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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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rlineimpl.py
74 lines | 2.7 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
""" Imports and provides the 'correct' version of readline for the platform.
Readline is used throughout IPython as::
import IPython.utils.rlineimpl as readline
In addition to normal readline stuff, this module provides have_readline
boolean and _outputfile variable used in IPython.utils.
"""
import sys
import warnings
_rlmod_names = ['gnureadline', 'readline']
have_readline = False
for _rlmod_name in _rlmod_names:
try:
# import readline as _rl
_rl = __import__(_rlmod_name)
# from readline import *
globals().update({k:v for k,v in _rl.__dict__.items() if not k.startswith('_')})
except ImportError:
pass
else:
have_readline = True
break
if have_readline and (sys.platform == 'win32' or sys.platform == 'cli'):
try:
_outputfile=_rl.GetOutputFile()
except AttributeError:
warnings.warn("Failed GetOutputFile")
have_readline = False
# Test to see if libedit is being used instead of GNU readline.
# Thanks to Boyd Waters for the original patch.
uses_libedit = False
if have_readline:
# Official Python docs state that 'libedit' is in the docstring for libedit readline:
uses_libedit = _rl.__doc__ and 'libedit' in _rl.__doc__
# Note that many non-System Pythons also do not use proper readline,
# but do not report libedit at all, nor are they linked dynamically against libedit.
# known culprits of this include: EPD, Fink
# There is not much we can do to detect this, until we find a specific failure
# case, rather than relying on the readline module to self-identify as broken.
if uses_libedit and sys.platform == 'darwin':
_rl.parse_and_bind("bind ^I rl_complete")
warnings.warn('\n'.join(['', "*"*78,
"libedit detected - readline will not be well behaved, including but not limited to:",
" * crashes on tab completion",
" * incorrect history navigation",
" * corrupting long-lines",
" * failure to wrap or indent lines properly",
"It is highly recommended that you install gnureadline, which is installable with:",
" pip install gnureadline",
"*"*78]),
RuntimeWarning)
# the clear_history() function was only introduced in Python 2.4 and is
# actually optional in the readline API, so we must explicitly check for its
# existence. Some known platforms actually don't have it. This thread:
# http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2003-August/037845.html
# has the original discussion.
if have_readline:
try:
_rl.clear_history
except AttributeError:
def clear_history(): pass
_rl.clear_history = clear_history