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Backport PR #10489: Prefer execution when there's only a single line entered...
Backport PR #10489: Prefer execution when there's only a single line entered Closes gh-10425 The heuristic here is to treat a single line specially, and always evaluate it as if the cursor was at the end. An alternative heuristic could be to do this if the cursor is on the last line of the input. This could also cause some weird effects if you e.g. type `for a in range(5):`, move the cursor back a few places and press enter - you'll get a newline inserted in the text, but it will indent as if it were after the colon. I'm still trying to think if there's a better way to approach it.

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module_paths.py
125 lines | 3.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Utility functions for finding modules
Utility functions for finding modules on sys.path.
`find_mod` finds named module on sys.path.
`get_init` helper function that finds __init__ file in a directory.
`find_module` variant of imp.find_module in std_lib that only returns
path to module and not an open file object as well.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2011, the IPython Development Team.
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from __future__ import print_function
# Stdlib imports
import imp
import os
# Third-party imports
# Our own imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals and constants
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Local utilities
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes and functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def find_module(name, path=None):
"""imp.find_module variant that only return path of module.
The `imp.find_module` returns a filehandle that we are not interested in.
Also we ignore any bytecode files that `imp.find_module` finds.
Parameters
----------
name : str
name of module to locate
path : list of str
list of paths to search for `name`. If path=None then search sys.path
Returns
-------
filename : str
Return full path of module or None if module is missing or does not have
.py or .pyw extension
"""
if name is None:
return None
try:
file, filename, _ = imp.find_module(name, path)
except ImportError:
return None
if file is None:
return filename
else:
file.close()
if os.path.splitext(filename)[1] in [".py", ".pyc"]:
return filename
else:
return None
def get_init(dirname):
"""Get __init__ file path for module directory
Parameters
----------
dirname : str
Find the __init__ file in directory `dirname`
Returns
-------
init_path : str
Path to __init__ file
"""
fbase = os.path.join(dirname, "__init__")
for ext in [".py", ".pyw"]:
fname = fbase + ext
if os.path.isfile(fname):
return fname
def find_mod(module_name):
"""Find module `module_name` on sys.path
Return the path to module `module_name`. If `module_name` refers to
a module directory then return path to __init__ file. Return full
path of module or None if module is missing or does not have .py or .pyw
extension. We are not interested in running bytecode.
Parameters
----------
module_name : str
Returns
-------
modulepath : str
Path to module `module_name`.
"""
parts = module_name.split(".")
basepath = find_module(parts[0])
for submodname in parts[1:]:
basepath = find_module(submodname, [basepath])
if basepath and os.path.isdir(basepath):
basepath = get_init(basepath)
return basepath