| .. _idle: |
| |
| IDLE |
| ==== |
| |
| .. moduleauthor:: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> |
| |
| **Source code:** :source:`Lib/idlelib/` |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: IDLE |
| single: Python Editor |
| single: Integrated Development Environment |
| |
| -------------- |
| |
| IDLE is Python's Integrated Development and Learning Environment. |
| |
| IDLE has the following features: |
| |
| * coded in 100% pure Python, using the :mod:`tkinter` GUI toolkit |
| |
| * cross-platform: works mostly the same on Windows, Unix, and macOS |
| |
| * Python shell window (interactive interpreter) with colorizing |
| of code input, output, and error messages |
| |
| * multi-window text editor with multiple undo, Python colorizing, |
| smart indent, call tips, auto completion, and other features |
| |
| * search within any window, replace within editor windows, and search |
| through multiple files (grep) |
| |
| * debugger with persistent breakpoints, stepping, and viewing |
| of global and local namespaces |
| |
| * configuration, browsers, and other dialogs |
| |
| Menus |
| ----- |
| |
| IDLE has two main window types, the Shell window and the Editor window. It is |
| possible to have multiple editor windows simultaneously. On Windows and |
| Linux, each has its own top menu. Each menu documented below indicates |
| which window type it is associated with. |
| |
| Output windows, such as used for Edit => Find in Files, are a subtype of editor |
| window. They currently have the same top menu but a different |
| default title and context menu. |
| |
| On macOS, there is one application menu. It dynamically changes according |
| to the window currently selected. It has an IDLE menu, and some entries |
| described below are moved around to conform to Apple guidlines. |
| |
| File menu (Shell and Editor) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| New File |
| Create a new file editing window. |
| |
| Open... |
| Open an existing file with an Open dialog. |
| |
| Recent Files |
| Open a list of recent files. Click one to open it. |
| |
| Open Module... |
| Open an existing module (searches sys.path). |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: Class browser |
| single: Path browser |
| |
| Class Browser |
| Show functions, classes, and methods in the current Editor file in a |
| tree structure. In the shell, open a module first. |
| |
| Path Browser |
| Show sys.path directories, modules, functions, classes and methods in a |
| tree structure. |
| |
| Save |
| Save the current window to the associated file, if there is one. Windows |
| that have been changed since being opened or last saved have a \* before |
| and after the window title. If there is no associated file, |
| do Save As instead. |
| |
| Save As... |
| Save the current window with a Save As dialog. The file saved becomes the |
| new associated file for the window. |
| |
| Save Copy As... |
| Save the current window to different file without changing the associated |
| file. |
| |
| Print Window |
| Print the current window to the default printer. |
| |
| Close |
| Close the current window (ask to save if unsaved). |
| |
| Exit |
| Close all windows and quit IDLE (ask to save unsaved windows). |
| |
| Edit menu (Shell and Editor) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Undo |
| Undo the last change to the current window. A maximum of 1000 changes may |
| be undone. |
| |
| Redo |
| Redo the last undone change to the current window. |
| |
| Cut |
| Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard; then delete the selection. |
| |
| Copy |
| Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard. |
| |
| Paste |
| Insert contents of the system-wide clipboard into the current window. |
| |
| The clipboard functions are also available in context menus. |
| |
| Select All |
| Select the entire contents of the current window. |
| |
| Find... |
| Open a search dialog with many options |
| |
| Find Again |
| Repeat the last search, if there is one. |
| |
| Find Selection |
| Search for the currently selected string, if there is one. |
| |
| Find in Files... |
| Open a file search dialog. Put results in a new output window. |
| |
| Replace... |
| Open a search-and-replace dialog. |
| |
| Go to Line |
| Move cursor to the line number requested and make that line visible. |
| |
| Show Completions |
| Open a scrollable list allowing selection of keywords and attributes. See |
| :ref:`Completions <completions>` in the Editing and navigation section below. |
| |
| Expand Word |
| Expand a prefix you have typed to match a full word in the same window; |
| repeat to get a different expansion. |
