7

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.

1 Answer 1

11

NOTE: This is now being maintained on Github. Download the latest version of the script from there!

I developed a script that binds to IPython's exception handling through set_custom_exc. If there's a NameError, it uses a regex to find what module you tried to use and then attempt to import it. It then runs the function you tried to call again. Here is the code:

import sys, IPython, colorama # <-- colorama must be "pip install"-ed

colorama.init()

def custom_exc(shell, etype, evalue, tb, tb_offset=None):
    pre = colorama.Fore.CYAN + colorama.Style.BRIGHT + "AutoImport: " + colorama.Style.NORMAL + colorama.Fore.WHITE
    if etype == NameError:
        shell.showtraceback((etype, evalue, tb), tb_offset) # Show the normal traceback
        import re
        try:
            # Get the name of the module you tried to import
            results = re.match("name '(.*)' is not defined", str(evalue))
            name = results.group(1)

            try:
                __import__(name)
            except:
                print(pre + "{} isn't a module".format(name))
                return

            # Import the module
            IPython.get_ipython().run_code("import {}".format(name))
            print(pre + "Imported referenced module \"{}\", will retry".format(name))
        except Exception as e:
            print(pre + "Attempted to import \"{}\" but an exception occured".format(name))

        try:
            # Run the failed line again
            res = IPython.get_ipython().run_cell(list(get_ipython().history_manager.get_range())[-1][-1])
        except Exception as e:
            print(pre + "Another exception occured while retrying")
            shell.showtraceback((type(e), e, None), None)
    else:
        shell.showtraceback((etype, evalue, tb), tb_offset=tb_offset)

# Bind the function we created to IPython's exception handler
IPython.get_ipython().set_custom_exc((Exception,), custom_exc)

You can make this run automatically when you start an IPython prompt by saving it somewhere and then setting an environment variable called PYTHONSTARTUP to the path to this file. You set environment variables differently depending on your OS (remember to alter the paths):

  • Windows: setx PYTHONSTARTUP C:\startup.py in command prompt
  • Mac/Linux (bash): Put export PYTHONSTARTUP=$HOME/startup.py into your ~/.bashrc

Here's a demo of the script in action:

Demo

10
  • Currently, this script infinite-loops on some errors - if import results in NameError and clean-up routine does same import... - you already know what happens. You need to check if module you're trying to import exists. Mar 20, 2016 at 17:38
  • @Rogalski How would I do that? I know pip has methods to do this but somebody might be importing something that's on their local machine. Mar 20, 2016 at 17:47
  • Run: try: import whatever except ImportError: oops_failed_to_import_handle_it()? Mar 20, 2016 at 18:39
  • @Rogalski Thanks, I'm updating it to support this, as well as have clearer output. Mar 20, 2016 at 18:42
  • @Rogalski This has now been updated to look prettier and not infinite loop. Mar 20, 2016 at 19:00

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.