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Manage and propagate argv correctly....
Manage and propagate argv correctly. All Application objects should take argv in their constructor, akin to how the standard signature of C programs is "main(int argc, char *argv)". This makes it possible to initialize them from code with different command-line options (otherwise, they end up directly accessing sys.argv[1:] via argparse).

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win32clip.py
45 lines | 1.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from IPython.core import ipapi
ip = ipapi.get()
def clip_f( self, parameter_s = '' ):
"""Save a set of lines to the clipboard.
Usage:\\
%clip n1-n2 n3-n4 ... n5 .. n6 ...
This function uses the same syntax as %macro for line extraction, but
instead of creating a macro it saves the resulting string to the
clipboard.
When used without arguments, this returns the text contents of the clipboard.
E.g.
mytext = %clip
"""
import win32clipboard as cl
import win32con
args = parameter_s.split()
cl.OpenClipboard()
if len( args ) == 0:
data = cl.GetClipboardData( win32con.CF_TEXT )
cl.CloseClipboard()
return data
api = self.getapi()
if parameter_s.lstrip().startswith('='):
rest = parameter_s[parameter_s.index('=')+1:].strip()
val = str(api.ev(rest))
else:
ranges = args[0:]
val = ''.join( self.extract_input_slices( ranges ) )
cl.EmptyClipboard()
cl.SetClipboardText( val )
cl.CloseClipboard()
print 'The following text was written to the clipboard'
print val
ip.define_magic( "clip", clip_f )