##// END OF EJS Templates
Store timestamps for modules to autoreload...
Store timestamps for modules to autoreload Closes gh-4127 At present, autoreload compares the timestamps on .py and .pyc files. However, this can fail in a couple of ways (see gh-4127). With this change, it caches the mtime of the .py file when we loaded it. Some extra complexity is needed to store the mtime as soon as possible - we scan sys.modules when autoreload is loaded, and register a post_execute hook to check for newly imported modules after each cell.

File last commit:

r9722:7ec1888e
r15682:3ec67fcd
Show More
qt.py
23 lines | 732 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
""" A Qt API selector that can be used to switch between PyQt and PySide.
This uses the ETS 4.0 selection pattern of:
PySide first, PyQt with API v2. second.
Do not use this if you need PyQt with the old QString/QVariant API.
"""
import os
from IPython.external.qt_loaders import (load_qt, QT_API_PYSIDE,
QT_API_PYQT)
QT_API = os.environ.get('QT_API', None)
if QT_API not in [QT_API_PYSIDE, QT_API_PYQT, None]:
raise RuntimeError("Invalid Qt API %r, valid values are: %r, %r" %
(QT_API, QT_API_PYSIDE, QT_API_PYQT))
if QT_API is None:
api_opts = [QT_API_PYSIDE, QT_API_PYQT]
else:
api_opts = [QT_API]
QtCore, QtGui, QtSvg, QT_API = load_qt(api_opts)