I want to modify how IPython handles import errors by default. When I prototype something in the IPython shell, I usually forget to first import os
, re
or whatever I need. The first few statements often follow this pattern:
In [1]: os.path.exists("~/myfile.txt")
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NameError Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-1-0ffb6014a804> in <module>()
----> 1 os.path.exists("~/myfile.txt")
NameError: name 'os' is not defined
In [2]: import os
In [3]: os.path.exists("~/myfile.txt")
Out[3]: False
Sure, that's my fault for having bad habits and, sure, in a script or real program that makes sense, but in the shell I'd rather that IPython follow the DWIM principle, by at least trying to import what I am trying to use.
In [1]: os.path.exists("~/myfile.txt")
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NameError Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-1-0ffb6014a804> in <module>()
----> 1 os.path.exists("~/myfile.txt")
NameError: name 'os' is not defined
Catching this for you and trying to import "os" … success!
Retrying …
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Out[1]: False
If this is not possible with a vanilla IPython, what would I have to do to make this work? Is a wrapper kernel the easiest way forward? Or should this be implemented directly in the core, with a magic command?
Note, this is different from those kind of question where someone wants to always load pre-defined modules. I don't. Cuz I don't know what I will be working on, and I don't want to load everything (nor do I want to keep the list of everything updated.