ``ar.elapsed`` = time since submission (wall_time if done)
445 443 * ``ar.progress`` = (int) number of sub-tasks that have completed
446 444 * ``len(ar)`` = # of tasks
447 445 * ``ar.wait_interactive()``: prints progress
448 446
449 Added :meth:`.Client.spin_thread` / :meth:`~.Client.stop_spin_thread` for running
450 spin in a background thread, to keep zmq queue clear. This can be used to
451 ensure that timing information is as accurate as possible (at the cost of
447 Added :meth:`.Client.spin_thread` / :meth:`~.Client.stop_spin_thread` for
448 running spin in a background thread, to keep zmq queue clear. This can be used
449 to ensure that timing information is as accurate as possible (at the cost of
452 450 having a background thread active).
453 451
454 452 Set TaskScheduler.hwm default to 1 instead of 0. 1 has more
455 453 predictable/intuitive behavior, if often slower, and thus a more logical
456 454 default. Users whose workloads require maximum throughput and are largely
457 455 homogeneous in time per task can make the optimization themselves, but now the
458 456 behavior will be less surprising to new users. :ghpull:`1294`.
459 457
460 458
461 459 Kernel/Engine unification
462 460 -------------------------
463 461
464 :ghpull:`1640`
465
466 Add :func:`IPython.embed_kernel()` as a public API.
467 Embedding an IPython kernel in an application is useful when you want to use
468 IPython.embed() but don't have a terminal attached on stdin and stdout.
469
470 :func:`IPython.parallel.bind_kernel` allows you to promote Engines to listening Kernels,
471 and connect QtConsoles directly to an Engine and debug it directly.
472
473 This also means that Engines are now fully IPython, allowing access to magics,
474 etc. in your parallel execution.
475
462 This is mostly work 'under the hood', but it is actually a *major* achievement
463 for the project that has deep implications in the long term: at last, we have
464 unified the main object that execute as the user's interactive shell (which
465 we refer to as the *IPython kernel*) with the objects that run in all the
466 worker nodes of the parallel computing facilities (the *IPython engines*).
467 Ever since the first implementation of IPython's parallel code back in 2006, we
468 had wanted to have these two roles be played by the same machinery, but a
469 number of technical reasons had prevented that from being true.
470
471 In this release we have now merged them, and this has a number of important
472 consequences:
473
474 * It is possible to connect any of our clients (qtconsole or terminal console)
475 to any individual parallel engine, with the *exact* behavior of working at a
476 'regular' IPython console/qtconsole. This makes debugging, plotting, etc. in
477 parallel scenarios vastly easier.
478
479 * Parallel engines can always execute arbitrary 'IPython code', that is, code
480 that has magics, shell extensions, etc. In combination with the ``%%px``
481 magics, it is thus extremely natural for example to send to all engines a
482 block of Cython or R code to be executed via the new Cython and R magics. For
483 example, this snippet would send the R block to all active engines in a
484 cluster::
485
486 %%px
487 %%R
488 ... R code goes here
489
490 * It is possible to embed not only an interactive shell with the
491 :func:`IPython.embed` call as always, but now you can also embed a *kernel*
492 with :func:``IPython.embed_kernel()`. Embedding an IPython kernel in an
493 application is useful when you want to use :func:`IPython.embed` but don't
494 have a terminal attached on stdin and stdout.
495
496 * The new :func:`IPython.parallel.bind_kernel` allows you to promote Engines to
497 listening Kernels, and connect QtConsoles directly to an Engine and debug it
498 directly.
499
500 In addition, having a single core object through our entire architecture also
501 makes the project conceptually cleaner, easier to maintain and more robust.
502 This took a lot of work to get in place, but we are thrilled to have this major
503 piece of architecture finally where we'd always wanted it to be.
504
476 505
477 506 Official Public API
478 507 -------------------
479 508
480 509 We have begun organizing our API for easier public use, with an eye towards an
481 510 official IPython 1.0 release which will firmly maintain this API compatible for
482 511 its entire lifecycle. There is now an :mod:`IPython.display` module that
483 512 aggregates all display routines, and the :mod:`IPython.config` namespace has
484 513 all public configuration tools. We will continue improving our public API
485 514 layout so that users only need to import names one level deeper than the main
486 515 ``IPython`` package to access all public namespaces.
487 516
488 517
489 518 IPython notebook file icons
490 519 ---------------------------
491 520
492 521 The directory ``docs/resources`` in the source distribution contains SVG and
493 522 PNG versions of our file icons, as well as an ``Info.plist.example`` file with
494 523 instructions to install them on Mac OSX. This is a first draft of our icons,
495 524 and we encourage contributions from users with graphic talent to improve them
496 525 in the future:
497 526
498 527 .. image:: ../../resources/ipynb_icon_128x128.png
499 528 :alt: IPython notebook file icon.
500 529
501 530
502 531 New top-level `locate` command
503 532 ------------------------------
504 533
505 534 Add `locate` entry points; these would be useful for quickly locating IPython
506 535 directories and profiles from other (non-Python) applications. :ghpull:`1762`.
507 536
508 537 Examples::
509 538
510 539 $> ipython locate
511 540 /Users/me/.ipython
512 541
513 542 $> ipython locate profile foo
514 543 /Users/me/.ipython/profile_foo
515 544
516 545 $> ipython locate profile
517 546 /Users/me/.ipython/profile_default
518 547
519 548 $> ipython locate profile dne
520 549 [ProfileLocate] Profile u'dne' not found.
521 550
522 551
523 552 Other new features and improvements
524 553 -----------------------------------
525 554
526 555 * **%install_ext**: A new magic function to install an IPython extension from
527 556 a URL. E.g. ``%install_ext
528 557 https://bitbucket.org/birkenfeld/ipython-physics/raw/default/physics.py``.
