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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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quitter.py
37 lines | 1.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
# encoding: utf-8
"""
A simple class for quitting IPython.
Authors:
* Brian Granger
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2009 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class Quitter(object):
"""Simple class to handle exit, similar to Python 2.5's.
It handles exiting in an ipython-safe manner, which the one in Python 2.5
doesn't do (obviously, since it doesn't know about ipython)."""
def __init__(self, shell, name):
self.shell = shell
self.name = name
def __repr__(self):
return 'Type %s() to exit.' % self.name
__str__ = __repr__
def __call__(self):
self.shell.exit()