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Changing input filtering to require whitespace separation between the initial command (alias, magic, autocall) and rest of line. ...
Changing input filtering to require whitespace separation between the initial command (alias, magic, autocall) and rest of line. This fixes some subtle but nasty bugs with lines that start with, e.g. r'a_string'. They had been getting parsed as the magic %r followed by the string literal 'a_string' -- now that's been fixed.

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ipy_which.py
70 lines | 1.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
r""" %which magic command
%which <cmd> => search PATH for files matching PATH. Also scans aliases
"""
import IPython.ipapi
ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
import os,sys
from fnmatch import fnmatch
def which(fname):
fullpath = filter(os.path.isdir,os.environ['PATH'].split(os.pathsep))
if '.' not in fullpath:
fullpath = ['.'] + fullpath
fn = fname
for p in fullpath:
for f in os.listdir(p):
head, ext = os.path.splitext(f)
if f == fn or fnmatch(head, fn):
yield os.path.join(p,f)
return
def which_alias(fname):
for al, tgt in ip.IP.alias_table.items():
if not (al == fname or fnmatch(al, fname)):
continue
trg = tgt[1]
trans = ip.expand_alias(trg)
cmd = trans.split(None,1)[0]
print al,"->",trans
for realcmd in which(cmd):
print " ==",realcmd
def which_f(self, arg):
r""" %which <cmd> => search PATH for files matching cmd. Also scans aliases.
Traverses PATH and prints all files (not just executables!) that match the
pattern on command line. Probably more useful in finding stuff
interactively than 'which', which only prints the first matching item.
Also discovers and expands aliases, so you'll see what will be executed
when you call an alias.
Example:
[~]|62> %which d
d -> ls -F --color=auto
== c:\cygwin\bin\ls.exe
c:\cygwin\bin\d.exe
[~]|64> %which diff*
diff3 -> diff3
== c:\cygwin\bin\diff3.exe
diff -> diff
== c:\cygwin\bin\diff.exe
c:\cygwin\bin\diff.exe
c:\cygwin\bin\diff3.exe
"""
which_alias(arg)
for e in which(arg):
print e
ip.expose_magic("which",which_f)