| |
| Show call tip |
| After an unclosed parenthesis for a function, open a small window with |
| function parameter hints. See :ref:`Calltips <calltips>` in the |
| Editing and navigation section below. |
| |
| Show surrounding parens |
| Highlight the surrounding parenthesis. |
| |
| .. _format-menu: |
| |
| Format menu (Editor window only) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Indent Region |
| Shift selected lines right by the indent width (default 4 spaces). |
| |
| Dedent Region |
| Shift selected lines left by the indent width (default 4 spaces). |
| |
| Comment Out Region |
| Insert ## in front of selected lines. |
| |
| Uncomment Region |
| Remove leading # or ## from selected lines. |
| |
| Tabify Region |
| Turn *leading* stretches of spaces into tabs. (Note: We recommend using |
| 4 space blocks to indent Python code.) |
| |
| Untabify Region |
| Turn *all* tabs into the correct number of spaces. |
| |
| Toggle Tabs |
| Open a dialog to switch between indenting with spaces and tabs. |
| |
| New Indent Width |
| Open a dialog to change indent width. The accepted default by the Python |
| community is 4 spaces. |
| |
| Format Paragraph |
| Reformat the current blank-line-delimited paragraph in comment block or |
| multiline string or selected line in a string. All lines in the |
| paragraph will be formatted to less than N columns, where N defaults to 72. |
| |
| Strip trailing whitespace |
| Remove trailing space and other whitespace characters after the last |
| non-whitespace character of a line by applying str.rstrip to each line, |
| including lines within multiline strings. |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: Run script |
| |
| Run menu (Editor window only) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Python Shell |
| Open or wake up the Python Shell window. |
| |
| Check Module |
| Check the syntax of the module currently open in the Editor window. If the |
| module has not been saved IDLE will either prompt the user to save or |
| autosave, as selected in the General tab of the Idle Settings dialog. If |
| there is a syntax error, the approximate location is indicated in the |
| Editor window. |
| |
| Run Module |
| Do Check Module (above). If no error, restart the shell to clean the |
| environment, then execute the module. Output is displayed in the Shell |
| window. Note that output requires use of ``print`` or ``write``. |
| When execution is complete, the Shell retains focus and displays a prompt. |
| At this point, one may interactively explore the result of execution. |
| This is similar to executing a file with ``python -i file`` at a command |
| line. |
| |
| Shell menu (Shell window only) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| View Last Restart |
| Scroll the shell window to the last Shell restart. |
| |
| Restart Shell |
| Restart the shell to clean the environment. |
| |
| Previous History |
| Cycle through earlier commands in history which match the current entry. |
| |
| Next History |
| Cycle through later commands in history which match the current entry. |
| |
| Interrupt Execution |
| Stop a running program. |
| |
| Debug menu (Shell window only) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Go to File/Line |
| Look on the current line. with the cursor, and the line above for a filename |
| and line number. If found, open the file if not already open, and show the |
| line. Use this to view source lines referenced in an exception traceback |
| and lines found by Find in Files. Also available in the context menu of |
| the Shell window and Output windows. |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: debugger |
| single: stack viewer |
| |
| Debugger (toggle) |
| When activated, code entered in the Shell or run from an Editor will run |
| under the debugger. In the Editor, breakpoints can be set with the context |
| menu. This feature is still incomplete and somewhat experimental. |
| |
| Stack Viewer |
| Show the stack traceback of the last exception in a tree widget, with |
| access to locals and globals. |
| |
| Auto-open Stack Viewer |
| Toggle automatically opening the stack viewer on an unhandled exception. |
| |
| Options menu (Shell and Editor) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Configure IDLE |
| Open a configuration dialog and change preferences for the following: |
| fonts, indentation, keybindings, text color themes, startup windows and |
| size, additional help sources, and extensions. On macOS, open the |
| configuration dialog by selecting Preferences in the application |
| menu. For more, see |
| :ref:`Setting preferences <preferences>` under Help and preferences. |
