source: branches/Release12/share/ipythonrc-asap@ 1329

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1# -*- Mode: Shell-Script -*- Not really, but shows comments correctly
2#***************************************************************************
3#
4# Configuration file for ipython -- ipythonrc format
5#
6# The format of this file is one of 'key value' lines.
7# Lines containing only whitespace at the beginning and then a # are ignored
8# as comments. But comments can NOT be put on lines with data.
9#***************************************************************************
10autocall 1
11
12autoindent 1
13
14automagic 1
15
16# Size of the output cache. After this many entries are stored, the cache will
17# get flushed. Depending on the size of your intermediate calculations, you
18# may have memory problems if you make it too big, since keeping things in the
19# cache prevents Python from reclaiming the memory for old results. Experiment
20# with a value that works well for you.
21
22# If you choose cache_size 0 IPython will revert to python's regular >>>
23# unnumbered prompt. You will still have _, __ and ___ for your last three
24# results, but that will be it. No dynamic _1, _2, etc. will be created. If
25# you are running on a slow machine or with very limited memory, this may
26# help.
27
28cache_size 100
29
30# Currently available schemes: NoColor, Linux, LightBG.
31
32# keep uncommented only the one you want:
33colors Linux
34#colors LightBG
35#colors NoColor
36
37# color_info: IPython can display information about objects via a set of
38# functions, and optionally can use colors for this, syntax highlighting
39# source code and various other elements. This information is passed through a
40# pager (it defaults to 'less' if $PAGER is not set).
41
42# If your pager has problems, try to setting it to properly handle escapes
43# (see the less manpage for detail), or disable this option. The magic
44# function @color_info allows you to toggle this interactively for testing.
45
46color_info 1
47
48# confirm_exit: set to 1 if you want IPython to confirm when you try to exit
49# with an EOF (Control-d in Unix, Control-Z/Enter in Windows). Note that using
50# the magic functions @Exit or @Quit you can force a direct exit, bypassing
51# any confirmation.
52
53confirm_exit 1
54
55# Use deep_reload() as a substitute for reload() by default. deep_reload() is
56# still available as dreload() and appears as a builtin.
57
58deep_reload 0
59
60# Which editor to use with the @edit command. If you leave this at 0, IPython
61# will honor your EDITOR environment variable. Since this editor is invoked on
62# the fly by ipython and is meant for editing small code snippets, you may
63# want to use a small, lightweight editor here.
64
65# For Emacs users, setting up your Emacs server properly as described in the
66# manual is a good idea. An alternative is to use jed, a very light editor
67# with much of the feel of Emacs (though not as powerful for heavy-duty work).
68
69editor 0
70
71# log 1 -> same as ipython -log. This automatically logs to ./ipython.log
72log 0
73
74# Same as ipython -Logfile YourLogfileName.
75# Don't use with log 1 (use one or the other)
76logfile ''
77
78# banner 0 -> same as ipython -nobanner
79banner 0
80
81# messages 0 -> same as ipython -nomessages
82messages 0
83
84# Automatically call the pdb debugger after every uncaught exception. If you
85# are used to debugging using pdb, this puts you automatically inside of it
86# after any call (either in IPython or in code called by it) which triggers an
87# exception which goes uncaught.
88pdb 0
89
90# Enable the pprint module for printing. pprint tends to give a more readable
91# display (than print) for complex nested data structures.
92pprint 1
93
94# Prompt strings (see ipython --help for more details).
95# Use %n to represent the current prompt number, and quote them to protect
96# spaces.
97prompt_in1 'ASAP>'
98
99# In prompt_in2, %n is replaced by as many dots as there are digits in the
100# current value of %n.
101prompt_in2 ' .%n.:'
102
103prompt_out 'asap>:'
104
105# quick 1 -> same as ipython -quick
106quick 0
107
108# Use the readline library (1) or not (0). Most users will want this on, but
109# if you experience strange problems with line management (mainly when using
110# IPython inside Emacs buffers) you may try disabling it. Not having it on
111# prevents you from getting command history with the arrow keys, searching and
112# name completion using TAB.
113
114readline 1
115
116# Screen Length: number of lines of your screen. This is used to control
117# printing of very long strings. Strings longer than this number of lines will
118# be paged with the less command instead of directly printed.
119
120# The default value for this is 0, which means IPython will auto-detect your
121# screen size every time it needs to print. If for some reason this isn't
122# working well (it needs curses support), specify it yourself. Otherwise don't
123# change the default.
