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Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow....
Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow. When a module is moved to quarantine, it means that while we intend to keep it, it is currently broken or sufficiently untested that it can't be in the main IPython codebase. To be moved back into the main IPython codebase a module must: 1. Work fully. 2. Have a test suite. 3. Be a proper IPython extension and tie into the official APIs. 3. Have members of the IPython dev team who are willing to maintain it. When a module is moved to deathrow, it means that the code is either broken and not worth repairing, deprecated, replaced by newer functionality, or code that should be developed and maintained by a third party.

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excolors.py
137 lines | 4.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Color schemes for exception handling code in IPython.
"""
#*****************************************************************************
# Copyright (C) 2005-2006 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu>
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#*****************************************************************************
#****************************************************************************
# Required modules
from IPython.utils.coloransi import ColorSchemeTable, TermColors, ColorScheme
def exception_colors():
"""Return a color table with fields for exception reporting.
The table is an instance of ColorSchemeTable with schemes added for
'Linux', 'LightBG' and 'NoColor' and fields for exception handling filled
in.
Examples:
>>> ec = exception_colors()
>>> ec.active_scheme_name
''
>>> print ec.active_colors
None
Now we activate a color scheme:
>>> ec.set_active_scheme('NoColor')
>>> ec.active_scheme_name
'NoColor'
>>> ec.active_colors.keys()
['em', 'filenameEm', 'excName', 'valEm', 'nameEm', 'line', 'topline',
'name', 'caret', 'val', 'vName', 'Normal', 'filename', 'linenoEm',
'lineno', 'normalEm']
"""
ex_colors = ColorSchemeTable()
# Populate it with color schemes
C = TermColors # shorthand and local lookup
ex_colors.add_scheme(ColorScheme(
'NoColor',
# The color to be used for the top line
topline = C.NoColor,
# The colors to be used in the traceback
filename = C.NoColor,
lineno = C.NoColor,
name = C.NoColor,
vName = C.NoColor,
val = C.NoColor,
em = C.NoColor,
# Emphasized colors for the last frame of the traceback
normalEm = C.NoColor,
filenameEm = C.NoColor,
linenoEm = C.NoColor,
nameEm = C.NoColor,
valEm = C.NoColor,
# Colors for printing the exception
excName = C.NoColor,
line = C.NoColor,
caret = C.NoColor,
Normal = C.NoColor
))
# make some schemes as instances so we can copy them for modification easily
ex_colors.add_scheme(ColorScheme(
'Linux',
# The color to be used for the top line
topline = C.LightRed,
# The colors to be used in the traceback
filename = C.Green,
lineno = C.Green,
name = C.Purple,
vName = C.Cyan,
val = C.Green,
em = C.LightCyan,
# Emphasized colors for the last frame of the traceback
normalEm = C.LightCyan,
filenameEm = C.LightGreen,
linenoEm = C.LightGreen,
nameEm = C.LightPurple,
valEm = C.LightBlue,
# Colors for printing the exception
excName = C.LightRed,
line = C.Yellow,
caret = C.White,
Normal = C.Normal
))
# For light backgrounds, swap dark/light colors
ex_colors.add_scheme(ColorScheme(
'LightBG',
# The color to be used for the top line
topline = C.Red,
# The colors to be used in the traceback
filename = C.LightGreen,
lineno = C.LightGreen,
name = C.LightPurple,
vName = C.Cyan,
val = C.LightGreen,
em = C.Cyan,
# Emphasized colors for the last frame of the traceback
normalEm = C.Cyan,
filenameEm = C.Green,
linenoEm = C.Green,
nameEm = C.Purple,
valEm = C.Blue,
# Colors for printing the exception
excName = C.Red,
#line = C.Brown, # brown often is displayed as yellow
line = C.Red,
caret = C.Normal,
Normal = C.Normal,
))
return ex_colors
# For backwards compatibility, keep around a single global object. Note that
# this should NOT be used, the factory function should be used instead, since
# these objects are stateful and it's very easy to get strange bugs if any code
# modifies the module-level object's state.
ExceptionColors = exception_colors()