| |
| Zoom/Restore Height |
| Toggles the window between normal size and maximum height. The initial size |
| defaults to 40 lines by 80 chars unless changed on the General tab of the |
| Configure IDLE dialog. |
| |
| Show/Hide Code Context (Editor Window only) |
| Open a pane at the top of the edit window which shows the block context |
| of the code which has scrolled above the top of the window. See |
| :ref:`Code Context <code-context>` in the Editing and Navigation section below. |
| |
| Window menu (Shell and Editor) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Lists the names of all open windows; select one to bring it to the foreground |
| (deiconifying it if necessary). |
| |
| Help menu (Shell and Editor) |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| About IDLE |
| Display version, copyright, license, credits, and more. |
| |
| IDLE Help |
| Display this IDLE document, detailing the menu options, basic editing and |
| navigation, and other tips. |
| |
| Python Docs |
| Access local Python documentation, if installed, or start a web browser |
| and open docs.python.org showing the latest Python documentation. |
| |
| Turtle Demo |
| Run the turtledemo module with example Python code and turtle drawings. |
| |
| Additional help sources may be added here with the Configure IDLE dialog under |
| the General tab. See the :ref:`Help sources <help-sources>` subsection below |
| for more on Help menu choices. |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: Cut |
| single: Copy |
| single: Paste |
| single: Set Breakpoint |
| single: Clear Breakpoint |
| single: breakpoints |
| |
| Context Menus |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Open a context menu by right-clicking in a window (Control-click on macOS). |
| Context menus have the standard clipboard functions also on the Edit menu. |
| |
| Cut |
| Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard; then delete the selection. |
| |
| Copy |
| Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard. |
| |
| Paste |
| Insert contents of the system-wide clipboard into the current window. |
| |
| Editor windows also have breakpoint functions. Lines with a breakpoint set are |
| specially marked. Breakpoints only have an effect when running under the |
| debugger. Breakpoints for a file are saved in the user's .idlerc directory. |
| |
| Set Breakpoint |
| Set a breakpoint on the current line. |
| |
| Clear Breakpoint |
| Clear the breakpoint on that line. |
| |
| Shell and Output windows also have the following. |
| |
| Go to file/line |
| Same as in Debug menu. |
| |
| The Shell window also has an output squeezing facility explained in the *Python |
| Shell window* subsection below. |
| |
| Squeeze |
| If the cursor is over an output line, squeeze all the output between |
| the code above and the prompt below down to a 'Squeezed text' label. |
| |
| |
| .. _editing-and-navigation: |
| |
| Editing and navigation |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Editor windows |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| IDLE may open editor windows when it starts, depending on settings |
| and how you start IDLE. Thereafter, use the File menu. There can be only |
| one open editor window for a given file. |
| |
| The title bar contains the name of the file, the full path, and the version |
| of Python and IDLE running the window. The status bar contains the line |
| number ('Ln') and column number ('Col'). Line numbers start with 1; |
| column numbers with 0. |
| |
| IDLE assumes that files with a known .py* extension contain Python code |
| and that other files do not. Run Python code with the Run menu. |
| |
| Key bindings |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In this section, 'C' refers to the :kbd:`Control` key on Windows and Unix and |
| the :kbd:`Command` key on macOS. |
| |
| * :kbd:`Backspace` deletes to the left; :kbd:`Del` deletes to the right |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-Backspace` delete word left; :kbd:`C-Del` delete word to the right |
| |
| * Arrow keys and :kbd:`Page Up`/:kbd:`Page Down` to move around |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-LeftArrow` and :kbd:`C-RightArrow` moves by words |
| |
| * :kbd:`Home`/:kbd:`End` go to begin/end of line |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-Home`/:kbd:`C-End` go to begin/end of file |
| |
