##// END OF EJS Templates
Shaperilio/autoreload verbosity (#13774)...
Shaperilio/autoreload verbosity (#13774) Worked on three things: 1. More descriptive parameter names for `%autoreload`; `now`, `off`, `explicit`, `all`, `complete`. (This last one could probably use a better name, but I couldn't think of anything better based on the message in 1d3018a93e98ad55f41d4419f835b738de80e1b7) 2. New optional arguments for `%autoreload` allow displaying the names of modules that are reloaded. Use `--print` or `-p` to use `print` statements, or `--log` / `-l` to log at `INFO` level. 3. `%aimport` can parse whitelist/blacklist modules on the same line, e.g. `%aimport os, -math` now works. `%autoreload` and will also now raise a `ValueError` if the parameter is invalid. I suppose a bit more verification could be done for input to `%aimport`....

File last commit:

r27747:f5d4e0ac
r28121:0725b4e7 merge
Show More
contexts.py
61 lines | 1.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""Miscellaneous context managers.
"""
import warnings
# Copyright (c) IPython Development Team.
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
class preserve_keys(object):
"""Preserve a set of keys in a dictionary.
Upon entering the context manager the current values of the keys
will be saved. Upon exiting, the dictionary will be updated to
restore the original value of the preserved keys. Preserved keys
which did not exist when entering the context manager will be
deleted.
Examples
--------
>>> d = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
>>> with preserve_keys(d, 'b', 'c', 'd'):
... del d['a']
... del d['b'] # will be reset to 2
... d['c'] = None # will be reset to 3
... d['d'] = 4 # will be deleted
... d['e'] = 5
... print(sorted(d.items()))
...
[('c', None), ('d', 4), ('e', 5)]
>>> print(sorted(d.items()))
[('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('e', 5)]
"""
def __init__(self, dictionary, *keys):
self.dictionary = dictionary
self.keys = keys
def __enter__(self):
# Actions to perform upon exiting.
to_delete = []
to_update = {}
d = self.dictionary
for k in self.keys:
if k in d:
to_update[k] = d[k]
else:
to_delete.append(k)
self.to_delete = to_delete
self.to_update = to_update
def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
d = self.dictionary
for k in self.to_delete:
d.pop(k, None)
d.update(self.to_update)