##// 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:

r11585:7814ebf2
r18547:4043b271
Show More
frontend.py
79 lines | 3.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""
Shim to maintain backwards compatibility with old frontend imports.
We have moved all contents of the old `frontend` subpackage into top-level
subpackages (`html`, `qt` and `terminal`), and flattened the notebook into
just `IPython.html`, formerly `IPython.frontend.html.notebook`.
This will let code that was making `from IPython.frontend...` calls continue
working, though a warning will be printed.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2013, IPython Development Team.
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from __future__ import print_function
# Stdlib
import sys
import types
from warnings import warn
warn("The top-level `frontend` package has been deprecated. "
"All its subpackages have been moved to the top `IPython` level.")
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Class declarations
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class ShimModule(types.ModuleType):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self._mirror = kwargs.pop("mirror")
super(ShimModule, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def __getattr__(self, key):
# Use the equivalent of import_item(name), see below
name = "%s.%s" % (self._mirror, key)
# NOTE: the code below is copied *verbatim* from
# importstring.import_item. For some very strange reason that makes no
# sense to me, if we call it *as a function*, it doesn't work. This
# has something to do with the deep bowels of the import machinery and
# I couldn't find a way to make the code work as a standard function
# call. But at least since it's an unmodified copy of import_item,
# which is used extensively and has a test suite, we can be reasonably
# confident this is OK. If anyone finds how to call the function, all
# the below could be replaced simply with:
#
# from IPython.utils.importstring import import_item
# return import_item('MIRROR.' + key)
parts = name.rsplit('.', 1)
if len(parts) == 2:
# called with 'foo.bar....'
package, obj = parts
module = __import__(package, fromlist=[obj])
try:
pak = module.__dict__[obj]
except KeyError:
raise AttributeError(obj)
return pak
else:
# called with un-dotted string
return __import__(parts[0])
# Unconditionally insert the shim into sys.modules so that further import calls
# trigger the custom attribute access above
sys.modules['IPython.frontend.html.notebook'] = ShimModule('notebook', mirror='IPython.html')
sys.modules['IPython.frontend'] = ShimModule('frontend', mirror='IPython')