| * Some useful Emacs bindings are inherited from Tcl/Tk: |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-a` beginning of line |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-e` end of line |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-k` kill line (but doesn't put it in clipboard) |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-l` center window around the insertion point |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-b` go backward one character without deleting (usually you can |
| also use the cursor key for this) |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-f` go forward one character without deleting (usually you can |
| also use the cursor key for this) |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-p` go up one line (usually you can also use the cursor key for |
| this) |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-d` delete next character |
| |
| Standard keybindings (like :kbd:`C-c` to copy and :kbd:`C-v` to paste) |
| may work. Keybindings are selected in the Configure IDLE dialog. |
| |
| Automatic indentation |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| After a block-opening statement, the next line is indented by 4 spaces (in the |
| Python Shell window by one tab). After certain keywords (break, return etc.) |
| the next line is dedented. In leading indentation, :kbd:`Backspace` deletes up |
| to 4 spaces if they are there. :kbd:`Tab` inserts spaces (in the Python |
| Shell window one tab), number depends on Indent width. Currently, tabs |
| are restricted to four spaces due to Tcl/Tk limitations. |
| |
| See also the indent/dedent region commands on the |
| :ref:`Format menu <format-menu>`. |
| |
| |
| .. _completions: |
| |
| Completions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Completions are supplied for functions, classes, and attributes of classes, |
| both built-in and user-defined. Completions are also provided for |
| filenames. |
| |
| The AutoCompleteWindow (ACW) will open after a predefined delay (default is |
| two seconds) after a '.' or (in a string) an os.sep is typed. If after one |
| of those characters (plus zero or more other characters) a tab is typed |
| the ACW will open immediately if a possible continuation is found. |
| |
| If there is only one possible completion for the characters entered, a |
| :kbd:`Tab` will supply that completion without opening the ACW. |
| |
| 'Show Completions' will force open a completions window, by default the |
| :kbd:`C-space` will open a completions window. In an empty |
| string, this will contain the files in the current directory. On a |
| blank line, it will contain the built-in and user-defined functions and |
| classes in the current namespaces, plus any modules imported. If some |
| characters have been entered, the ACW will attempt to be more specific. |
| |
| If a string of characters is typed, the ACW selection will jump to the |
| entry most closely matching those characters. Entering a :kbd:`tab` will |
| cause the longest non-ambiguous match to be entered in the Editor window or |
| Shell. Two :kbd:`tab` in a row will supply the current ACW selection, as |
| will return or a double click. Cursor keys, Page Up/Down, mouse selection, |
| and the scroll wheel all operate on the ACW. |
| |
| "Hidden" attributes can be accessed by typing the beginning of hidden |
| name after a '.', e.g. '_'. This allows access to modules with |
| ``__all__`` set, or to class-private attributes. |
| |
| Completions and the 'Expand Word' facility can save a lot of typing! |
| |
| Completions are currently limited to those in the namespaces. Names in |
| an Editor window which are not via ``__main__`` and :data:`sys.modules` will |
| not be found. Run the module once with your imports to correct this situation. |
| Note that IDLE itself places quite a few modules in sys.modules, so |
| much can be found by default, e.g. the re module. |
| |
| If you don't like the ACW popping up unbidden, simply make the delay |
| longer or disable the extension. |
| |
| .. _calltips: |
| |
| Calltips |
| ^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A calltip is shown when one types :kbd:`(` after the name of an *accessible* |
| function. A name expression may include dots and subscripts. A calltip |
| remains until it is clicked, the cursor is moved out of the argument area, |
| or :kbd:`)` is typed. When the cursor is in the argument part of a definition, |
| the menu or shortcut display a calltip. |
| |
| A calltip consists of the function signature and the first line of the |
| docstring. For builtins without an accessible signature, the calltip |
| consists of all lines up the fifth line or the first blank line. These |
| details may change. |
| |
| The set of *accessible* functions depends on what modules have been imported |
| into the user process, including those imported by Idle itself, |
