Javier Collado wrote: > Hello, > > I think that's exactly what the cpaste magic function does. Type > 'cpaste?' in your IPython session for more information. > > Best regards, > Javier > > 2010/1/14 Reckoner <recko...@gmail.com>: >> Hi, >> >> I am studying some examples in a tutorial where there are a lot of >> leading >>> characters and ellipsis in the text. This makes it hard to >> cut and paste into the IPython interpreter since it doesn't like these >> strings. >> >> Is there another interpreter I could use that will appropriately >> ignore and interpret these leading terms? >> >> For example, I cannot paste the following directly into the >> interpreter: >> >>>>> d = dict(x.__array_interface__) >>>>> d['shape'] = (3, 2, 5) >>>>> d['strides'] = (20, 20, 4) >>>>> class Arr: >> ... __array_interface__ = d >> ... base = x >> -- >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >>
Or, as a man with a shiny new hammer, you could roll your own processor in python as a learning exercise... #!/usr/bin/python import sys lines = [] try: while 1: l1 = sys.stdin.readline() l2 = l1.lstrip(">") if l1<>l2: l2 = l2[1:] lines.append( l2 ) except KeyboardInterrupt: print "\n--8<--------8<--------8<--------8<--------8<--------" print ''.join(lines) 10 points for modding it so it automatically recopies the data to the clipboard 20 points for using a timer to automatically issue a keyboard interrupt if the buffer has data and no input has been received for half a second :) Roger. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list