1.. _idle: 2 3IDLE 4==== 5 6.. moduleauthor:: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> 7 8**Source code:** :source:`Lib/idlelib/` 9 10.. index:: 11 single: IDLE 12 single: Python Editor 13 single: Integrated Development Environment 14 15-------------- 16 17IDLE is Python's Integrated Development and Learning Environment. 18 19IDLE has the following features: 20 21* coded in 100% pure Python, using the :mod:`tkinter` GUI toolkit 22 23* cross-platform: works mostly the same on Windows, Unix, and macOS 24 25* Python shell window (interactive interpreter) with colorizing 26 of code input, output, and error messages 27 28* multi-window text editor with multiple undo, Python colorizing, 29 smart indent, call tips, auto completion, and other features 30 31* search within any window, replace within editor windows, and search 32 through multiple files (grep) 33 34* debugger with persistent breakpoints, stepping, and viewing 35 of global and local namespaces 36 37* configuration, browsers, and other dialogs 38 39Menus 40----- 41 42IDLE has two main window types, the Shell window and the Editor window. It is 43possible to have multiple editor windows simultaneously. On Windows and 44Linux, each has its own top menu. Each menu documented below indicates 45which window type it is associated with. 46 47Output windows, such as used for Edit => Find in Files, are a subtype of editor 48window. They currently have the same top menu but a different 49default title and context menu. 50 51On macOS, there is one application menu. It dynamically changes according 52to the window currently selected. It has an IDLE menu, and some entries 53described below are moved around to conform to Apple guidelines. 54 55File menu (Shell and Editor) 56^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 57 58New File 59 Create a new file editing window. 60 61Open... 62 Open an existing file with an Open dialog. 63 64Recent Files 65 Open a list of recent files. Click one to open it. 66 67Open Module... 68 Open an existing module (searches sys.path). 69 70.. index:: 71 single: Class browser 72 single: Path browser 73 74Class Browser 75 Show functions, classes, and methods in the current Editor file in a 76 tree structure. In the shell, open a module first. 77 78Path Browser 79 Show sys.path directories, modules, functions, classes and methods in a 80 tree structure. 81 82Save 83 Save the current window to the associated file, if there is one. Windows 84 that have been changed since being opened or last saved have a \* before 85 and after the window title. If there is no associated file, 86 do Save As instead. 87 88Save As... 89 Save the current window with a Save As dialog. The file saved becomes the 90 new associated file for the window. 91 92Save Copy As... 93 Save the current window to different file without changing the associated 94 file. 95 96Print Window 97 Print the current window to the default printer. 98 99Close 100 Close the current window (ask to save if unsaved). 101 102Exit 103 Close all windows and quit IDLE (ask to save unsaved windows). 104 105Edit menu (Shell and Editor) 106^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 107 108Undo 109 Undo the last change to the current window. A maximum of 1000 changes may 110 be undone. 111 112Redo 113 Redo the last undone change to the current window. 114 115Cut 116 Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard; then delete the selection. 117 118Copy 119 Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard. 120 121Paste 122 Insert contents of the system-wide clipboard into the current window. 123 124The clipboard functions are also available in context menus. 125 126Select All 127 Select the entire contents of the current window. 128 129Find... 130 Open a search dialog with many options 131 132Find Again 133 Repeat the last search, if there is one. 134 135Find Selection 136 Search for the currently selected string, if there is one. 137 138Find in Files... 139 Open a file search dialog. Put results in a new output window. 140 141Replace... 142 Open a search-and-replace dialog. 143 144Go to Line 145 Move the cursor to the beginning of the line requested and make that 146 line visible. A request past the end of the file goes to the end. 147 Clear any selection and update the line and column status. 148 149Show Completions 150 Open a scrollable list allowing selection of existing names. See 151 :ref:`Completions <completions>` in the Editing and navigation section below. 152 153Expand Word 154 Expand a prefix you have typed to match a full word in the same window; 155 repeat to get a different expansion. 156 157Show call tip 158 After an unclosed parenthesis for a function, open a small window with 159 function parameter hints. See :ref:`Calltips <calltips>` in the 160 Editing and navigation section below. 161 162Show surrounding parens 163 Highlight the surrounding parenthesis. 164 165.. _format-menu: 166 167Format menu (Editor window only) 168^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 169 170Indent Region 171 Shift selected lines right by the indent width (default 4 spaces). 