| and what definitions have been run, all since the last restart. |
| |
| For example, restart the Shell and enter ``itertools.count(``. A calltip |
| appears because Idle imports itertools into the user process for its own use. |
| (This could change.) Enter ``turtle.write(`` and nothing appears. Idle does |
| not import turtle. The menu or shortcut do nothing either. Enter |
| ``import turtle`` and then ``turtle.write(`` will work. |
| |
| In an editor, import statements have no effect until one runs the file. One |
| might want to run a file after writing the import statements at the top, |
| or immediately run an existing file before editing. |
| |
| .. _code-context: |
| |
| Code Context |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Within an editor window containing Python code, code context can be toggled |
| in order to show or hide a pane at the top of the window. When shown, this |
| pane freezes the opening lines for block code, such as those beginning with |
| ``class``, ``def``, or ``if`` keywords, that would have otherwise scrolled |
| out of view. The size of the pane will be expanded and contracted as needed |
| to show the all current levels of context, up to the maximum number of |
| lines defined in the Configure IDLE dialog (which defaults to 15). If there |
| are no current context lines and the feature is toggled on, a single blank |
| line will display. Clicking on a line in the context pane will move that |
| line to the top of the editor. |
| |
| The text and background colors for the context pane can be configured under |
| the Highlights tab in the Configure IDLE dialog. |
| |
| Python Shell window |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With IDLE's Shell, one enters, edits, and recalls complete statements. |
| Most consoles and terminals only work with a single physical line at a time. |
| |
| When one pastes code into Shell, it is not compiled and possibly executed |
| until one hits :kbd:`Return`. One may edit pasted code first. |
| If one pastes more that one statement into Shell, the result will be a |
| :exc:`SyntaxError` when multiple statements are compiled as if they were one. |
| |
| The editing features described in previous subsections work when entering |
| code interactively. IDLE's Shell window also responds to the following keys. |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-c` interrupts executing command |
| |
| * :kbd:`C-d` sends end-of-file; closes window if typed at a ``>>>`` prompt |
| |
| * :kbd:`Alt-/` (Expand word) is also useful to reduce typing |
| |
| Command history |
| |
| * :kbd:`Alt-p` retrieves previous command matching what you have typed. On |
| macOS use :kbd:`C-p`. |
| |
| * :kbd:`Alt-n` retrieves next. On macOS use :kbd:`C-n`. |
| |
| * :kbd:`Return` while on any previous command retrieves that command |
| |
| Text colors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Idle defaults to black on white text, but colors text with special meanings. |
| For the shell, these are shell output, shell error, user output, and |
| user error. For Python code, at the shell prompt or in an editor, these are |
| keywords, builtin class and function names, names following ``class`` and |
| ``def``, strings, and comments. For any text window, these are the cursor (when |
| present), found text (when possible), and selected text. |
| |
| Text coloring is done in the background, so uncolorized text is occasionally |
| visible. To change the color scheme, use the Configure IDLE dialog |
| Highlighting tab. The marking of debugger breakpoint lines in the editor and |
| text in popups and dialogs is not user-configurable. |
| |
| |
| Startup and code execution |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Upon startup with the ``-s`` option, IDLE will execute the file referenced by |
| the environment variables :envvar:`IDLESTARTUP` or :envvar:`PYTHONSTARTUP`. |
| IDLE first checks for ``IDLESTARTUP``; if ``IDLESTARTUP`` is present the file |
| referenced is run. If ``IDLESTARTUP`` is not present, IDLE checks for |
| ``PYTHONSTARTUP``. Files referenced by these environment variables are |
| convenient places to store functions that are used frequently from the IDLE |
| shell, or for executing import statements to import common modules. |
| |
| In addition, ``Tk`` also loads a startup file if it is present. Note that the |
| Tk file is loaded unconditionally. This additional file is ``.Idle.py`` and is |
| looked for in the user's home directory. Statements in this file will be |
| executed in the Tk namespace, so this file is not useful for importing |
| functions to be used from IDLE's Python shell. |
| |
