##// END OF EJS Templates
semantic names for indicator icons...
semantic names for indicator icons For all of the discussion that we had about what kind of icons should and should not be used to indicate what mode the notebook is in, we never went through to make it possible to override it. With this change, it is now possible to override what icons are displayed for Command and Edit Modes. For example, @minrk liked the fighter-jet icon for Command Mode, so he can put this in his custom.css .ipython-command-mode:before { content: "\f0fb"; }

File last commit:

r13386:91babb98
r15806:6b3b303a
Show More
debug.py
43 lines | 1.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""
Contains debug writer.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#Copyright (c) 2013, the 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 .base import WriterBase
from pprint import pprint
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class DebugWriter(WriterBase):
"""Consumes output from nbconvert export...() methods and writes usefull
debugging information to the stdout. The information includes a list of
resources that were extracted from the notebook(s) during export."""
def write(self, output, resources, notebook_name='notebook', **kw):
"""
Consume and write Jinja output.
See base for more...
"""
if isinstance(resources['outputs'], dict):
print("outputs extracted from %s" % notebook_name)
print('-' * 80)
pprint(resources['outputs'], indent=2, width=70)
else:
print("no outputs extracted from %s" % notebook_name)
print('=' * 80)