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Merge pull request #2728 from Carreau/shifttab...
Merge pull request #2728 from Carreau/shifttab also bind shift tab for tooltip + config This does not change the curent behavior, only add the shift+tab shortcut. Note that the shift tab shortcut has a slightly different behavior. You can select part of a line and pressing shift-tab will show you the tooltip only for the selection. This is disabled for multiline selection to still allow to unindent block of code, Keep in mind that the real real shortcut for indent unindent is Ctrl+] or [ . Select/tab is not really supported by codemirror. Finally the "tooltip_on_tab" behavior is globally configurable via IPython.config so that it could be easily switched to false. It can be overridden via js console for test purpose. IPython.config.tooltip_on_tab = true | false Take effect immediately, only on current notebook. or globally via custom.js var user_conf = {tooltip_on_tab:false | true}; $.extend(IPython.config, user_conf)

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Capturing Output.ipynb
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Capturing Output with %%capture

One of IPython's new cell magics is %%capture, which captures stdout/err for a cell, and discards them or stores them in variables in your namespace.

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import sys

By default, it just swallows it up. This is a simple way to suppress unwanted output.

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%%capture
print 'hi, stdout'
print >> sys.stderr, 'hi, stderr'

If you specify a name, then stdout and stderr will be stored in an object in your namespace.

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%%capture captured
print 'hi, stdout'
print >> sys.stderr, 'hi, stderr'
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captured

Calling the object writes the output to stdout/err as appropriate.

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captured()
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captured.stdout
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captured.stderr

%%capture only captures stdout/err, not displaypub, so you can still do plots and use the display protocol inside %%capture

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%pylab inline
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%%capture wontshutup

print "setting up X"
x = np.linspace(0,5,1000)
print "step 2: constructing y-data"
y = np.sin(x)
print "step 3: display info about y"
plt.plot(x,y)
print "okay, I'm done now"
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wontshutup()

And you can selectively disable capturing stdout or stderr by passing --no-stdout/err.

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%%capture cap --no-stderr
print 'hi, stdout'
print >> sys.stderr, "hello, stderr"
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cap.stdout
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cap.stderr