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.. _qtconsole:
=========================
IPython as a QtGUI widget
=========================
We now have a version of IPython, using the new two-process :ref:`ZeroMQ Kernel <ipythonzmq>`,
running in a PyQt_ GUI.
Overview
========
The Qt frontend has hand-coded emacs-style bindings for text navigation. This is not yet
configurable.
.. seealso::
`The original IPython-Qt project description. <ipython_qt>`_
``%loadpy``
===========
The ``%loadpy`` magic has been added, just for the GUI frontend. It takes any python
script (must end in '.py'), and pastes its contents as your next input, so you can edit it
before executing. The script may be on your machine, but you can also specify a url, and
it will download the script from the web. This is particularly useful for playing with
examples from documentation, such as matplotlib.
.. sourcecode:: ipython
In [6]: %loadpy
http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/plot_directive/mpl_examples/mplot3d/contour3d_demo.py
In [7]: from mpl_toolkits.mplot3d import axes3d
...: import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
...:
...: fig = plt.figure()
...: ax = fig.add_subplot(111, projection='3d')
...: X, Y, Z = axes3d.get_test_data(0.05)
...: cset = ax.contour(X, Y, Z)
...: ax.clabel(cset, fontsize=9, inline=1)
...:
...: plt.show()
Pylab
=====
One of the most exciting features of the new console is embedded matplotlib figures. You
can use any standard matplotlib GUI backend (Except native MacOSX) to draw the figures,
and since there is now a two-process model, there is no longer a conflict between user
input and the drawing eventloop.
.. image:: figs/besselj.png
:width: 519px
.. pastefig:
:func:`pastefig`
****************
An additional function, :func:`pastefig`, will be added to the global namespace if you
specify the ``--pylab`` argument. This takes the active figures in matplotlib, and embeds
them in your document. This is especially useful for saving_ your work.
.. _inline:
``--pylab inline``
******************
If you want to have all of your figures embedded in your session, instead of calling
:func:`pastefig`, you can specify ``--pylab inline``, and each time you make a plot, it
will show up in your document, as if you had called :func:`pastefig`.
.. _saving:
Saving and Printing
===================
IPythonQt has the ability to save your current session, as either HTML or XHTML. If you
have been using `pastefig <pastefig>`_ or inline_ pylab, your figures will be PNG
in HTML, or inlined as SVG in XHTML. PNG images have the option to be either in an
external folder, as in many browsers' "Webpage, Complete" option, or inlined as well, for
a larger, but more portable file.
The widget also exposes the ability to print directly, via the default print shortcut or
context menu.
.. Note::
Saving is only available to richtext Qt widgets, so make sure you start ipqt with the
``--rich`` flag, or with ``--pylab``, which always uses a richtext widget.
See these examples of :download:`png/html<figs/jn.html>` and :download:`svg/xhtml
<figs/jn.xhtml>` output. Note that syntax highlighting does not survive export. This is a known
issue, and is being investigated.
Colors and Highlighting
=======================
Terminal IPython has always had some coloring, but never syntax highlighting. There are a
few simple color choices, specified by the ``--colors`` flag or ``%colors`` magic:
* LightBG for light backgrounds
* Linux for dark backgrounds
* NoColor for a simple colorless terminal
The Qt widget has full support for the ``--colors`` flag, but adds new, more intuitive
aliases for the colors (the old names still work): dark=Linux, light=LightBG, bw=NoColor.
The Qt widget, however, has full syntax highlighting as you type, handled by the
`pygments`_ library. The ``--style`` argument exposes access to any style by name that can
be found by pygments, and there are several already installed. The ``--colors`` argument,
if unspecified, will be guessed based on the chosen style. Similarly, there are default
styles associated with each ``--colors`` option.
Screenshot of ``ipython-qtconsole --colors dark``, which uses the 'monokai' theme by
default:
.. image:: figs/colors_dark.png
:width: 627px
.. Note::
Calling ``ipython-qtconsole -h`` will show all the style names that pygments can find
on your system.
You can also pass the filename of a custom CSS stylesheet, if you want to do your own
coloring, via the ``--stylesheet`` argument. The default LightBG stylesheet:
.. sourcecode:: css
QPlainTextEdit, QTextEdit { background-color: white;
color: black ;
selection-background-color: #ccc}
.error { color: red; }
.in-prompt { color: navy; }
.in-prompt-number { font-weight: bold; }
.out-prompt { color: darkred; }
.out-prompt-number { font-weight: bold; }
Process Management
==================
With the two-process ZMQ model, the frontend does not block input during execution. This
means that actions can be taken by the frontend while the Kernel is executing, or even
after it crashes. The most basic such command is via 'Ctrl-.', which restarts the kernel.
This can be done in the middle of a blocking execution. The frontend can also know, via a
heartbeat mechanism, that the kernel has died. This means that the frontend can safely
restart the kernel.
Multiple Consoles
*****************
Since the Kernel listens on the network, multiple frontends can connect to it. These
do not have to all be qt frontends - any IPython frontend can connect and run code.
When you start ipython-qtconsole, there will be an output line, like::
To connect another client to this kernel, use:
-e --xreq 62109 --sub 62110 --rep 62111 --hb 62112
Other frontends can connect to your kernel, and share in the execution. This is great for
collaboration. The `-e` flag is for 'external'. Starting other consoles with that flag
will not try to start their own, but rather connect to yours. Ultimately, you will not
have to specify each port individually, but for now this copy-paste method is best.
By default (for security reasons), the kernel only listens on localhost, so you can only
connect multiple frontends to the kernel from your local machine. You can specify to
listen on an external interface by specifying the ``--ip`` argument::
$> ipython-qtconsole --ip 192.168.1.123
If you specify the ip as 0.0.0.0, that refers to all interfaces, so any computer that can
see yours can connect to the kernel.
.. warning::
Since the ZMQ code currently has no security, listening on an external-facing IP
is dangerous. You are giving any computer that can see you on the network the ability
to issue arbitrary shell commands as you on your machine. Be very careful with this.
Stopping Kernels and Consoles
*****************************
Since there can be many consoles per kernel, the shutdown mechanism and dialog are
probably more complicated than you are used to. Since you don't always want to shutdown a
kernel when you close a window, you are given the option to just close the console window
or also close the Kernel and *all other windows*. Note that this only refers to all other
*local* windows, as remote Consoles are not allowed to shutdown the kernel, and shutdowns
do not close Remote consoles (to allow for saving, etc.).
Rules:
* Restarting the kernel automatically clears all *local* Consoles, and prompts remote
Consoles about the reset.
* Shutdown closes all *local* Consoles, and notifies remotes that
the Kernel has been shutdown.
* Remote Consoles may not restart or shutdown the kernel.
Regressions
===========
There are some features, where the qt console lags behind the Terminal frontend. We hope
to have these fixed by 0.11 release.
* Configuration: The Qt frontend and ZMQ kernel are not yet hooked up to the IPython
configuration system
* History Persistence: Currently the history of a GUI session does
not persist between sessions.
* !cmd input: Due to our use of pexpect, we cannot pass input to subprocesses launched
using the '!' escape. (this will not be fixed).
.. [PyQt] PyQt4 http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/software/pyqt/download
.. [pygments] Pygments http://pygments.org/