| Command line usage |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| idle.py [-c command] [-d] [-e] [-h] [-i] [-r file] [-s] [-t title] [-] [arg] ... |
| |
| -c command run command in the shell window |
| -d enable debugger and open shell window |
| -e open editor window |
| -h print help message with legal combinations and exit |
| -i open shell window |
| -r file run file in shell window |
| -s run $IDLESTARTUP or $PYTHONSTARTUP first, in shell window |
| -t title set title of shell window |
| - run stdin in shell (- must be last option before args) |
| |
| If there are arguments: |
| |
| * If ``-``, ``-c``, or ``r`` is used, all arguments are placed in |
| ``sys.argv[1:...]`` and ``sys.argv[0]`` is set to ``''``, ``'-c'``, |
| or ``'-r'``. No editor window is opened, even if that is the default |
| set in the Options dialog. |
| |
| * Otherwise, arguments are files opened for editing and |
| ``sys.argv`` reflects the arguments passed to IDLE itself. |
| |
| Startup failure |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| IDLE uses a socket to communicate between the IDLE GUI process and the user |
| code execution process. A connection must be established whenever the Shell |
| starts or restarts. (The latter is indicated by a divider line that says |
| 'RESTART'). If the user process fails to connect to the GUI process, it |
| displays a ``Tk`` error box with a 'cannot connect' message that directs the |
| user here. It then exits. |
| |
| A common cause of failure is a user-written file with the same name as a |
| standard library module, such as *random.py* and *tkinter.py*. When such a |
| file is located in the same directory as a file that is about to be run, |
| IDLE cannot import the stdlib file. The current fix is to rename the |
| user file. |
| |
| Though less common than in the past, an antivirus or firewall program may |
| stop the connection. If the program cannot be taught to allow the |
| connection, then it must be turned off for IDLE to work. It is safe to |
| allow this internal connection because no data is visible on external |
| ports. A similar problem is a network mis-configuration that blocks |
| connections. |
| |
| Python installation issues occasionally stop IDLE: multiple versions can |
| clash, or a single installation might need admin access. If one undo the |
| clash, or cannot or does not want to run as admin, it might be easiest to |
| completely remove Python and start over. |
| |
| A zombie pythonw.exe process could be a problem. On Windows, use Task |
| Manager to detect and stop one. Sometimes a restart initiated by a program |
| crash or Keyboard Interrupt (control-C) may fail to connect. Dismissing |
| the error box or Restart Shell on the Shell menu may fix a temporary problem. |
| |
| When IDLE first starts, it attempts to read user configuration files in |
| ~/.idlerc/ (~ is one's home directory). If there is a problem, an error |
| message should be displayed. Leaving aside random disk glitches, this can |
| be prevented by never editing the files by hand, using the configuration |
| dialog, under Options, instead Options. Once it happens, the solution may |
| be to delete one or more of the configuration files. |
| |
| If IDLE quits with no message, and it was not started from a console, try |
| starting from a console (``python -m idlelib)`` and see if a message appears. |
| |
| Running user code |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With rare exceptions, the result of executing Python code with IDLE is |
| intended to be the same as executing the same code by the default method, |
| directly with Python in a text-mode system console or terminal window. |
| However, the different interface and operation occasionally affect |
| visible results. For instance, ``sys.modules`` starts with more entries, |
| and ``threading.activeCount()`` returns 2 instead of 1. |
| |
| By default, IDLE runs user code in a separate OS process rather than in |
| the user interface process that runs the shell and editor. In the execution |
| process, it replaces ``sys.stdin``, ``sys.stdout``, and ``sys.stderr`` |
| with objects that get input from and send output to the Shell window. |
| The original values stored in ``sys.__stdin__``, ``sys.__stdout__``, and |
| ``sys.__stderr__`` are not touched, but may be ``None``. |
| |
| When Shell has the focus, it controls the keyboard and screen. This is |
| normally transparent, but functions that directly access the keyboard |
| and screen will not work. These include system-specific functions that |
| determine whether a key has been pressed and if so, which. |
| |
| IDLE's standard stream replacements are not inherited by subprocesses |