172 173Dedent Region 174 Shift selected lines left by the indent width (default 4 spaces). 175 176Comment Out Region 177 Insert ## in front of selected lines. 178 179Uncomment Region 180 Remove leading # or ## from selected lines. 181 182Tabify Region 183 Turn *leading* stretches of spaces into tabs. (Note: We recommend using 184 4 space blocks to indent Python code.) 185 186Untabify Region 187 Turn *all* tabs into the correct number of spaces. 188 189Toggle Tabs 190 Open a dialog to switch between indenting with spaces and tabs. 191 192New Indent Width 193 Open a dialog to change indent width. The accepted default by the Python 194 community is 4 spaces. 195 196Format Paragraph 197 Reformat the current blank-line-delimited paragraph in comment block or 198 multiline string or selected line in a string. All lines in the 199 paragraph will be formatted to less than N columns, where N defaults to 72. 200 201Strip trailing whitespace 202 Remove trailing space and other whitespace characters after the last 203 non-whitespace character of a line by applying str.rstrip to each line, 204 including lines within multiline strings. Except for Shell windows, 205 remove extra newlines at the end of the file. 206 207.. index:: 208 single: Run script 209 210Run menu (Editor window only) 211^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 212 213.. _run-module: 214 215Run Module 216 Do :ref:`Check Module <check-module>`. If no error, restart the shell to clean the 217 environment, then execute the module. Output is displayed in the Shell 218 window. Note that output requires use of ``print`` or ``write``. 219 When execution is complete, the Shell retains focus and displays a prompt. 220 At this point, one may interactively explore the result of execution. 221 This is similar to executing a file with ``python -i file`` at a command 222 line. 223 224.. _run-custom: 225 226Run... Customized 227 Same as :ref:`Run Module <run-module>`, but run the module with customized 228 settings. *Command Line Arguments* extend :data:`sys.argv` as if passed 229 on a command line. The module can be run in the Shell without restarting. 230 231.. _check-module: 232 233Check Module 234 Check the syntax of the module currently open in the Editor window. If the 235 module has not been saved IDLE will either prompt the user to save or 236 autosave, as selected in the General tab of the Idle Settings dialog. If 237 there is a syntax error, the approximate location is indicated in the 238 Editor window. 239 240.. _python-shell: 241 242Python Shell 243 Open or wake up the Python Shell window. 244 245 246Shell menu (Shell window only) 247^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 248 249View Last Restart 250 Scroll the shell window to the last Shell restart. 251 252Restart Shell 253 Restart the shell to clean the environment. 254 255Previous History 256 Cycle through earlier commands in history which match the current entry. 257 258Next History 259 Cycle through later commands in history which match the current entry. 260 261Interrupt Execution 262 Stop a running program. 263 264Debug menu (Shell window only) 265^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 266 267Go to File/Line 268 Look on the current line. with the cursor, and the line above for a filename 269 and line number. If found, open the file if not already open, and show the 270 line. Use this to view source lines referenced in an exception traceback 271 and lines found by Find in Files. Also available in the context menu of 272 the Shell window and Output windows. 273 274.. index:: 275 single: debugger 276 single: stack viewer 277 278Debugger (toggle) 279 When activated, code entered in the Shell or run from an Editor will run 280 under the debugger. In the Editor, breakpoints can be set with the context 281 menu. This feature is still incomplete and somewhat experimental. 282 283Stack Viewer 284 Show the stack traceback of the last exception in a tree widget, with 285 access to locals and globals. 286 287Auto-open Stack Viewer 288 Toggle automatically opening the stack viewer on an unhandled exception. 289 290Options menu (Shell and Editor) 291^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 292 293Configure IDLE 294 Open a configuration dialog and change preferences for the following: 295 fonts, indentation, keybindings, text color themes, startup windows and 296 size, additional help sources, and extensions. On macOS, open the 297 configuration dialog by selecting Preferences in the application 298 menu. For more details, see 299 :ref:`Setting preferences <preferences>` under Help and preferences. 300 301Most configuration options apply to all windows or all future windows. 302The option items below only apply to the active window. 303 304Show/Hide Code Context (Editor Window only) 305 Open a pane at the top of the edit window which shows the block context 306 of the code which has scrolled above the top of the window. See 307 :ref:`Code Context <code-context>` in the Editing and Navigation section 308 below. 