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Added GTK support to ZeroMQ kernel....
Added GTK support to ZeroMQ kernel. We use an approach which is a combination of an gtk timer callback into our execution loop, like we do for Qt and Wx, I've run as tests several GTK examples found on the net, as well as multiple matplotlib scripts, and so far everything works as expected. The only catch is that we silently trap gtk.main_quit(), so examples that call it with a 'close' button or similar seem to not do anything. But their windows close normally and no other problems have been found. This solution uses code taken from an old bug report of ours: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/270856 specifically the attachment in this comment: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/270856/comments/6 along with the changes suggested by Michiel de Hoon there. Thanks to Ville and Michiel for that old discussion, which put me on the right track to figure out the details of the logic needed for GTK.

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output_trap.py
107 lines | 2.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
""" Trap stdout/stderr."""
__docformat__ = "restructuredtext en"
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008 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 sys
from cStringIO import StringIO
class OutputTrap(object):
""" Object which can trap text sent to stdout and stderr.
"""
def __init__(self, out=None, err=None):
# Filelike objects to store stdout/stderr text.
if out is None:
self.out = StringIO()
else:
self.out = out
if err is None:
self.err = StringIO()
else:
self.err = err
# Boolean to check if the stdout/stderr hook is set.
self.out_set = False
self.err_set = False
@property
def out_text(self):
""" Return the text currently in the stdout buffer.
"""
return self.out.getvalue()
@property
def err_text(self):
""" Return the text currently in the stderr buffer.
"""
return self.err.getvalue()
def set(self):
""" Set the hooks.
"""
if sys.stdout is not self.out:
self._out_save = sys.stdout
sys.stdout = self.out
self.out_set = True
if sys.stderr is not self.err:
self._err_save = sys.stderr
sys.stderr = self.err
self.err_set = True
def unset(self):
""" Remove the hooks.
"""
if self.out_set:
sys.stdout = self._out_save
self.out_set = False
if self.err_set:
sys.stderr = self._err_save
self.err_set = False
def clear(self):
""" Clear out the buffers.
"""
self.out.reset()
self.out.truncate()
self.err.reset()
self.err.truncate()
def add_to_message(self, message):
""" Add the text from stdout and stderr to the message from the
interpreter to its listeners.
Parameters
----------
message : dict
"""
out_text = self.out_text
if out_text:
message['stdout'] = out_text
err_text = self.err_text
if err_text:
message['stderr'] = err_text