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Merge pull request #1008 from minrk/excepthook...
Merge pull request #1008 from minrk/excepthook Use a much more restrained crash handler by default. Now the excepthook shows a regular traceback, with a brief message about reporting bugs and how to enable to the big crash handler. Our previous, extremely verbose crash handler can still be activated via `%config Application.verbose_crash=True`, so we can debug real crashes or ask users for extra detail easily. Small fixes along the way: * current Application added to configurables list, for use in %config. * email addresses in full crash reports changed to ipython-dev, so they don't go straight to individual users. Should close #695, and ameliorate #833 (doesn't fix the bug, but the message is more sensible).

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decorators.py
46 lines | 1.7 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""Decorators that don't go anywhere else.
This module contains misc. decorators that don't really go with another module
in :mod:`IPython.utils`. Beore putting something here please see if it should
go into another topical module in :mod:`IPython.utils`.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2009 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def flag_calls(func):
"""Wrap a function to detect and flag when it gets called.
This is a decorator which takes a function and wraps it in a function with
a 'called' attribute. wrapper.called is initialized to False.
The wrapper.called attribute is set to False right before each call to the
wrapped function, so if the call fails it remains False. After the call
completes, wrapper.called is set to True and the output is returned.
Testing for truth in wrapper.called allows you to determine if a call to
func() was attempted and succeeded."""
def wrapper(*args,**kw):
wrapper.called = False
out = func(*args,**kw)
wrapper.called = True
return out
wrapper.called = False
wrapper.__doc__ = func.__doc__
return wrapper