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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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win32clip.py
45 lines | 1.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from IPython.core import ipapi
ip = ipapi.get()
def clip_f( self, parameter_s = '' ):
"""Save a set of lines to the clipboard.
Usage:\\
%clip n1-n2 n3-n4 ... n5 .. n6 ...
This function uses the same syntax as %macro for line extraction, but
instead of creating a macro it saves the resulting string to the
clipboard.
When used without arguments, this returns the text contents of the clipboard.
E.g.
mytext = %clip
"""
import win32clipboard as cl
import win32con
args = parameter_s.split()
cl.OpenClipboard()
if len( args ) == 0:
data = cl.GetClipboardData( win32con.CF_TEXT )
cl.CloseClipboard()
return data
api = self.getapi()
if parameter_s.lstrip().startswith('='):
rest = parameter_s[parameter_s.index('=')+1:].strip()
val = str(api.ev(rest))
else:
ranges = args[0:]
val = ''.join( self.extract_input_slices( ranges ) )
cl.EmptyClipboard()
cl.SetClipboardText( val )
cl.CloseClipboard()
print 'The following text was written to the clipboard'
print val
ip.define_magic( "clip", clip_f )