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Merge pull request #1399 from asmeurer/sympyprinting...
Merge pull request #1399 from asmeurer/sympyprinting Use LaTeX to display, on output, various built-in types with the SymPy printing extension. SymPy's latex() function supports printing lists, tuples, and dicts using latex notation (it uses bmatrix, pmatrix, and Bmatrix, respectively). This provides a more unified experience with SymPy functions that return these types (such as solve()). Also display ints, longs, and floats using LaTeX, to get a more unified printing experience (so that, e.g., x/x will print the same as just 1). The string form can always be obtained by manually calling the actual print function, or 2d unicode printing using pprint(). SymPy's latex() function doesn't treat set() or frosenset() correctly presently (see http://code.google.com/p/sympy/issues /detail?id=3062), so for the present, we leave those alone.

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ipy_server.py
37 lines | 1023 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
""" Simple TCP socket server that executes statements in IPython instance.
Usage:
import ipy_server
ipy_server.serve_thread(16455)
Now, to execute the statements in this ipython instance, open a TCP socket
(port 16455), write out the statements, and close the socket.
You can use e.g. "telnet localhost 16455" or a script to do this.
This is a bit like 'M-x server-start" or gnuserv in the emacs world.
"""
from IPython.core import ipapi
ip = ipapi.get()
import SocketServer
# user-accessible port
PORT = 8099
class IPythonRequestHandler(SocketServer.StreamRequestHandler):
def handle(self):
#print "connection from", self.client_address
inp = self.rfile.read().replace('\r\n','\n')
#print "Execute",inp
ip.runlines(inp)
def serve(port = PORT):
server = SocketServer.TCPServer(("", port), IPythonRequestHandler)
print "ipy_server on TCP port", port
server.serve_forever()
def serve_thread(port = PORT):
import thread
thread.start_new_thread(serve, (port,))