124
125screen_length 0
126
127# Prompt separators for input and output.
128# Use \n for newline explicitly, without quotes.
129# Use 0 (like at the cmd line) to turn off a given separator.
130
131# The structure of prompt printing is:
132# (SeparateIn)Input....
133# (SeparateOut)Output...
134# (SeparateOut2), # that is, no newline is printed after Out2
135# By choosing these you can organize your output any way you want.
136
137separate_in \n
138
139separate_out 0
140
141separate_out2 0
142
143# 'nosep 1' is a shorthand for '-SeparateIn 0 -SeparateOut 0 -SeparateOut2 0'.
144# Simply removes all input/output separators, overriding the choices above.
145nosep 0
146
147# xmode - Exception reporting mode.
148
149# Valid modes: Plain, Context and Verbose.
150
151# Plain: similar to python's normal traceback printing.
152
153# Context: prints 5 lines of context source code around each line in the
154# traceback.
155
156# Verbose: similar to Context, but additionally prints the variables currently
157# visible where the exception happened (shortening their strings if too
158# long). This can potentially be very slow, if you happen to have a huge data
159# structure whose string representation is complex to compute. Your computer
160# may appear to freeze for a while with cpu usage at 100%. If this occurs, you
161# can cancel the traceback with Ctrl-C (maybe hitting it more than once).
162
163xmode Plain
164#xmode Context
165#xmode Verbose
166
167#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
168# Section: Readline configuration (readline is not available for MS-Windows)
169
170# This is done via the following options:
171
172# (i) readline_parse_and_bind: this option can appear as many times as you
173# want, each time defining a string to be executed via a
174# readline.parse_and_bind() command. The syntax for valid commands of this
175# kind can be found by reading the documentation for the GNU readline library,
176# as these commands are of the kind which readline accepts in its
177# configuration file.
178
179# The TAB key can be used to complete names at the command line in one of two
180# ways: 'complete' and 'menu-complete'. The difference is that 'complete' only
181# completes as much as possible while 'menu-complete' cycles through all
182# possible completions. Leave the one you prefer uncommented.
183
184readline_parse_and_bind tab: complete
185#readline_parse_and_bind tab: menu-complete
186
187# This binds Control-l to printing the list of all possible completions when
188# there is more than one (what 'complete' does when hitting TAB twice, or at
189# the first TAB if show-all-if-ambiguous is on)
190readline_parse_and_bind "\C-l": possible-completions
191
192# This forces readline to automatically print the above list when tab
193# completion is set to 'complete'. You can still get this list manually by
194# using the key bound to 'possible-completions' (Control-l by default) or by
195# hitting TAB twice. Turning this on makes the printing happen at the first
196# TAB.
197readline_parse_and_bind set show-all-if-ambiguous on
198
199# If you have TAB set to complete names, you can rebind any key (Control-o by
200# default) to insert a true TAB character.
201readline_parse_and_bind "\C-o": tab-insert
202
203# These commands allow you to indent/unindent easily, with the 4-space
204# convention of the Python coding standards. Since IPython's internal
205# auto-indent system also uses 4 spaces, you should not change the number of
206# spaces in the code below.
207readline_parse_and_bind "\M-i": " "
208readline_parse_and_bind "\M-o": "\d\d\d\d"
209readline_parse_and_bind "\M-I": "\d\d\d\d"
210
211# Bindings for incremental searches in the history. These searches use the
212# string typed so far on the command line and search anything in the previous
213# input history containing them.
214readline_parse_and_bind "\C-r": reverse-search-history
215readline_parse_and_bind "\C-s": forward-search-history
216
217# Bindings for completing the current line in the history of previous
218# commands. This allows you to recall any previous command by typing its first
219# few letters and hitting Control-p, bypassing all intermediate commands which
220# may be in the history (much faster than hitting up-arrow 50 times!)
221readline_parse_and_bind "\C-p": history-search-backward
222readline_parse_and_bind "\C-n": history-search-forward
223
224# (ii) readline_remove_delims: a string of characters to be removed from the
225# default word-delimiters list used by readline, so that completions may be
226# performed on strings which contain them.
227
228readline_remove_delims '"[]{}-/~
229
230#"' -- just to fix emacs coloring which gets confused by unmatched quotes.
231
232# (iii) readline_omit__names: normally hitting <tab> after a '.' in a name
233# will complete all attributes of an object, including all the special methods
234# whose names inlclude double underscores (like __getitem__ or __class__). If
235# you'd rather not see these names by default, you can set this option to 1.