529 558
530 559 * The ``%loadpy`` magic is no longer restricted to Python files, and has been
531 560 renamed ``%load``. The old name remains as an alias.
532 561
533 562 * New command line arguments will help external programs find IPython folders:
534 563 ``ipython locate`` finds the user's IPython directory, and ``ipython locate
535 564 profile foo`` finds the folder for the 'foo' profile (if it exists).
536 565
537 566 * The :envvar:`IPYTHON_DIR` environment variable, introduced in the Great
538 567 Reorganization of 0.11 and existing only in versions 0.11-0.13, has been
539 568 deprecated. As described in :ghpull:`1167`, the complexity and confusion of
540 569 migrating to this variable is not worth the aesthetic improvement. Please use
541 570 the historical :envvar:`IPYTHONDIR` environment variable instead.
542 571
543 572 * The default value of *interactivity* passed from
544 573 :meth:`~IPython.core.interactiveshell.InteractiveShell.run_cell` to
545 574 :meth:`~IPython.core.interactiveshell.InteractiveShell.run_ast_nodes`
546 575 is now configurable.
547 576
548 577 * New ``%alias_magic`` function to conveniently create aliases of existing
549 578 magics, if you prefer to have shorter names for personal use.
550 579
551 580 * We ship unminified versions of the JavaScript libraries we use, to better
552 581 comply with Debian's packaging policies.
553 582
554 583 * Simplify the information presented by ``obj?/obj??`` to eliminate a few
555 584 redundant fields when possible. :ghpull:`2038`.
556 585
557 586 * Improved continuous integration for IPython. We now have automated test runs
558 587 on `Shining Panda <https://jenkins.shiningpanda.com/ipython>`_ and `Travis-CI
559 588 <http://travis-ci.org/#!/ipython/ipython>`_, as well as `Tox support
560 589 <http://tox.testrun.org>`_.
561 590
562 591 * The `vim-ipython`_ functionality (externally developed) has been updated to
563 592 the latest version.
564 593
565 594 .. _vim-ipython: https://github.com/ivanov/vim-ipython
566 595
567 596 * The ``%save`` magic now has a ``-f`` flag to force overwriting, which makes
568 597 it much more usable in the notebook where it is not possible to reply to
569 598 interactive questions from the kernel. :ghpull:`1937`.
570 599
571 600 * Use dvipng to format sympy.Matrix, enabling display of matrices in the Qt
572 601 console with the sympy printing extension. :ghpull:`1861`.
573 602
574 603 * Our messaging protocol now has a reasonable test suite, helping ensure that
575 604 we don't accidentally deviate from the spec and possibly break third-party
576 605 applications that may have been using it. We encourage users to contribute
577 606 more stringent tests to this part of the test suite. :ghpull:`1627`.
578 607
579 608 * Use LaTeX to display, on output, various built-in types with the SymPy
580 609 printing extension. :ghpull:`1399`.
581 610
582 611 * Add Gtk3 event loop integration and example. :ghpull:`1588`.
583 612
584 613 * ``clear_output`` improvements, which allow things like progress bars and other
585 614 simple animations to work well in the notebook (:ghpull:`1563`):
586 615
587 616 * `clear_output()` clears the line, even in terminal IPython, the QtConsole
588 617 and plain Python as well, by printing `\r` to streams.
589 618
590 619 * `clear_output()` avoids the flicker in the notebook by adding a delay,
591 620 and firing immediately upon the next actual display message.
592 621
593 622 * `display_javascript` hides its `output_area` element, so using display to
594 623 run a bunch of javascript doesn't result in ever-growing vertical space.
595 624
596 625 * Add simple support for running inside a virtualenv. While this doesn't
597 626 supplant proper installation (as users should do), it helps ad-hoc calling of
598 627 IPython from inside a virtualenv. :ghpull:`1388`.
599 628
600 629
601 630 Major Bugs fixed
602 631 ----------------
603 632
604 633 In this cycle, we have :ref:`closed over 740 issues <issues_list_013>`, but a
605 634 few major ones merit special mention:
606 635
607 636 * The ``%pastebin`` magic has been updated to point to gist.github.com, since
608 637 unfortunately http://paste.pocoo.org has closed down. We also added a -d flag
609 638 for the user to provide a gist description string. :ghpull:`1670`.
610 639
611 640 * Fix ``%paste`` that would reject certain valid inputs. :ghpull:`1258`.
612 641
613 642 * Fix sending and receiving of Numpy structured arrays (those with composite
614 643 dtypes, often used as recarrays). :ghpull:`2034`.
615 644
616 645 * Reconnect when the websocket connection closes unexpectedly. :ghpull:`1577`.
617 646
618 647 * Fix truncated representation of objects in the debugger by showing at least
619 648 80 characters' worth of information. :ghpull:`1793`.
620 649
621 650 * Fix logger to be Unicode-aware: logging could crash ipython if there was
622 651 unicode in the input. :ghpull:`1792`.
623 652
624 653 * Fix images missing from XML/SVG export in the Qt console. :ghpull:`1449`.
625 654
626 655 * Fix deepreload on Python 3. :ghpull:`1625`, as well as having a much cleaner
627 656 and more robust implementation of deepreload in general. :ghpull:`1457`.
628 657
629 658
630 659 Backwards incompatible changes
631 660 ------------------------------
632 661
633 662 * The exception :exc:`IPython.core.error.TryNext` previously accepted
634 663 arguments and keyword arguments to be passed to the next implementation
635 664 of the hook. This feature was removed as it made error message propagation
636 665 difficult and violated the principle of loose coupling.
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