309 310Show/Hide Line Numbers (Editor Window only) 311 Open a column to the left of the edit window which shows the number 312 of each line of text. The default is off, which may be changed in the 313 preferences (see :ref:`Setting preferences <preferences>`). 314 315Zoom/Restore Height 316 Toggles the window between normal size and maximum height. The initial size 317 defaults to 40 lines by 80 chars unless changed on the General tab of the 318 Configure IDLE dialog. The maximum height for a screen is determined by 319 momentarily maximizing a window the first time one is zoomed on the screen. 320 Changing screen settings may invalidate the saved height. This toggle has 321 no effect when a window is maximized. 322 323Window menu (Shell and Editor) 324^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 325 326Lists the names of all open windows; select one to bring it to the foreground 327(deiconifying it if necessary). 328 329Help menu (Shell and Editor) 330^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 331 332About IDLE 333 Display version, copyright, license, credits, and more. 334 335IDLE Help 336 Display this IDLE document, detailing the menu options, basic editing and 337 navigation, and other tips. 338 339Python Docs 340 Access local Python documentation, if installed, or start a web browser 341 and open docs.python.org showing the latest Python documentation. 342 343Turtle Demo 344 Run the turtledemo module with example Python code and turtle drawings. 345 346Additional help sources may be added here with the Configure IDLE dialog under 347the General tab. See the :ref:`Help sources <help-sources>` subsection below 348for more on Help menu choices. 349 350.. index:: 351 single: Cut 352 single: Copy 353 single: Paste 354 single: Set Breakpoint 355 single: Clear Breakpoint 356 single: breakpoints 357 358Context Menus 359^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 360 361Open a context menu by right-clicking in a window (Control-click on macOS). 362Context menus have the standard clipboard functions also on the Edit menu. 363 364Cut 365 Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard; then delete the selection. 366 367Copy 368 Copy selection into the system-wide clipboard. 369 370Paste 371 Insert contents of the system-wide clipboard into the current window. 372 373Editor windows also have breakpoint functions. Lines with a breakpoint set are 374specially marked. Breakpoints only have an effect when running under the 375debugger. Breakpoints for a file are saved in the user's ``.idlerc`` 376directory. 377 378Set Breakpoint 379 Set a breakpoint on the current line. 380 381Clear Breakpoint 382 Clear the breakpoint on that line. 383 384Shell and Output windows also have the following. 385 386Go to file/line 387 Same as in Debug menu. 388 389The Shell window also has an output squeezing facility explained in the *Python 390Shell window* subsection below. 391 392Squeeze 393 If the cursor is over an output line, squeeze all the output between 394 the code above and the prompt below down to a 'Squeezed text' label. 395 396 397.. _editing-and-navigation: 398 399Editing and navigation 400---------------------- 401 402Editor windows 403^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 404 405IDLE may open editor windows when it starts, depending on settings 406and how you start IDLE. Thereafter, use the File menu. There can be only 407one open editor window for a given file. 408 409The title bar contains the name of the file, the full path, and the version 410of Python and IDLE running the window. The status bar contains the line 411number ('Ln') and column number ('Col'). Line numbers start with 1; 412column numbers with 0. 413 414IDLE assumes that files with a known .py* extension contain Python code 415and that other files do not. Run Python code with the Run menu. 416 417Key bindings 418^^^^^^^^^^^^ 419 420In this section, 'C' refers to the :kbd:`Control` key on Windows and Unix and 421the :kbd:`Command` key on macOS. 422 423* :kbd:`Backspace` deletes to the left; :kbd:`Del` deletes to the right 424 425* :kbd:`C-Backspace` delete word left; :kbd:`C-Del` delete word to the right 426 427* Arrow keys and :kbd:`Page Up`/:kbd:`Page Down` to move around 428 429* :kbd:`C-LeftArrow` and :kbd:`C-RightArrow` moves by words 430 431* :kbd:`Home`/:kbd:`End` go to begin/end of line 432 433* :kbd:`C-Home`/:kbd:`C-End` go to begin/end of file 434 435* Some useful Emacs bindings are inherited from Tcl/Tk: 436 437 * :kbd:`C-a` beginning of line 438 439 * :kbd:`C-e` end of line 440 441 * :kbd:`C-k` kill line (but doesn't put it in clipboard) 442 443 * :kbd:`C-l` center window around the insertion point 444 445 * :kbd:`C-b` go backward one character without deleting (usually you can 446 also use the cursor key for this) 447 448 * :kbd:`C-f` go forward one character without deleting (usually you can 449 also use the cursor key for this) 450 451 * :kbd:`C-p` go up one line (usually you can also use the cursor key for 452 this) 453 454 * :kbd:`C-d` delete next character 455 456Standard keybindings (like :kbd:`C-c` to copy and :kbd:`C-v` to paste) 457may work. Keybindings are selected in the Configure IDLE dialog. 