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Arg, forgot the most important:...
Arg, forgot the most important: Put the pandoc version test under the pandoc_available test. This avoids raising an exception when the module is imported: the exception is only raised on pandoc(...) function calls. It also prints warnings if pandoc is not found at import time and if the version does not meet the expected one.

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inputhookqt4.py
180 lines | 6.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Qt4's inputhook support function
Author: Christian Boos
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2011 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import os
import signal
import threading
from IPython.core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell
from IPython.external.qt_for_kernel import QtCore, QtGui
from IPython.lib.inputhook import allow_CTRL_C, ignore_CTRL_C, stdin_ready
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Module Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
got_kbdint = False
sigint_timer = None
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def create_inputhook_qt4(mgr, app=None):
"""Create an input hook for running the Qt4 application event loop.
Parameters
----------
mgr : an InputHookManager
app : Qt Application, optional.
Running application to use. If not given, we probe Qt for an
existing application object, and create a new one if none is found.
Returns
-------
A pair consisting of a Qt Application (either the one given or the
one found or created) and a inputhook.
Notes
-----
We use a custom input hook instead of PyQt4's default one, as it
interacts better with the readline packages (issue #481).
The inputhook function works in tandem with a 'pre_prompt_hook'
which automatically restores the hook as an inputhook in case the
latter has been temporarily disabled after having intercepted a
KeyboardInterrupt.
"""
if app is None:
app = QtCore.QCoreApplication.instance()
if app is None:
app = QtGui.QApplication([" "])
# Re-use previously created inputhook if any
ip = InteractiveShell.instance()
if hasattr(ip, '_inputhook_qt4'):
return app, ip._inputhook_qt4
# Otherwise create the inputhook_qt4/preprompthook_qt4 pair of
# hooks (they both share the got_kbdint flag)
def inputhook_qt4():
"""PyOS_InputHook python hook for Qt4.
Process pending Qt events and if there's no pending keyboard
input, spend a short slice of time (50ms) running the Qt event
loop.
As a Python ctypes callback can't raise an exception, we catch
the KeyboardInterrupt and temporarily deactivate the hook,
which will let a *second* CTRL+C be processed normally and go
back to a clean prompt line.
"""
try:
allow_CTRL_C()
app = QtCore.QCoreApplication.instance()
if not app: # shouldn't happen, but safer if it happens anyway...
return 0
app.processEvents(QtCore.QEventLoop.AllEvents, 300)
if not stdin_ready():
# Generally a program would run QCoreApplication::exec()
# from main() to enter and process the Qt event loop until
# quit() or exit() is called and the program terminates.
#
# For our input hook integration, we need to repeatedly
# enter and process the Qt event loop for only a short
# amount of time (say 50ms) to ensure that Python stays
# responsive to other user inputs.
#
# A naive approach would be to repeatedly call
# QCoreApplication::exec(), using a timer to quit after a
# short amount of time. Unfortunately, QCoreApplication
# emits an aboutToQuit signal before stopping, which has
# the undesirable effect of closing all modal windows.
#
# To work around this problem, we instead create a
# QEventLoop and call QEventLoop::exec(). Other than
# setting some state variables which do not seem to be
# used anywhere, the only thing QCoreApplication adds is
# the aboutToQuit signal which is precisely what we are
# trying to avoid.
timer = QtCore.QTimer()
event_loop = QtCore.QEventLoop()
timer.timeout.connect(event_loop.quit)
while not stdin_ready():
timer.start(50)
event_loop.exec_()
timer.stop()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
global got_kbdint, sigint_timer
ignore_CTRL_C()
got_kbdint = True
mgr.clear_inputhook()
# This generates a second SIGINT so the user doesn't have to
# press CTRL+C twice to get a clean prompt.
#
# Since we can't catch the resulting KeyboardInterrupt here
# (because this is a ctypes callback), we use a timer to
# generate the SIGINT after we leave this callback.
#
# Unfortunately this doesn't work on Windows (SIGINT kills
# Python and CTRL_C_EVENT doesn't work).
if(os.name == 'posix'):
pid = os.getpid()
if(not sigint_timer):
sigint_timer = threading.Timer(.01, os.kill,
args=[pid, signal.SIGINT] )
sigint_timer.start()
else:
print("\nKeyboardInterrupt - Ctrl-C again for new prompt")
except: # NO exceptions are allowed to escape from a ctypes callback
ignore_CTRL_C()
from traceback import print_exc
print_exc()
print("Got exception from inputhook_qt4, unregistering.")
mgr.clear_inputhook()
finally:
allow_CTRL_C()
return 0
def preprompthook_qt4(ishell):
"""'pre_prompt_hook' used to restore the Qt4 input hook
(in case the latter was temporarily deactivated after a
CTRL+C)
"""
global got_kbdint, sigint_timer
if(sigint_timer):
sigint_timer.cancel()
sigint_timer = None
if got_kbdint:
mgr.set_inputhook(inputhook_qt4)
got_kbdint = False
ip._inputhook_qt4 = inputhook_qt4
ip.set_hook('pre_prompt_hook', preprompthook_qt4)
return app, inputhook_qt4