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Backport PR #4163: Fix for incorrect default encoding on Windows....
Backport PR #4163: Fix for incorrect default encoding on Windows. Whilst trying out rendering notebooks in a flask app under Apache on Windows I got the below error when simply trying to import `SlidesExporter` ```python mod_wsgi (pid=6260): Exception occurred processing WSGI script 'flask_test.wsgi'. Traceback (most recent call last): File "flask_test.py", line 81, in render_notebook from IPython.nbconvert.exporters import SlidesExporter File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\__init__.py", line 47, in <module> from .terminal.embed import embed File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\terminal\\embed.py", line 32, in <module> from IPython.terminal.interactiveshell import TerminalInteractiveShell File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\terminal\\interactiveshell.py", line 25, in <module> from IPython.core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell, InteractiveShellABC File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\core\\interactiveshell.py", line 59, in <module> from IPython.core.prompts import PromptManager File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\core\\prompts.py", line 138, in <module> HOME = py3compat.str_to_unicode(os.environ.get("HOME","//////:::::ZZZZZ,,,~~~")) File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\utils\\py3compat.py", line 18, in decode return s.decode(encoding, "replace") LookupError: unknown encoding: cp0 ``` A little bit of [googling](http://bugs.python.org/issue6501) suggests that Windows returns 'cp0' to indicate there is no code page. This fix simply looks for this invalid value and replaces it with something valid. With this change it works for me.

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dtexample.py
164 lines | 2.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Simple example using doctests.
This file just contains doctests both using plain python and IPython prompts.
All tests should be loaded by nose.
"""
from IPython.utils.py3compat import doctest_refactor_print
def pyfunc():
"""Some pure python tests...
>>> pyfunc()
'pyfunc'
>>> import os
>>> 2+3
5
>>> for i in range(3):
... print i,
... print i+1,
...
0 1 1 2 2 3
"""
return 'pyfunc'
@doctest_refactor_print
def ipfunc():
"""Some ipython tests...
In [1]: import os
In [3]: 2+3
Out[3]: 5
In [26]: for i in range(3):
....: print i,
....: print i+1,
....:
0 1 1 2 2 3
Examples that access the operating system work:
In [1]: !echo hello
hello
In [2]: !echo hello > /tmp/foo_iptest
In [3]: !cat /tmp/foo_iptest
hello
In [4]: rm -f /tmp/foo_iptest
It's OK to use '_' for the last result, but do NOT try to use IPython's
numbered history of _NN outputs, since those won't exist under the
doctest environment:
In [7]: 'hi'
Out[7]: 'hi'
In [8]: print repr(_)
'hi'
In [7]: 3+4
Out[7]: 7
In [8]: _+3
Out[8]: 10
In [9]: ipfunc()
Out[9]: 'ipfunc'
"""
return 'ipfunc'
def ranfunc():
"""A function with some random output.
Normal examples are verified as usual:
>>> 1+3
4
But if you put '# random' in the output, it is ignored:
>>> 1+3
junk goes here... # random
>>> 1+2
again, anything goes #random
if multiline, the random mark is only needed once.
>>> 1+2
You can also put the random marker at the end:
# random
>>> 1+2
# random
.. or at the beginning.
More correct input is properly verified:
>>> ranfunc()
'ranfunc'
"""
return 'ranfunc'
def random_all():
"""A function where we ignore the output of ALL examples.
Examples:
# all-random
This mark tells the testing machinery that all subsequent examples should
be treated as random (ignoring their output). They are still executed,
so if a they raise an error, it will be detected as such, but their
output is completely ignored.
>>> 1+3
junk goes here...
>>> 1+3
klasdfj;
>>> 1+2
again, anything goes
blah...
"""
pass
@doctest_refactor_print
def iprand():
"""Some ipython tests with random output.
In [7]: 3+4
Out[7]: 7
In [8]: print 'hello'
world # random
In [9]: iprand()
Out[9]: 'iprand'
"""
return 'iprand'
@doctest_refactor_print
def iprand_all():
"""Some ipython tests with fully random output.
# all-random
In [7]: 1
Out[7]: 99
In [8]: print 'hello'
world
In [9]: iprand_all()
Out[9]: 'junk'
"""
return 'iprand_all'