458 459Automatic indentation 460^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 461 462After a block-opening statement, the next line is indented by 4 spaces (in the 463Python Shell window by one tab). After certain keywords (break, return etc.) 464the next line is dedented. In leading indentation, :kbd:`Backspace` deletes up 465to 4 spaces if they are there. :kbd:`Tab` inserts spaces (in the Python 466Shell window one tab), number depends on Indent width. Currently, tabs 467are restricted to four spaces due to Tcl/Tk limitations. 468 469See also the indent/dedent region commands on the 470:ref:`Format menu <format-menu>`. 471 472.. _completions: 473 474Completions 475^^^^^^^^^^^ 476 477Completions are supplied, when requested and available, for module 478names, attributes of classes or functions, or filenames. Each request 479method displays a completion box with existing names. (See tab 480completions below for an exception.) For any box, change the name 481being completed and the item highlighted in the box by 482typing and deleting characters; by hitting :kbd:`Up`, :kbd:`Down`, 483:kbd:`PageUp`, :kbd:`PageDown`, :kbd:`Home`, and :kbd:`End` keys; 484and by a single click within the box. Close the box with :kbd:`Escape`, 485:kbd:`Enter`, and double :kbd:`Tab` keys or clicks outside the box. 486A double click within the box selects and closes. 487 488One way to open a box is to type a key character and wait for a 489predefined interval. This defaults to 2 seconds; customize it 490in the settings dialog. (To prevent auto popups, set the delay to a 491large number of milliseconds, such as 100000000.) For imported module 492names or class or function attributes, type '.'. 493For filenames in the root directory, type :data:`os.sep` or 494data:`os.altsep` immediately after an opening quote. (On Windows, 495one can specify a drive first.) Move into subdirectories by typing a 496directory name and a separator. 497 498Instead of waiting, or after a box is closed, open a completion box 499immediately with Show Completions on the Edit menu. The default hot 500key is :kbd:`C-space`. If one types a prefix for the desired name 501before opening the box, the first match or near miss is made visible. 502The result is the same as if one enters a prefix 503after the box is displayed. Show Completions after a quote completes 504filenames in the current directory instead of a root directory. 505 506Hitting :kbd:`Tab` after a prefix usually has the same effect as Show 507Completions. (With no prefix, it indents.) However, if there is only 508one match to the prefix, that match is immediately added to the editor 509text without opening a box. 510 511Invoking 'Show Completions', or hitting :kbd:`Tab` after a prefix, 512outside of a string and without a preceding '.' opens a box with 513keywords, builtin names, and available module-level names. 514 515When editing code in an editor (as oppose to Shell), increase the 516available module-level names by running your code 517and not restarting the Shell thereafter. This is especially useful 518after adding imports at the top of a file. This also increases 519possible attribute completions. 520 521Completion boxes intially exclude names beginning with '_' or, for 522modules, not included in '__all__'. The hidden names can be accessed 523by typing '_' after '.', either before or after the box is opened. 524 525.. _calltips: 526 527Calltips 528^^^^^^^^ 529 530A calltip is shown when one types :kbd:`(` after the name of an *accessible* 531function. A name expression may include dots and subscripts. A calltip 532remains until it is clicked, the cursor is moved out of the argument area, 533or :kbd:`)` is typed. When the cursor is in the argument part of a definition, 534the menu or shortcut display a calltip. 535 536A calltip consists of the function signature and the first line of the 537docstring. For builtins without an accessible signature, the calltip 538consists of all lines up the fifth line or the first blank line. These 539details may change. 540 541The set of *accessible* functions depends on what modules have been imported 542into the user process, including those imported by Idle itself, 543and what definitions have been run, all since the last restart. 544 545For example, restart the Shell and enter ``itertools.count(``. A calltip 546appears because Idle imports itertools into the user process for its own use. 547(This could change.) Enter ``turtle.write(`` and nothing appears. Idle does 548not import turtle. The menu or shortcut do nothing either. Enter 549``import turtle`` and then ``turtle.write(`` will work. 550 551In an editor, import statements have no effect until one runs the file. One 552might want to run a file after writing the import statements at the top, 553or immediately run an existing file before editing. 