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.. _overview:
============
Introduction
============
Overview
========
One of Python's most useful features is its interactive interpreter.
This system allows very fast testing of ideas without the overhead of
creating test files as is typical in most programming languages.
However, the interpreter supplied with the standard Python distribution
is somewhat limited for extended interactive use.
The goal of IPython is to create a comprehensive environment for
interactive and exploratory computing. To support this goal, IPython
has three main components:
* An enhanced interactive Python shell.
* A decoupled two-process communication model, which allows for multiple
clients to connect to a computation kernel, most notably the web-based
:ref:`notebook <htmlnotebook>`
* An architecture for interactive parallel computing.
All of IPython is open source (released under the revised BSD license).
Enhanced interactive Python shell
=================================
IPython's interactive shell (:command:`ipython`), has the following goals,
amongst others:
1. Provide an interactive shell superior to Python's default. IPython
has many features for object introspection, system shell access,
and its own special command system for adding functionality when
working interactively. It tries to be a very efficient environment
both for Python code development and for exploration of problems
using Python objects (in situations like data analysis).
2. Serve as an embeddable, ready to use interpreter for your own
programs. IPython can be started with a single call from inside
another program, providing access to the current namespace. This
can be very useful both for debugging purposes and for situations
where a blend of batch-processing and interactive exploration are
needed. New in the 0.9 version of IPython is a reusable wxPython
based IPython widget.
3. Offer a flexible framework which can be used as the base
environment for other systems with Python as the underlying
language. Specifically scientific environments like Mathematica,
IDL and Matlab inspired its design, but similar ideas can be
useful in many fields.
4. Allow interactive testing of threaded graphical toolkits. IPython
has support for interactive, non-blocking control of GTK, Qt and
WX applications via special threading flags. The normal Python
shell can only do this for Tkinter applications.
Main features of the interactive shell
--------------------------------------
* Dynamic object introspection. One can access docstrings, function
definition prototypes, source code, source files and other details
of any object accessible to the interpreter with a single
keystroke (:samp:`?`, and using :samp:`??` provides additional detail).
* Searching through modules and namespaces with :samp:`*` wildcards, both
when using the :samp:`?` system and via the :samp:`%psearch` command.
* Completion in the local namespace, by typing :kbd:`TAB` at the prompt.
This works for keywords, modules, methods, variables and files in the
current directory. This is supported via the readline library, and
full access to configuring readline's behavior is provided.
Custom completers can be implemented easily for different purposes
(system commands, magic arguments etc.)
* Numbered input/output prompts with command history (persistent
across sessions and tied to each profile), full searching in this
history and caching of all input and output.
* User-extensible 'magic' commands. A set of commands prefixed with
:samp:`%` is available for controlling IPython itself and provides
directory control, namespace information and many aliases to
common system shell commands.
* Alias facility for defining your own system aliases.
* Complete system shell access. Lines starting with :samp:`!` are passed
directly to the system shell, and using :samp:`!!` or :samp:`var = !cmd`
captures shell output into python variables for further use.
* Background execution of Python commands in a separate thread.
IPython has an internal job manager called jobs, and a
convenience backgrounding magic function called :samp:`%bg`.
* The ability to expand python variables when calling the system shell. In a
shell command, any python variable prefixed with :samp:`$` is expanded. A
double :samp:`$$` allows passing a literal :samp:`$` to the shell (for access
to shell and environment variables like :envvar:`PATH`).
* Filesystem navigation, via a magic :samp:`%cd` command, along with a
persistent bookmark system (using :samp:`%bookmark`) for fast access to
frequently visited directories.
* A lightweight persistence framework via the :samp:`%store` command, which
allows you to save arbitrary Python variables. These get restored
automatically when your session restarts.
* Automatic indentation (optional) of code as you type (through the
readline library).
* Macro system for quickly re-executing multiple lines of previous
input with a single name. Macros can be stored persistently via
:samp:`%store` and edited via :samp:`%edit`.
* Session logging (you can then later use these logs as code in your
programs). Logs can optionally timestamp all input, and also store
session output (marked as comments, so the log remains valid
Python source code).
* Session restoring: logs can be replayed to restore a previous
session to the state where you left it.
* Verbose and colored exception traceback printouts. Easier to parse
visually, and in verbose mode they produce a lot of useful
debugging information (basically a terminal version of the cgitb
module).
* Auto-parentheses: callable objects can be executed without
parentheses: :samp:`sin 3` is automatically converted to :samp:`sin(3)`.
* Auto-quoting: using :samp:`,`, or :samp:`;` as the first character forces
auto-quoting of the rest of the line: :samp:`,my_function a b` becomes
automatically :samp:`my_function("a","b")`, while :samp:`;my_function a b`
becomes :samp:`my_function("a b")`.
* Extensible input syntax. You can define filters that pre-process
user input to simplify input in special situations. This allows
for example pasting multi-line code fragments which start with
:samp:`>>>` or :samp:`...` such as those from other python sessions or the
standard Python documentation.