236
237# Note that even when this option is set, you can still see those names by
238# explicitly typing a _ after the period and hitting <tab>: 'name._<tab>' will
239# always complete attribute names starting with '_'.
240
241# This option is off by default so that new users see all attributes of any
242# objects they are dealing with.
243
244readline_omit__names 0
245
246#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
247# Section: modules to be loaded with 'import ...'
248
249# List, separated by spaces, the names of the modules you want to import
250
251# Example:
252# import_mod sys os
253# will produce internally the statements
254# import sys
255# import os
256
257# Each import is executed in its own try/except block, so if one module
258# fails to load the others will still be ok.
259
260import_mod sys
261
262#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
263# Section: modules to import some functions from: 'from ... import ...'
264
265# List, one per line, the modules for which you want only to import some
266# functions. Give the module name first and then the name of functions to be
267# imported from that module.
268
269# Example:
270# import_some struct pack unpack
271# will produce internally the statement
272# from struct import pack,unpack
273
274# If you have more than one modules_some line, each gets its own try/except
275# block (like modules, see above).
276
277import_some
278
279#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
280# Section: modules to import all from : 'from ... import *'
281
282# List (same syntax as import_mod above) those modules for which you want to
283# import all functions. Remember, this is a potentially dangerous thing to do,
284# since it is very easy to overwrite names of things you need. Use with
285# caution.
286
287# Example:
288# import_all sys os
289# will produce internally the statements
290# from sys import *
291# from os import *
292
293# As before, each will be called in a separate try/except block.
294
295import_all asap
296
297#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
298# Section: Python code to execute.
299
300# Put here code to be explicitly executed (keep it simple!)
301# Put one line of python code per line. All whitespace is removed (this is a
302# feature, not a bug), so don't get fancy building loops here.
303# This is just for quick convenient creation of things you want available.
304
305# Example:
306# banner 0 disables sys.stdout
307execute sys.stdout = sys.__stdout__
308# and each *line* (not each statement, we don't do python syntax parsing) is
309# executed in its own try/except block.
310execute print welcome()
311
312# Note for the adventurous: you can use this to define your own names for the
313# magic functions, by playing some namespace tricks:
314
315# execute __IP.magic_cl = __IP.magic_clear
316
317# defines @cl as a new name for @clear.
318
319#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
320# Section: Pyhton files to load and execute.
321
322# Put here the full names of files you want executed with execfile(file). If
323# you want complicated initialization, just write whatever you want in a
324# regular python file and load it from here.
325
326# Filenames defined here (which *must* include the extension) are searched for
327# through all of sys.path. Since IPython adds your .ipython directory to
328# sys.path, they can also be placed in your .ipython dir and will be
329# found. Otherwise (if you want to execute things not in .ipyton nor in
330# sys.path) give a full path (you can use ~, it gets expanded)
331
332# Example:
333# execfile file1.py ~/file2.py
334# will generate
335# execfile('file1.py')
336# execfile('_path_to_your_home/file2.py')
337
338# As before, each file gets its own try/except block.
339
340execfile asapuserfuncs.py
341
342# If you are feeling adventurous, you can even add functionality to IPython
343# through here. IPython works through a global variable called __ip which
344# exists at the time when these files are read. If you know what you are doing
345# (read the source) you can add functions to __ip in files loaded here.
346
347# The file example-magic.py contains a simple but correct example. Try it:
348
349# execfile example-magic.py
350
351# Look at the examples in IPython/iplib.py for more details on how these magic
352# functions need to process their arguments.
353
354#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
355# Section: aliases for system shell commands
356
357# Here you can define your own names for system commands. The syntax is
358# similar to that of the builtin @alias function:
359
360# alias alias_name command_string
361
362# The resulting aliases are auto-generated magic functions (hence usable as
363# @alias_name)
364
365# For example:
366
367# alias myls ls -la
368
369# will define '@myls' as an alias for executing the system command 'ls -la'.
370# If automagic is on, you can just type myls like you would at a system shell
371# prompt. This allows you to customize IPython's environment to have the same
372# aliases you are accustomed to from your own shell.
373
374# You can also define aliases with parameters using %s specifiers (one per
375# parameter):
376
377# alias parts echo first %s second %s
378
379# will give you in IPython:
380# >>> @parts A B
381# first A second B
382
383# Use one 'alias' statement per alias you wish to define.
384
385#alias
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