| created in the execution process, whether directly by user code or by modules |
| such as multiprocessing. If such subprocess use ``input`` from sys.stdin |
| or ``print`` or ``write`` to sys.stdout or sys.stderr, |
| IDLE should be started in a command line window. The secondary subprocess |
| will then be attached to that window for input and output. |
| |
| If ``sys`` is reset by user code, such as with ``importlib.reload(sys)``, |
| IDLE's changes are lost and input from the keyboard and output to the screen |
| will not work correctly. |
| |
| User output in Shell |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When a program outputs text, the result is determined by the |
| corresponding output device. When IDLE executes user code, ``sys.stdout`` |
| and ``sys.stderr`` are connected to the display area of IDLE's Shell. Some of |
| its features are inherited from the underlying Tk Text widget. Others |
| are programmed additions. Where it matters, Shell is designed for development |
| rather than production runs. |
| |
| For instance, Shell never throws away output. A program that sends unlimited |
| output to Shell will eventually fill memory, resulting in a memory error. |
| In contrast, some system text windows only keep the last n lines of output. |
| A Windows console, for instance, keeps a user-settable 1 to 9999 lines, |
| with 300 the default. |
| |
| A Tk Text widget, and hence IDLE's Shell, displays characters (codepoints) in |
| the BMP (Basic Multilingual Plane) subset of Unicode. Which characters are |
| displayed with a proper glyph and which with a replacement box depends on the |
| operating system and installed fonts. Tab characters cause the following text |
| to begin after the next tab stop. (They occur every 8 'characters'). Newline |
| characters cause following text to appear on a new line. Other control |
| characters are ignored or displayed as a space, box, or something else, |
| depending on the operating system and font. (Moving the text cursor through |
| such output with arrow keys may exhibit some surprising spacing behavior.) :: |
| |
| >>> s = 'a\tb\a<\x02><\r>\bc\nd' # Enter 22 chars. |
| >>> len(s) |
| 14 |
| >>> s # Display repr(s) |
| 'a\tb\x07<\x02><\r>\x08c\nd' |
| >>> print(s, end='') # Display s as is. |
| # Result varies by OS and font. Try it. |
| |
| The ``repr`` function is used for interactive echo of expression |
| values. It returns an altered version of the input string in which |
| control codes, some BMP codepoints, and all non-BMP codepoints are |
| replaced with escape codes. As demonstrated above, it allows one to |
| identify the characters in a string, regardless of how they are displayed. |
| |
| Normal and error output are generally kept separate (on separate lines) |
| from code input and each other. They each get different highlight colors. |
| |
| For SyntaxError tracebacks, the normal '^' marking where the error was |
| detected is replaced by coloring the text with an error highlight. |
| When code run from a file causes other exceptions, one may right click |
| on a traceback line to jump to the corresponding line in an IDLE editor. |
| The file will be opened if necessary. |
| |
| Shell has a special facility for squeezing output lines down to a |
| 'Squeezed text' label. This is done automatically |
| for output over N lines (N = 50 by default). |
| N can be changed in the PyShell section of the General |
| page of the Settings dialog. Output with fewer lines can be squeezed by |
| right clicking on the output. This can be useful lines long enough to slow |
| down scrolling. |
| |
| Squeezed output is expanded in place by double-clicking the label. |
| It can also be sent to the clipboard or a separate view window by |
| right-clicking the label. |
| |
| Developing tkinter applications |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| IDLE is intentionally different from standard Python in order to |
| facilitate development of tkinter programs. Enter ``import tkinter as tk; |
| root = tk.Tk()`` in standard Python and nothing appears. Enter the same |
| in IDLE and a tk window appears. In standard Python, one must also enter |
| ``root.update()`` to see the window. IDLE does the equivalent in the |
| background, about 20 times a second, which is about every 50 milleseconds. |
| Next enter ``b = tk.Button(root, text='button'); b.pack()``. Again, |
| nothing visibly changes in standard Python until one enters ``root.update()``. |
| |
| Most tkinter programs run ``root.mainloop()``, which usually does not |
| return until the tk app is destroyed. If the program is run with |
