##// END OF EJS Templates
Merge pull request #2046 from jstenar/iptest-unicode...
Merge pull request #2046 from jstenar/iptest-unicode iptest unicode - fix space in path issue for iptest when using --with-xunit - fix unicode issue in path for iptest closes #760

File last commit:

r7408:34ddebb4
r7734:bb4488ab merge
Show More
Capturing Output.ipynb
181 lines | 3.5 KiB | text/plain | TextLexer

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.

In [ ]:
import sys

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

In [ ]:
%%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.

In [ ]:
%%capture captured
print 'hi, stdout'
print >> sys.stderr, 'hi, stderr'
In [ ]:
captured

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

In [ ]:
captured()
In [ ]:
captured.stdout
In [ ]:
captured.stderr

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

In [ ]:
%pylab inline
In [ ]:
%%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"
In [ ]:
wontshutup()

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

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