554 555.. _code-context: 556 557Code Context 558^^^^^^^^^^^^ 559 560Within an editor window containing Python code, code context can be toggled 561in order to show or hide a pane at the top of the window. When shown, this 562pane freezes the opening lines for block code, such as those beginning with 563``class``, ``def``, or ``if`` keywords, that would have otherwise scrolled 564out of view. The size of the pane will be expanded and contracted as needed 565to show the all current levels of context, up to the maximum number of 566lines defined in the Configure IDLE dialog (which defaults to 15). If there 567are no current context lines and the feature is toggled on, a single blank 568line will display. Clicking on a line in the context pane will move that 569line to the top of the editor. 570 571The text and background colors for the context pane can be configured under 572the Highlights tab in the Configure IDLE dialog. 573 574Python Shell window 575^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 576 577With IDLE's Shell, one enters, edits, and recalls complete statements. 578Most consoles and terminals only work with a single physical line at a time. 579 580When one pastes code into Shell, it is not compiled and possibly executed 581until one hits :kbd:`Return`. One may edit pasted code first. 582If one pastes more that one statement into Shell, the result will be a 583:exc:`SyntaxError` when multiple statements are compiled as if they were one. 584 585The editing features described in previous subsections work when entering 586code interactively. IDLE's Shell window also responds to the following keys. 587 588* :kbd:`C-c` interrupts executing command 589 590* :kbd:`C-d` sends end-of-file; closes window if typed at a ``>>>`` prompt 591 592* :kbd:`Alt-/` (Expand word) is also useful to reduce typing 593 594 Command history 595 596 * :kbd:`Alt-p` retrieves previous command matching what you have typed. On 597 macOS use :kbd:`C-p`. 598 599 * :kbd:`Alt-n` retrieves next. On macOS use :kbd:`C-n`. 600 601 * :kbd:`Return` while on any previous command retrieves that command 602 603Text colors 604^^^^^^^^^^^ 605 606Idle defaults to black on white text, but colors text with special meanings. 607For the shell, these are shell output, shell error, user output, and 608user error. For Python code, at the shell prompt or in an editor, these are 609keywords, builtin class and function names, names following ``class`` and 610``def``, strings, and comments. For any text window, these are the cursor (when 611present), found text (when possible), and selected text. 612 613Text coloring is done in the background, so uncolorized text is occasionally 614visible. To change the color scheme, use the Configure IDLE dialog 615Highlighting tab. The marking of debugger breakpoint lines in the editor and 616text in popups and dialogs is not user-configurable. 617 618 619Startup and code execution 620-------------------------- 621 622Upon startup with the ``-s`` option, IDLE will execute the file referenced by 623the environment variables :envvar:`IDLESTARTUP` or :envvar:`PYTHONSTARTUP`. 624IDLE first checks for ``IDLESTARTUP``; if ``IDLESTARTUP`` is present the file 625referenced is run. If ``IDLESTARTUP`` is not present, IDLE checks for 626``PYTHONSTARTUP``. Files referenced by these environment variables are 627convenient places to store functions that are used frequently from the IDLE 628shell, or for executing import statements to import common modules. 629 630In addition, ``Tk`` also loads a startup file if it is present. Note that the 631Tk file is loaded unconditionally. This additional file is ``.Idle.py`` and is 632looked for in the user's home directory. Statements in this file will be 633executed in the Tk namespace, so this file is not useful for importing 634functions to be used from IDLE's Python shell. 635 636Command line usage 637^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 638 639.. code-block:: none 640 641 idle.py [-c command] [-d] [-e] [-h] [-i] [-r file] [-s] [-t title] [-] [arg] ... 642 643 -c command run command in the shell window 644 -d enable debugger and open shell window 645 -e open editor window 646 -h print help message with legal combinations and exit 647 -i open shell window 648 -r file run file in shell window 649 -s run $IDLESTARTUP or $PYTHONSTARTUP first, in shell window 650 -t title set title of shell window 651 - run stdin in shell (- must be last option before args) 652 653If there are arguments: 654 655* If ``-``, ``-c``, or ``r`` is used, all arguments are placed in 656 ``sys.argv[1:...]`` and ``sys.argv[0]`` is set to ``''``, ``'-c'``, 657 or ``'-r'``. No editor window is opened, even if that is the default 658 set in the Options dialog. 659 660* Otherwise, arguments are files opened for editing and 661 ``sys.argv`` reflects the arguments passed to IDLE itself. 