| ``python -i`` or from an IDLE editor, a ``>>>`` shell prompt does not |
| appear until ``mainloop()`` returns, at which time there is nothing left |
| to interact with. |
| |
| When running a tkinter program from an IDLE editor, one can comment out |
| the mainloop call. One then gets a shell prompt immediately and can |
| interact with the live application. One just has to remember to |
| re-enable the mainloop call when running in standard Python. |
| |
| Running without a subprocess |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| By default, IDLE executes user code in a separate subprocess via a socket, |
| which uses the internal loopback interface. This connection is not |
| externally visible and no data is sent to or received from the Internet. |
| If firewall software complains anyway, you can ignore it. |
| |
| If the attempt to make the socket connection fails, Idle will notify you. |
| Such failures are sometimes transient, but if persistent, the problem |
| may be either a firewall blocking the connection or misconfiguration of |
| a particular system. Until the problem is fixed, one can run Idle with |
| the -n command line switch. |
| |
| If IDLE is started with the -n command line switch it will run in a |
| single process and will not create the subprocess which runs the RPC |
| Python execution server. This can be useful if Python cannot create |
| the subprocess or the RPC socket interface on your platform. However, |
| in this mode user code is not isolated from IDLE itself. Also, the |
| environment is not restarted when Run/Run Module (F5) is selected. If |
| your code has been modified, you must reload() the affected modules and |
| re-import any specific items (e.g. from foo import baz) if the changes |
| are to take effect. For these reasons, it is preferable to run IDLE |
| with the default subprocess if at all possible. |
| |
| .. deprecated:: 3.4 |
| |
| |
| Help and preferences |
| -------------------- |
| |
| .. _help-sources: |
| |
| Help sources |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Help menu entry "IDLE Help" displays a formatted html version of the |
| IDLE chapter of the Library Reference. The result, in a read-only |
| tkinter text window, is close to what one sees in a web browser. |
| Navigate through the text with a mousewheel, |
| the scrollbar, or up and down arrow keys held down. |
| Or click the TOC (Table of Contents) button and select a section |
| header in the opened box. |
| |
| Help menu entry "Python Docs" opens the extensive sources of help, |
| including tutorials, available at docs.python.org/x.y, where 'x.y' |
| is the currently running Python version. If your system |
| has an off-line copy of the docs (this may be an installation option), |
| that will be opened instead. |
| |
| Selected URLs can be added or removed from the help menu at any time using the |
| General tab of the Configure IDLE dialog . |
| |
| .. _preferences: |
| |
| Setting preferences |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The font preferences, highlighting, keys, and general preferences can be |
| changed via Configure IDLE on the Option menu. |
| Non-default user settings are saved in a .idlerc directory in the user's |
| home directory. Problems caused by bad user configuration files are solved |
| by editing or deleting one or more of the files in .idlerc. |
| |
| On the Font tab, see the text sample for the effect of font face and size |
| on multiple characters in multiple languages. Edit the sample to add |
| other characters of personal interest. Use the sample to select |
| monospaced fonts. If particular characters have problems in Shell or an |
| editor, add them to the top of the sample and try changing first size |
| and then font. |
| |
| On the Highlights and Keys tab, select a built-in or custom color theme |
| and key set. To use a newer built-in color theme or key set with older |
| IDLEs, save it as a new custom theme or key set and it well be accessible |
| to older IDLEs. |
| |
| IDLE on macOS |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Under System Preferences: Dock, one can set "Prefer tabs when opening |
| documents" to "Always". This setting is not compatible with the tk/tkinter |
| GUI framework used by IDLE, and it breaks a few IDLE features. |
| |
| Extensions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| IDLE contains an extension facility. Preferences for extensions can be |
| changed with the Extensions tab of the preferences dialog. See the |
| beginning of config-extensions.def in the idlelib directory for further |
| information. The only current default extension is zzdummy, an example |
| also used for testing. |