show/hide this revision's text 2 Added code example

An interpreter within the interpreter

The standard library's code module let's you include your own read-eval-print loop inside a program, or run a whole nested interpreter. E.g. (copied my example from here)

$ python
Python 2.5.1 (r251:54863, Jan 17 2008, 19:35:17) 
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5465)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> shared_var = "Set in main console"
>>> import code
>>> ic = code.InteractiveConsole({ 'shared_var': shared_var })
>>> try:
...     ic.interact("My custom console banner!")
... except SystemExit, e:
...     print "Got SystemExit!"
... 
My custom console banner!
>>> shared_var
'Set in main console'
>>> shared_var = "Set in sub-console"
>>> sys.exit()
Got SystemExit!
>>> shared_var
'Set in main console'

This is extremely useful for situations where you want to accept scripted input from the user, or query the state of the VM in real-time.

TurboGears uses this to great effect by having a WebConsole from which you can query the state of you live web app.

show/hide this revision's text 1

An interpreter within the interpreter

The standard library's code module let's you include your own read-eval-print loop inside a program.

This is extremely useful for situations where you want to accept scripted input from the user, or query the state of the VM in real-time.

TurboGears uses this to great effect by having a WebConsole from which you can query the state of you live web app.

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