Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
Hello,
You should already be able to use epydoc by adding it in the launch config
dialog
options for python files.
see: http://editra.org/launch_overview
If you have an IPyShell embedded in the program you are launching it should
work.
What kind of issues are you seeing?
Cody
Original comment by CodyPrec...@gmail.com
on 25 Jan 2009 at 5:51
[deleted comment]
> You should already be able to use epydoc by adding it in the launch config
dialog
> options for python files.
>
> see: http://editra.org/launch_overview
Ah, cool. That's exactly what I searched for. Didn't noticed that there was a
button :)
> If you have an IPyShell embedded in the program you are launching it should
work.
> What kind of issues are you seeing?
The control characters are displayed incorrectly and it exits directly:
[0;32mIn [[1;32m1[0;32m]: [0m
Do you really want to exit ([y]/n)?
>>> Exit Kode: 0
Original comment by jug4andr...@googlemail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 12:41
Hello (Laurent), you still out there?
Any idea what this issue is or if this is something that IPyShell can/does
support?
Thanks,
Cody
Original comment by CodyPrec...@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 6:35
Hi cody :)
Still there! Just sleeping a little ;)
>> If you have an IPyShell embedded in the program you are launching it should
work.
>> What kind of issues are you seeing?
>
>The control characters are displayed incorrectly and it exits directly:
>
>
>[0;32mIn [[1;32m1[0;32m]: [0m
>Do you really want to exit ([y]/n)?
>>>> Exit Kode: 0
Can explain me what you are trying to do ?_?
I haven't understood what is the process...
Can you tell me what are the exact step to reproduce this ?
What I understood is that you wanted to launch a script calling ipython instaed
of
python. So I think it is not related to ipyshell. If you want to send your
script via
ipython instead of python, do you have the same effect with command line
(outside
editra)?
Regards,
Laurent
(Looking at youe ttle you want to launch a script from ipyshell? is that that?)
Original comment by laurent....@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 6:46
Ok just seen what you are saying.
I'm on it.
Original comment by laurent....@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 7:00
Oups :)
Forget my last mail!!!
I was playing with ipyshell, and a stupid ctrl+v made the discussion appears on
the
shell, was thinking it was the bug!! Sorry.
Please explan better how to reproduce will try to reproduce and will try to fix.
Sorry!
Original comment by laurent....@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 7:04
Hello!
I want to have a ipyshell after launching my script to access the variables and
objects defined in the script (for debugging/testing). To achieve that, there
are 2 ways:
1) Execute the program with ipython
2) Embed the shell into the program (see
http://ipython.scipy.org/doc/manual/html/interactive/reference.html#embedding)
Both end like I wrote before. I think it's because ipython uses terminal control
characters and expects a terminal to display them. Further, I don't know what
would
be easier: Make this work with the launch plugin or hack it into the ipyshell
plugin.
Regards,
Julian
Original comment by jug4andr...@googlemail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 7:04
Ok I see now :)
> Both end like I wrote before. I think it's because ipython uses
> terminal
> control
> characters and expects a terminal to display them.
That's exactly the problem.
I've tried before to use the same trick but is has never worked for me :(
I see two other way to do this:
-1) start an ipyshell (so you'll get an ipython shell)
Inside do "ls your working directory"
Then %run script.py
>> problems: will be limited to non wx features. If you use matplotlib ,
disable threading support.
>> you will found perhaps some bugs I've never seen ;)
-2) launcher, is it possible to launch a command without redirecting stdin
stdout?
I mean something like (under windows) launch a cmd prompt and then launch
ipython myscript.py inside it?
Cody can launcher do that? If I remember well SPE had an option like this,
so it could also call winpdb from it's GUI. So the launcher invocked winpdb
outside the editor. Same for python shell.(Was quite usefull in fact ;) )
We can also try to make a connection between launcher and the ipyshell.
I can add a function call, something like:
Ipython_execute(string) that will run 'ls "current_path"\n%run string'.
But first I need to know if solution sems ok for you :)
Original comment by laurent....@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 9:40
Hello,
The Launch plugin is very generic and general case. It has api for allowing
custom
handling of different filetypes to handle their error output but out side of
that it
does not do much more than manage different command line calls and reading from
stdout/stderr. The view is also Read Only, it does not allow for interactive
input.
This plugin will remain that way, if there is a need for some sort of special
case
handling like this it will need to be either handled by a specialized plugin or
by
IPyShell.
As a possible workaround you could have the logic for doing this in the python
script you are trying to launch. When Launch runs it it creates a separate
process
so you should be able to do anything you would when its run standalone.
i.e) You could write a generic script that takes another script to run as an
argument then just wrap the calls to ipython within it. (* Disclaimer: I
haven't
used ipython other than trying out this plugin so I don't know much about it *)
myLaunchScript.py myScriptToLaunch.py
Cody
Original comment by CodyPrec...@gmail.com
on 26 Jan 2009 at 9:55
closing as wont fix
Original comment by CodyPrec...@gmail.com
on 3 Sep 2009 at 3:36
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
jug4andr...@googlemail.com
on 25 Jan 2009 at 11:55