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Shaperilio/qtgui fixes (#13957)...
Shaperilio/qtgui fixes (#13957) I started using the released version of my `PySide6`-enabling changes and noted some problems. In this PR, I fix those, and also overall improve the feedback to the user when a GUI event loop is hooked in: - Report which event loop is running when using `%gui <some GUI>`; e.g. `%gui qt` will show `Installed qt6 event loop hook.` - Report when the event loop is disabled; i.e. `%gui` will show `GUI event loop hook disabled.` if an event loop hook was installed, or `No event loop hook running.` if nothing was installed. - Requesting a second event loop will give the message `Shell is already running a gui event loop for <some GUI>. Call with no arguments to disable current loop.` - Requesting a different version of Qt, i.e. `%gui qt6` followed by `%gui` followed by `%gui qt5` will show `Cannot switch Qt versions for this session; will use qt6.` followed by `Installed qt6 event loop hook.` (Fixes / improves #13864)

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frame.py
92 lines | 3.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for working with stack frames.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2011 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import sys
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def extract_vars(*names,**kw):
"""Extract a set of variables by name from another frame.
Parameters
----------
*names : str
One or more variable names which will be extracted from the caller's
frame.
**kw : integer, optional
How many frames in the stack to walk when looking for your variables.
The default is 0, which will use the frame where the call was made.
Examples
--------
::
In [2]: def func(x):
...: y = 1
...: print(sorted(extract_vars('x','y').items()))
...:
In [3]: func('hello')
[('x', 'hello'), ('y', 1)]
"""
depth = kw.get('depth',0)
callerNS = sys._getframe(depth+1).f_locals
return dict((k,callerNS[k]) for k in names)
def extract_vars_above(*names):
"""Extract a set of variables by name from another frame.
Similar to extractVars(), but with a specified depth of 1, so that names
are extracted exactly from above the caller.
This is simply a convenience function so that the very common case (for us)
of skipping exactly 1 frame doesn't have to construct a special dict for
keyword passing."""
callerNS = sys._getframe(2).f_locals
return dict((k,callerNS[k]) for k in names)
def debugx(expr,pre_msg=''):
"""Print the value of an expression from the caller's frame.
Takes an expression, evaluates it in the caller's frame and prints both
the given expression and the resulting value (as well as a debug mark
indicating the name of the calling function. The input must be of a form
suitable for eval().
An optional message can be passed, which will be prepended to the printed
expr->value pair."""
cf = sys._getframe(1)
print('[DBG:%s] %s%s -> %r' % (cf.f_code.co_name,pre_msg,expr,
eval(expr,cf.f_globals,cf.f_locals)))
# deactivate it by uncommenting the following line, which makes it a no-op
#def debugx(expr,pre_msg=''): pass
def extract_module_locals(depth=0):
"""Returns (module, locals) of the function `depth` frames away from the caller"""
f = sys._getframe(depth + 1)
global_ns = f.f_globals
module = sys.modules[global_ns['__name__']]
return (module, f.f_locals)