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Use default OS shell to run system commands Instead of using os.system which uses /bin/sh, this uses subprocess.call (the replacement of os.system) to run the command using the default shell of the OS. With this, one can use more advanced commands for bash, zsh, ksh, ... I also edited the docstring, added comments and fixed the handling of return codes.

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util.py
106 lines | 3.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
""" Defines miscellaneous Qt-related helper classes and functions.
"""
# Standard library imports.
import inspect
# System library imports.
from IPython.external.qt import QtCore, QtGui
# IPython imports.
from IPython.utils.traitlets import HasTraits, TraitType
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Metaclasses
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
MetaHasTraits = type(HasTraits)
MetaQObject = type(QtCore.QObject)
class MetaQObjectHasTraits(MetaQObject, MetaHasTraits):
""" A metaclass that inherits from the metaclasses of HasTraits and QObject.
Using this metaclass allows a class to inherit from both HasTraits and
QObject. Using SuperQObject instead of QObject is highly recommended. See
QtKernelManager for an example.
"""
def __new__(mcls, name, bases, classdict):
# FIXME: this duplicates the code from MetaHasTraits.
# I don't think a super() call will help me here.
for k,v in classdict.iteritems():
if isinstance(v, TraitType):
v.name = k
elif inspect.isclass(v):
if issubclass(v, TraitType):
vinst = v()
vinst.name = k
classdict[k] = vinst
cls = MetaQObject.__new__(mcls, name, bases, classdict)
return cls
def __init__(mcls, name, bases, classdict):
# Note: super() did not work, so we explicitly call these.
MetaQObject.__init__(mcls, name, bases, classdict)
MetaHasTraits.__init__(mcls, name, bases, classdict)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class SuperQObject(QtCore.QObject):
""" Permits the use of super() in class hierarchies that contain QObject.
Unlike QObject, SuperQObject does not accept a QObject parent. If it did,
super could not be emulated properly (all other classes in the heierarchy
would have to accept the parent argument--they don't, of course, because
they don't inherit QObject.)
This class is primarily useful for attaching signals to existing non-Qt
classes. See QtKernelManagerMixin for an example.
"""
def __new__(cls, *args, **kw):
# We initialize QObject as early as possible. Without this, Qt complains
# if SuperQObject is not the first class in the super class list.
inst = QtCore.QObject.__new__(cls)
QtCore.QObject.__init__(inst)
return inst
def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
# Emulate super by calling the next method in the MRO, if there is one.
mro = self.__class__.mro()
for qt_class in QtCore.QObject.mro():
mro.remove(qt_class)
next_index = mro.index(SuperQObject) + 1
if next_index < len(mro):
mro[next_index].__init__(self, *args, **kw)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def get_font(family, fallback=None):
"""Return a font of the requested family, using fallback as alternative.
If a fallback is provided, it is used in case the requested family isn't
found. If no fallback is given, no alternative is chosen and Qt's internal
algorithms may automatically choose a fallback font.
Parameters
----------
family : str
A font name.
fallback : str
A font name.
Returns
-------
font : QFont object
"""
font = QtGui.QFont(family)
# Check whether we got what we wanted using QFontInfo, since exactMatch()
# is overly strict and returns false in too many cases.
font_info = QtGui.QFontInfo(font)
if fallback is not None and font_info.family() != family:
font = QtGui.QFont(fallback)
return font