* Flexible configuration system. It uses a configuration file which
allows permanent setting of all command-line options, module
loading, code and file execution. The system allows recursive file
inclusion, so you can have a base file with defaults and layers
which load other customizations for particular projects.
* Embeddable. You can call IPython as a python shell inside your own
python programs. This can be used both for debugging code or for
providing interactive abilities to your programs with knowledge
about the local namespaces (very useful in debugging and data
analysis situations).
* Easy debugger access. You can set IPython to call up an enhanced version of
the Python debugger (pdb) every time there is an uncaught exception. This
drops you inside the code which triggered the exception with all the data
live and it is possible to navigate the stack to rapidly isolate the source
of a bug. The :samp:`%run` magic command (with the :samp:`-d` option) can run
any script under pdb's control, automatically setting initial breakpoints for
you. This version of pdb has IPython-specific improvements, including
tab-completion and traceback coloring support. For even easier debugger
access, try :samp:`%debug` after seeing an exception. winpdb is also
supported, see ipy_winpdb extension.
* Profiler support. You can run single statements (similar to
:samp:`profile.run()`) or complete programs under the profiler's control.
While this is possible with standard cProfile or profile modules,
IPython wraps this functionality with magic commands (see :samp:`%prun`
and :samp:`%run -p`) convenient for rapid interactive work.
* Doctest support. The special :samp:`%doctest_mode` command toggles a mode
that allows you to paste existing doctests (with leading :samp:`>>>`
prompts and whitespace) and uses doctest-compatible prompts and
output, so you can use IPython sessions as doctest code.
.. _ipythonzmq:
Decoupled two-process model
==============================
IPython has abstracted and extended the notion of a traditional
*Read-Evaluate-Print Loop* (REPL) environment by decoupling the *evaluation*
into its own process. We call this process a kernel: it receives execution
instructions from clients and communicates the results back to them.
This decoupling allows us to have several clients connected to the same
kernel, and even allows clients and kernels to live on different machines.
With the exclusion of the traditional single process terminal-based IPython
(what you start if you run ``ipython`` without any subcommands), all
other IPython machinery uses this two-process model. This includes ``ipython
console``, ``ipython qtconsole``, and ``ipython notebook``.
As an example, this means that when you start ``ipython qtconsole``, you're
really starting two processes, a kernel and a Qt-based client can send
commands to and receive results from that kernel. If there is already a kernel
running that you want to connect to, you can pass the ``--existing`` flag
which will skip initiating a new kernel and connect to the most recent kernel,
instead. To connect to a specific kernel once you have several kernels
running, use the ``%connect_info`` magic to get the unique connection file,
which will be something like ``--existing kernel-19732.json`` but with
different numbers which correspond to the Process ID of the kernel.
You can read more about using :ref:`ipython qtconsole <qtconsole>`, and
:ref:`ipython notebook <htmlnotebook>`. There is also a :ref:`message spec
<messaging>` which documents the protocol for communication between kernels
and clients.
Interactive parallel computing
==============================
Increasingly, parallel computer hardware, such as multicore CPUs, clusters and
supercomputers, is becoming ubiquitous. Over the last several years, we have
developed an architecture within IPython that allows such hardware to be used
quickly and easily from Python. Moreover, this architecture is designed to
support interactive and collaborative parallel computing.
The main features of this system are:
* Quickly parallelize Python code from an interactive Python/IPython session.
* A flexible and dynamic process model that be deployed on anything from
multicore workstations to supercomputers.
* An architecture that supports many different styles of parallelism, from
message passing to task farming. And all of these styles can be handled
interactively.
* Both blocking and fully asynchronous interfaces.
* High level APIs that enable many things to be parallelized in a few lines
of code.
* Write parallel code that will run unchanged on everything from multicore
workstations to supercomputers.
* Full integration with Message Passing libraries (MPI).
* Capabilities based security model with full encryption of network connections.
* Share live parallel jobs with other users securely. We call this
collaborative parallel computing.
* Dynamically load balanced task farming system.
* Robust error handling. Python exceptions raised in parallel execution are
gathered and presented to the top-level code.
For more information, see our :ref:`overview <parallel_index>` of using IPython
for parallel computing.
Portability and Python requirements
-----------------------------------
As of the 0.11 release, IPython works with Python 2.6 and 2.7. Versions 0.9 and
0.10 worked with Python 2.4 and above. IPython now also supports Python 3,
although for now the code for this is separate, and kept up to date with the
main IPython repository. In the future, these will converge to a single codebase
which can be automatically translated using 2to3.
IPython is known to work on the following operating systems:
* Linux
* Most other Unix-like OSs (AIX, Solaris, BSD, etc.)
* Mac OS X
* Windows (CygWin, XP, Vista, etc.)
See :ref:`here <install_index>` for instructions on how to install IPython.