ptpython
A better Python REPL
pip install ptpython
Ptpython is an advanced Python REPL. It should work on all Python versions from 2.6 up to 3.11 and work cross platform (Linux, BSD, OS X and Windows).
Note: this version of ptpython requires at least Python 3.6. Install ptpython 2.0.5 for older Python versions.
Installation
Install it using pip:
pip install ptpython
Start it by typing ptpython
.
Features
- Syntax highlighting.
- Multiline editing (the up arrow works).
- Autocompletion.
- Mouse support. [1]
- Support for color schemes.
- Support for bracketed paste [2].
- Both Vi and Emacs key bindings.
- Support for double width (Chinese) characters.
- ... and many other things.
[1] Disabled by default. (Enable in the menu.)
[2] If the terminal supports it (most terminals do), this allows pasting without going into paste mode. It will keep the indentation.
Command Line Options
The help menu shows basic command-line options.
$ ptpython --help
usage: ptpython [-h] [--vi] [-i] [--light-bg] [--dark-bg] [--config-file CONFIG_FILE]
[--history-file HISTORY_FILE] [-V]
[args ...]
ptpython: Interactive Python shell.
positional arguments:
args Script and arguments
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--vi Enable Vi key bindings
-i, --interactive Start interactive shell after executing this file.
--asyncio Run an asyncio event loop to support top-level "await".
--light-bg Run on a light background (use dark colors for text).
--dark-bg Run on a dark background (use light colors for text).
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
Location of configuration file.
--history-file HISTORY_FILE
Location of history file.
-V, --version show program's version number and exit
environment variables:
PTPYTHON_CONFIG_HOME: a configuration directory to use
PYTHONSTARTUP: file executed on interactive startup (no default)
__pt_repr__: A nicer repr with colors
When classes implement a __pt_repr__
method, this will be used instead
of __repr__
for printing. Any prompt_toolkit "formatted
text"
can be returned from here. In order to avoid writing a __repr__
as
well, the ptpython.utils.ptrepr_to_repr
decorator can be applied. For
instance:
from ptpython.utils import ptrepr_to_repr
from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import HTML
@ptrepr_to_repr
class MyClass:
def __pt_repr__(self):
return HTML('<yellow>Hello world!</yellow>')
More screenshots
The configuration menu:
The history page and its help:
Autocompletion:
Embedding the REPL
Embedding the REPL in any Python application is easy:
from ptpython.repl import embed
embed(globals(), locals())
You can make ptpython your default Python REPL by creating a PYTHONSTARTUP file containing code like this:
import sys
try:
from ptpython.repl import embed
except ImportError:
print("ptpython is not available: falling back to standard prompt")
else:
sys.exit(embed(globals(), locals()))
Note config file support currently only works when invoking ptpython directly. That it, the config file will be ignored when embedding ptpython in an application.
Multiline editing
Multi-line editing mode will automatically turn on when you press enter after a colon.
To execute the input in multi-line mode, you can either press
Alt+Enter
, or Esc
followed by Enter
. (If you want the first to
work in the OS X terminal, you have to check the "Use option as meta
key" checkbox in your terminal settings. For iTerm2, you have to check
"Left option acts as +Esc" in the options.)
Syntax validation
Before execution, ptpython
will see whether the input is syntactically
correct Python code. If not, it will show a warning, and move the cursor
to the error.
Asyncio REPL and top level await
In order to get top-level await
support, start ptpython as follows:
ptpython --asyncio
This will spawn an asyncio event loop and embed the async REPL in the
event loop. After this, top-level await will work and statements like
await asyncio.sleep(10)
will execute.
Additional features
Running system commands: Press Meta-!
in Emacs mode or just !
in Vi
navigation mode to see the "Shell command" prompt. There you can enter
system commands without leaving the REPL.
Selecting text: Press Control+Space
in Emacs mode or V
(major V) in
Vi navigation mode.
Configuration
It is possible to create a config.py
file to customize configuration.
ptpython will look in an appropriate platform-specific directory via
appdirs <https://pypi.org/project/appdirs/>. See the
appdirs
documentation for the precise location for your platform. A
PTPYTHON_CONFIG_HOME
environment variable, if set, can also be used to
explicitly override where configuration is looked for.
Have a look at this example to see what is possible: config.py
Note config file support currently only works when invoking ptpython directly. That it, the config file will be ignored when embedding ptpython in an application.
IPython support
Run ptipython
(prompt_toolkit - IPython), to get a nice interactive
shell with all the power that IPython has to offer, like magic functions
and shell integration. Make sure that IPython has been installed.
(pip install ipython
)
This is also available for embedding:
from ptpython.ipython import embed
embed(globals(), locals())
Django support
django-extensions
has a shell_plus
management command. When ptpython
has been
installed, it will by default use ptpython
or ptipython
.
PDB
There is an experimental PDB replacement: ptpdb.
Windows support
prompt_toolkit
and ptpython
works better on Linux and OS X than on
Windows. Some things might not work, but it is usable:
Windows terminal integration
If you are using the Windows Terminal and
want to integrate ptpython
as a profile, go to Settings -> Open JSON
file and add the following profile under profiles.list:
{
"commandline": "%SystemRoot%\\System32\\cmd.exe /k ptpython",
"guid": "{f91d49a3-741b-409c-8a15-c4360649121f}",
"hidden": false,
"icon": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e6/Python_Windows_interpreter_icon_2006%E2%80%932016_Tiny.png",
"name": "ptpython@cmd"
}
FAQ
Q: The Ctrl-S
forward search doesn't work and freezes my
terminal.
A: Try to run stty -ixon
in your terminal to disable flow control.
Q: The Meta
-key doesn't work.
A: For some terminals you have to enable the Alt-key to act as meta
key, but you can also type Escape
before any key instead.
Alternatives
If you find another alternative, you can create an issue and we'll list
it here. If you find a nice feature somewhere that is missing in
ptpython
, also create a GitHub issue and maybe we'll implement it.
Special thanks to
- Pygments: Syntax highlighter.
- Jedi: Autocompletion library.
- wcwidth: Determine columns needed for a wide characters.
- prompt_toolkit for the interface.