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Fix use of --pylab=auto and --matplotlib=auto (#14403)...
Fix use of --pylab=auto and --matplotlib=auto (#14403) Fixes #14401 which has been a bug in the 8.22.x and 8.23.x releases. When I removed the multiple initialisation of Matplotlib backends in #14330 it broke use of the following: ```bash ipython --matplotlib ipython --matplotlib=auto ipython --pylab ipython --pylab=auto ``` by failing to display Matplotlib plot. If you specify a particular GUI event loop such as using ```bash ipython --pylab=qt ``` then it was and is fine. So for anyone finding this, the workaround until the next release is to specify a GUI loop rather than relying on the auto selection. I didn't notice this as I've been concentrating on moving the Matplotlib backend logic from IPython to Matplotlib, and with those changes (matplotlib/matplotlib#27948) the above use cases all work OK. The fix is to reintroduce the early import of `matplotlib-inline` but only if both the gui loop is not specified and the Matplotlib version is before the movement of the backend logic across to it. There are no explicit tests for this. In the future I will try to think of some tests for some of this IPython-Matplotlib functionality that don't involve installing complicated backend dependencies or adding image comparison tests.

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setup.py
141 lines | 4.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Setup script for IPython.
Under Posix environments it works like a typical setup.py script.
Under Windows, the command sdist is not supported, since IPython
requires utilities which are not available under Windows."""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2008-2011, IPython Development Team.
# Copyright (c) 2001-2007, Fernando Perez <fernando.perez@colorado.edu>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.rst, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import os
import sys
# **Python version check**
#
# This check is also made in IPython/__init__, don't forget to update both when
# changing Python version requirements.
if sys.version_info < (3, 10):
pip_message = 'This may be due to an out of date pip. Make sure you have pip >= 9.0.1.'
try:
import pip
pip_version = tuple([int(x) for x in pip.__version__.split('.')[:3]])
if pip_version < (9, 0, 1) :
pip_message = 'Your pip version is out of date, please install pip >= 9.0.1. '\
'pip {} detected.'.format(pip.__version__)
else:
# pip is new enough - it must be something else
pip_message = ''
except Exception:
pass
error = """
IPython 8.19+ supports Python 3.10 and above, following SPEC0
IPython 8.13+ supports Python 3.9 and above, following NEP 29.
IPython 8.0-8.12 supports Python 3.8 and above, following NEP 29.
When using Python 2.7, please install IPython 5.x LTS Long Term Support version.
Python 3.3 and 3.4 were supported up to IPython 6.x.
Python 3.5 was supported with IPython 7.0 to 7.9.
Python 3.6 was supported with IPython up to 7.16.
Python 3.7 was still supported with the 7.x branch.
See IPython `README.rst` file for more information:
https://github.com/ipython/ipython/blob/main/README.rst
Python {py} detected.
{pip}
""".format(
py=sys.version_info, pip=pip_message
)
print(error, file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
# At least we're on the python version we need, move on.
from setuptools import setup
# Our own imports
from setupbase import target_update
from setupbase import (
setup_args,
check_package_data_first,
find_data_files,
git_prebuild,
)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Handle OS specific things
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
if os.name in ('nt','dos'):
os_name = 'windows'
else:
os_name = os.name
# Under Windows, 'sdist' has not been supported. Now that the docs build with
# Sphinx it might work, but let's not turn it on until someone confirms that it
# actually works.
if os_name == 'windows' and 'sdist' in sys.argv:
print('The sdist command is not available under Windows. Exiting.')
sys.exit(1)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Things related to the IPython documentation
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# update the manuals when building a source dist
if len(sys.argv) >= 2 and sys.argv[1] in ('sdist','bdist_rpm'):
# List of things to be updated. Each entry is a triplet of args for
# target_update()
to_update = [
(
"docs/man/ipython.1.gz",
["docs/man/ipython.1"],
"cd docs/man && python -m gzip --best ipython.1",
),
]
[ target_update(*t) for t in to_update ]
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Find all the packages, package data, and data_files
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
data_files = find_data_files()
setup_args['data_files'] = data_files
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# custom distutils commands
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# imports here, so they are after setuptools import if there was one
from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist
setup_args['cmdclass'] = {
'build_py': \
check_package_data_first(git_prebuild('IPython')),
'sdist' : git_prebuild('IPython', sdist),
}
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Do the actual setup now
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
setup(**setup_args)