662 663Startup failure 664^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 665 666IDLE uses a socket to communicate between the IDLE GUI process and the user 667code execution process. A connection must be established whenever the Shell 668starts or restarts. (The latter is indicated by a divider line that says 669'RESTART'). If the user process fails to connect to the GUI process, it 670displays a ``Tk`` error box with a 'cannot connect' message that directs the 671user here. It then exits. 672 673A common cause of failure is a user-written file with the same name as a 674standard library module, such as *random.py* and *tkinter.py*. When such a 675file is located in the same directory as a file that is about to be run, 676IDLE cannot import the stdlib file. The current fix is to rename the 677user file. 678 679Though less common than in the past, an antivirus or firewall program may 680stop the connection. If the program cannot be taught to allow the 681connection, then it must be turned off for IDLE to work. It is safe to 682allow this internal connection because no data is visible on external 683ports. A similar problem is a network mis-configuration that blocks 684connections. 685 686Python installation issues occasionally stop IDLE: multiple versions can 687clash, or a single installation might need admin access. If one undo the 688clash, or cannot or does not want to run as admin, it might be easiest to 689completely remove Python and start over. 690 691A zombie pythonw.exe process could be a problem. On Windows, use Task 692Manager to check for one and stop it if there is. Sometimes a restart 693initiated by a program crash or Keyboard Interrupt (control-C) may fail 694to connect. Dismissing the error box or using Restart Shell on the Shell 695menu may fix a temporary problem. 696 697When IDLE first starts, it attempts to read user configuration files in 698``~/.idlerc/`` (~ is one's home directory). If there is a problem, an error 699message should be displayed. Leaving aside random disk glitches, this can 700be prevented by never editing the files by hand. Instead, use the 701configuration dialog, under Options. Once there is an error in a user 702configuration file, the best solution may be to delete it and start over 703with the settings dialog. 704 705If IDLE quits with no message, and it was not started from a console, try 706starting it from a console or terminal (``python -m idlelib``) and see if 707this results in an error message. 708 709Running user code 710^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 711 712With rare exceptions, the result of executing Python code with IDLE is 713intended to be the same as executing the same code by the default method, 714directly with Python in a text-mode system console or terminal window. 715However, the different interface and operation occasionally affect 716visible results. For instance, ``sys.modules`` starts with more entries, 717and ``threading.activeCount()`` returns 2 instead of 1. 718 719By default, IDLE runs user code in a separate OS process rather than in 720the user interface process that runs the shell and editor. In the execution 721process, it replaces ``sys.stdin``, ``sys.stdout``, and ``sys.stderr`` 722with objects that get input from and send output to the Shell window. 723The original values stored in ``sys.__stdin__``, ``sys.__stdout__``, and 724``sys.__stderr__`` are not touched, but may be ``None``. 725 726When Shell has the focus, it controls the keyboard and screen. This is 727normally transparent, but functions that directly access the keyboard 728and screen will not work. These include system-specific functions that 729determine whether a key has been pressed and if so, which. 730 731IDLE's standard stream replacements are not inherited by subprocesses 732created in the execution process, whether directly by user code or by modules 733such as multiprocessing. If such subprocess use ``input`` from sys.stdin 734or ``print`` or ``write`` to sys.stdout or sys.stderr, 735IDLE should be started in a command line window. The secondary subprocess 736will then be attached to that window for input and output. 737 738The IDLE code running in the execution process adds frames to the call stack 739that would not be there otherwise. IDLE wraps ``sys.getrecursionlimit`` and 740``sys.setrecursionlimit`` to reduce the effect of the additional stack frames. 741 742If ``sys`` is reset by user code, such as with ``importlib.reload(sys)``, 743IDLE's changes are lost and input from the keyboard and output to the screen 744will not work correctly. 745 746When user code raises SystemExit either directly or by calling sys.exit, IDLE 747returns to a Shell prompt instead of exiting. 748 749User output in Shell 750^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 751 752When a program outputs text, the result is determined by the 753corresponding output device. When IDLE executes user code, ``sys.stdout`` 754and ``sys.stderr`` are connected to the display area of IDLE's Shell. Some of 755its features are inherited from the underlying Tk Text widget. Others 756are programmed additions. Where it matters, Shell is designed for development 757rather than production runs. 758 759For instance, Shell never throws away output. A program that sends unlimited 760output to Shell will eventually fill memory, resulting in a memory error. 