13. Interactive Input Editing and History Substitution
Some versions of the Python interpreter support editing of the current input line and history substitution, similar to facilities found in the Korn shell and the GNU Bash shell. This is implemented using the GNU Readline library, which supports various styles of editing. This library has its own documentation which we won’t duplicate here.
Tab Completion and History Editing
Completion of variable and module names is automatically
enabled
at interpreter startup so that the Tab key invokes the completion function; it
looks at Python statement names, the current local variables, and the available
module names. For dotted expressions such as string.a
, it will evaluate the
expression up to the final '.'
and then suggest completions from the
attributes of the resulting object. Note that this may execute
application-defined code if an object with a
__getattr__()
method is part of the expression. The default
configuration also saves your history into a file named ==.python_history
== in
your user directory. The history will be available again during the next
interactive interpreter session.
Alternatives to the Interactive Interpreter
Which alternative interactive interpreter you know? When they suitable to use?
This facility is an enormous step forward compared to earlier versions of the
interpreter; however, some wishes are left: It would be nice if the proper
indentation were suggested on continuation lines (the parser knows if an indent
token is required next). The completion mechanism might use the interpreter’s
symbol table. A command to check (or even suggest) matching parentheses, quotes,
etc., would also be useful.
One alternative enhanced interactive interpreter that has been around for quite
some time is IPython, which features tab completion,
object exploration and advanced history management. It can also be thoroughly
customized and embedded into other applications. Another similar enhanced
interactive environment is bpython.