##// END OF EJS Templates
Remove EventManager reset methods, because they violate encapsulation....
Remove EventManager reset methods, because they violate encapsulation. The whole idea of the EventManager is that you can register hooks without worrying about what hooks other pieces of code might be registering. The reset methods violate this separation of concerns, since they will blow away everyone else's hooks too. (See gh-6680 for an example of this breaking things.) Since there is never any safe way to use them, we simply remove them entirely.

File last commit:

r13348:e6afea51
r18547:4043b271
Show More
refbug.py
48 lines | 1.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Minimal script to reproduce our nasty reference counting bug.
The problem is related to https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/141
The original fix for that appeared to work, but John D. Hunter found a
matplotlib example which, when run twice in a row, would break. The problem
were references held by open figures to internals of Tkinter.
This code reproduces the problem that John saw, without matplotlib.
This script is meant to be called by other parts of the test suite that call it
via %run as if it were executed interactively by the user. As of 2011-05-29,
test_run.py calls it.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Module imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import sys
from IPython import get_ipython
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# This needs to be here because nose and other test runners will import
# this module. Importing this module has potential side effects that we
# want to prevent.
if __name__ == '__main__':
ip = get_ipython()
if not '_refbug_cache' in ip.user_ns:
ip.user_ns['_refbug_cache'] = []
aglobal = 'Hello'
def f():
return aglobal
cache = ip.user_ns['_refbug_cache']
cache.append(f)
def call_f():
for func in cache:
print('lowercased:',func().lower())