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%time magic displays output even when code ends in semicolon #13837 (#13841)...
%time magic displays output even when code ends in semicolon #13837 (#13841) After the magic is evaluated and the result is calculated, the modification tests whether the evaluated magic was _time_ and whether semicolon is the final character. The result is killed if both things happen. My choice would be to remove the _time_ test, so a semicolon would prevent the print of the output of any magic, but this is only a suggestion I keep open. I did not write any automated test, but I can do that once (and if) the solution is accepted. [#13837](https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/13837) points to [#10227](https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/10227) (_Cell magic result in printing the last evaluated line even if followed by semicolon_). There, somebody says that ';' may be a meaningful character because we could have a C++ expression, for instance. The IPython repository says the documentation for other languages is in Jupyter. I ran Jupyter on my browser with C++ and saw that a semicolon after the last statement prevents the output to be printed (a semicolon between 2 statements in a cell seems to be necessary, though). See attached file for simple examples. Therefore, it seems that the semicolon at the end in C++ already behaves the same way that in Python and is not required by the interpreter. ![IPython_Cpp](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/5789832/203915670-513514d6-70a4-4efa-b4f4-9a8293d5a1ff.png)

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__init__.py
156 lines | 5.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# PYTHON_ARGCOMPLETE_OK
"""
IPython: tools for interactive and parallel computing in Python.
https://ipython.org
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2008-2011, IPython Development Team.
# Copyright (c) 2001-2007, Fernando Perez <fernando.perez@colorado.edu>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import sys
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Setup everything
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Don't forget to also update setup.py when this changes!
if sys.version_info < (3, 8):
raise ImportError(
"""
IPython 8+ supports Python 3.8 and above, following NEP 29.
When using Python 2.7, please install IPython 5.x LTS Long Term Support version.
Python 3.3 and 3.4 were supported up to IPython 6.x.
Python 3.5 was supported with IPython 7.0 to 7.9.
Python 3.6 was supported with IPython up to 7.16.
Python 3.7 was still supported with the 7.x branch.
See IPython `README.rst` file for more information:
https://github.com/ipython/ipython/blob/main/README.rst
"""
)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Setup the top level names
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from .core.getipython import get_ipython
from .core import release
from .core.application import Application
from .terminal.embed import embed
from .core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell
from .utils.sysinfo import sys_info
from .utils.frame import extract_module_locals
# Release data
__author__ = '%s <%s>' % (release.author, release.author_email)
__license__ = release.license
__version__ = release.version
version_info = release.version_info
# list of CVEs that should have been patched in this release.
# this is informational and should not be relied upon.
__patched_cves__ = {"CVE-2022-21699"}
def embed_kernel(module=None, local_ns=None, **kwargs):
"""Embed and start an IPython kernel in a given scope.
If you don't want the kernel to initialize the namespace
from the scope of the surrounding function,
and/or you want to load full IPython configuration,
you probably want `IPython.start_kernel()` instead.
Parameters
----------
module : types.ModuleType, optional
The module to load into IPython globals (default: caller)
local_ns : dict, optional
The namespace to load into IPython user namespace (default: caller)
**kwargs : various, optional
Further keyword args are relayed to the IPKernelApp constructor,
allowing configuration of the Kernel. Will only have an effect
on the first embed_kernel call for a given process.
"""
(caller_module, caller_locals) = extract_module_locals(1)
if module is None:
module = caller_module
if local_ns is None:
local_ns = caller_locals
# Only import .zmq when we really need it
from ipykernel.embed import embed_kernel as real_embed_kernel
real_embed_kernel(module=module, local_ns=local_ns, **kwargs)
def start_ipython(argv=None, **kwargs):
"""Launch a normal IPython instance (as opposed to embedded)
`IPython.embed()` puts a shell in a particular calling scope,
such as a function or method for debugging purposes,
which is often not desirable.
`start_ipython()` does full, regular IPython initialization,
including loading startup files, configuration, etc.
much of which is skipped by `embed()`.
This is a public API method, and will survive implementation changes.
Parameters
----------
argv : list or None, optional
If unspecified or None, IPython will parse command-line options from sys.argv.
To prevent any command-line parsing, pass an empty list: `argv=[]`.
user_ns : dict, optional
specify this dictionary to initialize the IPython user namespace with particular values.
**kwargs : various, optional
Any other kwargs will be passed to the Application constructor,
such as `config`.
"""
from IPython.terminal.ipapp import launch_new_instance
return launch_new_instance(argv=argv, **kwargs)
def start_kernel(argv=None, **kwargs):
"""Launch a normal IPython kernel instance (as opposed to embedded)
`IPython.embed_kernel()` puts a shell in a particular calling scope,
such as a function or method for debugging purposes,
which is often not desirable.
`start_kernel()` does full, regular IPython initialization,
including loading startup files, configuration, etc.
much of which is skipped by `embed()`.
Parameters
----------
argv : list or None, optional
If unspecified or None, IPython will parse command-line options from sys.argv.
To prevent any command-line parsing, pass an empty list: `argv=[]`.
user_ns : dict, optional
specify this dictionary to initialize the IPython user namespace with particular values.
**kwargs : various, optional
Any other kwargs will be passed to the Application constructor,
such as `config`.
"""
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"start_kernel is deprecated since IPython 8.0, use from `ipykernel.kernelapp.launch_new_instance`",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
from ipykernel.kernelapp import launch_new_instance
return launch_new_instance(argv=argv, **kwargs)