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Reverse hscrollbar min-height hack on OS X...
Reverse hscrollbar min-height hack on OS X OS X has optional behavior to only draw scrollbars during scroll, which causes problems for CodeMirror's scrollbars. CodeMirror's solution is to set a minimum size for their scrollbars, which is always present. The trade is that the container overlays most of the last line, swallowing click events when there is scrolling to do, even when no scrollbar is visible. This reverses the trade, recovering the click events at the expense of never showing the horizontal scrollbar on OS X when this option is enabled.

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test_kernelmanager.py
108 lines | 3.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Copyright (c) IPython Development Team.
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
from __future__ import print_function
import unittest
from IPython.kernel.inprocess.blocking import BlockingInProcessKernelClient
from IPython.kernel.inprocess.manager import InProcessKernelManager
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test case
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class InProcessKernelManagerTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def test_interface(self):
""" Does the in-process kernel manager implement the basic KM interface?
"""
km = InProcessKernelManager()
self.assert_(not km.has_kernel)
km.start_kernel()
self.assert_(km.has_kernel)
self.assert_(km.kernel is not None)
kc = BlockingInProcessKernelClient(kernel=km.kernel)
self.assert_(not kc.channels_running)
kc.start_channels()
self.assert_(kc.channels_running)
old_kernel = km.kernel
km.restart_kernel()
self.assertIsNotNone(km.kernel)
self.assertNotEquals(km.kernel, old_kernel)
km.shutdown_kernel()
self.assert_(not km.has_kernel)
self.assertRaises(NotImplementedError, km.interrupt_kernel)
self.assertRaises(NotImplementedError, km.signal_kernel, 9)
kc.stop_channels()
self.assert_(not kc.channels_running)
def test_execute(self):
""" Does executing code in an in-process kernel work?
"""
km = InProcessKernelManager()
km.start_kernel()
kc = BlockingInProcessKernelClient(kernel=km.kernel)
kc.start_channels()
kc.wait_for_ready()
kc.execute('foo = 1')
self.assertEquals(km.kernel.shell.user_ns['foo'], 1)
def test_complete(self):
""" Does requesting completion from an in-process kernel work?
"""
km = InProcessKernelManager()
km.start_kernel()
kc = BlockingInProcessKernelClient(kernel=km.kernel)
kc.start_channels()
kc.wait_for_ready()
km.kernel.shell.push({'my_bar': 0, 'my_baz': 1})
kc.complete('my_ba', 5)
msg = kc.get_shell_msg()
self.assertEqual(msg['header']['msg_type'], 'complete_reply')
self.assertEqual(sorted(msg['content']['matches']),
['my_bar', 'my_baz'])
def test_inspect(self):
""" Does requesting object information from an in-process kernel work?
"""
km = InProcessKernelManager()
km.start_kernel()
kc = BlockingInProcessKernelClient(kernel=km.kernel)
kc.start_channels()
kc.wait_for_ready()
km.kernel.shell.user_ns['foo'] = 1
kc.inspect('foo')
msg = kc.get_shell_msg()
self.assertEqual(msg['header']['msg_type'], 'inspect_reply')
content = msg['content']
assert content['found']
text = content['data']['text/plain']
self.assertIn('int', text)
def test_history(self):
""" Does requesting history from an in-process kernel work?
"""
km = InProcessKernelManager()
km.start_kernel()
kc = BlockingInProcessKernelClient(kernel=km.kernel)
kc.start_channels()
kc.wait_for_ready()
kc.execute('%who')
kc.history(hist_access_type='tail', n=1)
msg = kc.shell_channel.get_msgs()[-1]
self.assertEquals(msg['header']['msg_type'], 'history_reply')
history = msg['content']['history']
self.assertEquals(len(history), 1)
self.assertEquals(history[0][2], '%who')
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()