##// END OF EJS Templates
Allow the user to interact with link anchors in the qtconsole...
Allow the user to interact with link anchors in the qtconsole Since the qtconsole can display hyperlinks, it would be useful to allow interacting with them. This adds showing a tooltip when the mouse is over a link. The tooltip code stores the anchor in ConsoleWidget._anchor, so when the user right-clicks to select the context menu for "Open Link" or "Copy Link Address", it uses the text that was displayed and not whats under the current context menu pointer location. Also storing the anchor allows me to check to see if we've already displayed that anchor on a new mouseMoveEvent so the tooltip doesn't keep getting redrawn.

File last commit:

r8216:e1d0b7e3
r8532:9891d074
Show More
test_handlers.py
119 lines | 4.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Tests for input handlers.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Module imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# third party
import nose.tools as nt
# our own packages
from IPython.core import autocall
from IPython.testing import tools as tt
from IPython.testing.globalipapp import get_ipython
from IPython.utils import py3compat
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Get the public instance of IPython
ip = get_ipython()
failures = []
num_tests = 0
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class CallableIndexable(object):
def __getitem__(self, idx): return True
def __call__(self, *args, **kws): return True
class Autocallable(autocall.IPyAutocall):
def __call__(self):
return "called"
def run(tests):
"""Loop through a list of (pre, post) inputs, where pre is the string
handed to ipython, and post is how that string looks after it's been
transformed (i.e. ipython's notion of _i)"""
tt.check_pairs(ip.prefilter_manager.prefilter_lines, tests)
def test_handlers():
# alias expansion
# We're using 'true' as our syscall of choice because it doesn't
# write anything to stdout.
# Turn off actual execution of aliases, because it's noisy
old_system_cmd = ip.system
ip.system = lambda cmd: None
ip.alias_manager.alias_table['an_alias'] = (0, 'true')
# These are useful for checking a particular recursive alias issue
ip.alias_manager.alias_table['top'] = (0, 'd:/cygwin/top')
ip.alias_manager.alias_table['d'] = (0, 'true')
run([(i,py3compat.u_format(o)) for i,o in \
[("an_alias", "get_ipython().system({u}'true ')"), # alias
# Below: recursive aliases should expand whitespace-surrounded
# chars, *not* initial chars which happen to be aliases:
("top", "get_ipython().system({u}'d:/cygwin/top ')"),
]])
ip.system = old_system_cmd
call_idx = CallableIndexable()
ip.user_ns['call_idx'] = call_idx
# For many of the below, we're also checking that leading whitespace
# turns off the esc char, which it should unless there is a continuation
# line.
run([(i,py3compat.u_format(o)) for i,o in \
[('"no change"', '"no change"'), # normal
(u"lsmagic", "get_ipython().magic({u}'lsmagic ')"), # magic
#("a = b # PYTHON-MODE", '_i'), # emacs -- avoids _in cache
]])
# Objects which are instances of IPyAutocall are *always* autocalled
autocallable = Autocallable()
ip.user_ns['autocallable'] = autocallable
# auto
ip.magic('autocall 0')
# Only explicit escapes or instances of IPyAutocallable should get
# expanded
run([
('len "abc"', 'len "abc"'),
('autocallable', 'autocallable()'),
# Don't add extra brackets (gh-1117)
('autocallable()', 'autocallable()'),
])
ip.magic('autocall 1')
run([
('len "abc"', 'len("abc")'),
('len "abc";', 'len("abc");'), # ; is special -- moves out of parens
# Autocall is turned off if first arg is [] and the object
# is both callable and indexable. Like so:
('len [1,2]', 'len([1,2])'), # len doesn't support __getitem__...
('call_idx [1]', 'call_idx [1]'), # call_idx *does*..
('call_idx 1', 'call_idx(1)'),
('len', 'len'), # only at 2 does it auto-call on single args
])
ip.magic('autocall 2')
run([
('len "abc"', 'len("abc")'),
('len "abc";', 'len("abc");'),
('len [1,2]', 'len([1,2])'),
('call_idx [1]', 'call_idx [1]'),
('call_idx 1', 'call_idx(1)'),
# This is what's different:
('len', 'len()'), # only at 2 does it auto-call on single args
])
ip.magic('autocall 1')
nt.assert_equal(failures, [])