Can't get the IPYthon ipapi object working
Hi , I found out from a random google search that I could use IPython
to automatically import modules so that I could test Django views.
I downloaded it (WIN XP), installed it. I'm able to import it, but I
just can't seem to get the object working.
The code:
---
try:
import IPython.ipapi
ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
a = ip.options
ip.ex('import os')
except Exception,msg:
print "Message: ", msg
---
I get: ' Message: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'options' '
If I remove the ip.options statement, it will say the same thing about
attribute 'ex'
Does anyone know if there are configuration options necessary?
I read the docs, and it described a profile module, but I just need
to run this, for this single purpose ( at least, now, later I can see
its usefulness definitely,)
Steve
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Re: Can't get the IPYthon ipapi object working
On Feb 18, 3:12 pm, Robert Kern wrote:
> On 2009-02-18 15:49, beetlecube wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi , I found out from a random google search that I could use IPython
> > to automatically import modules so that I could test Django views.
>
> > I downloaded it (WIN XP), installed it. I'm able to import it, but I
> > just can't seem to get the object working.
>
> > The code:
> > ---
> > try:
> > import IPython.ipapi
> > ip = IPython.ipapi.get()
> > a = ip.options
> > ip.ex('import os')
>
> > except Exception,msg:
> > print "Message: ", msg
> > ---
>
> > I get: ' Message: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'options' '
>
Shoulda know I was doing something fundamentally wrong.
Thanks a lot!
> > If I remove the ip.options statement, it will say the same thing about
> > attribute 'ex'
>
> This needs to be run in the context of a running instance IPython, not just
> any
> other module. That kind of code is usually put into your c:\Documents and
> Settings\username\_ipython\ipy_user_conf.py file.
>
> --
> Robert Kern
>
> "I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
> that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it
> had
> an underlying truth."
> -- Umberto Eco
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