761In contrast, some system text windows only keep the last n lines of output. 762A Windows console, for instance, keeps a user-settable 1 to 9999 lines, 763with 300 the default. 764 765A Tk Text widget, and hence IDLE's Shell, displays characters (codepoints) in 766the BMP (Basic Multilingual Plane) subset of Unicode. Which characters are 767displayed with a proper glyph and which with a replacement box depends on the 768operating system and installed fonts. Tab characters cause the following text 769to begin after the next tab stop. (They occur every 8 'characters'). Newline 770characters cause following text to appear on a new line. Other control 771characters are ignored or displayed as a space, box, or something else, 772depending on the operating system and font. (Moving the text cursor through 773such output with arrow keys may exhibit some surprising spacing behavior.) :: 774 775 >>> s = 'a\tb\a<\x02><\r>\bc\nd' # Enter 22 chars. 776 >>> len(s) 777 14 778 >>> s # Display repr(s) 779 'a\tb\x07<\x02><\r>\x08c\nd' 780 >>> print(s, end='') # Display s as is. 781 # Result varies by OS and font. Try it. 782 783The ``repr`` function is used for interactive echo of expression 784values. It returns an altered version of the input string in which 785control codes, some BMP codepoints, and all non-BMP codepoints are 786replaced with escape codes. As demonstrated above, it allows one to 787identify the characters in a string, regardless of how they are displayed. 788 789Normal and error output are generally kept separate (on separate lines) 790from code input and each other. They each get different highlight colors. 791 792For SyntaxError tracebacks, the normal '^' marking where the error was 793detected is replaced by coloring the text with an error highlight. 794When code run from a file causes other exceptions, one may right click 795on a traceback line to jump to the corresponding line in an IDLE editor. 796The file will be opened if necessary. 797 798Shell has a special facility for squeezing output lines down to a 799'Squeezed text' label. This is done automatically 800for output over N lines (N = 50 by default). 801N can be changed in the PyShell section of the General 802page of the Settings dialog. Output with fewer lines can be squeezed by 803right clicking on the output. This can be useful lines long enough to slow 804down scrolling. 805 806Squeezed output is expanded in place by double-clicking the label. 807It can also be sent to the clipboard or a separate view window by 808right-clicking the label. 809 810Developing tkinter applications 811^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 812 813IDLE is intentionally different from standard Python in order to 814facilitate development of tkinter programs. Enter ``import tkinter as tk; 815root = tk.Tk()`` in standard Python and nothing appears. Enter the same 816in IDLE and a tk window appears. In standard Python, one must also enter 817``root.update()`` to see the window. IDLE does the equivalent in the 818background, about 20 times a second, which is about every 50 milliseconds. 819Next enter ``b = tk.Button(root, text='button'); b.pack()``. Again, 820nothing visibly changes in standard Python until one enters ``root.update()``. 821 822Most tkinter programs run ``root.mainloop()``, which usually does not 823return until the tk app is destroyed. If the program is run with 824``python -i`` or from an IDLE editor, a ``>>>`` shell prompt does not 825appear until ``mainloop()`` returns, at which time there is nothing left 826to interact with. 827 828When running a tkinter program from an IDLE editor, one can comment out 829the mainloop call. One then gets a shell prompt immediately and can 830interact with the live application. One just has to remember to 831re-enable the mainloop call when running in standard Python. 832 833Running without a subprocess 834^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 835 836By default, IDLE executes user code in a separate subprocess via a socket, 837which uses the internal loopback interface. This connection is not 838externally visible and no data is sent to or received from the Internet. 839If firewall software complains anyway, you can ignore it. 840 841If the attempt to make the socket connection fails, Idle will notify you. 842Such failures are sometimes transient, but if persistent, the problem 843may be either a firewall blocking the connection or misconfiguration of 844a particular system. Until the problem is fixed, one can run Idle with 845the -n command line switch. 846 847If IDLE is started with the -n command line switch it will run in a 848single process and will not create the subprocess which runs the RPC 849Python execution server. This can be useful if Python cannot create 850the subprocess or the RPC socket interface on your platform. However, 851in this mode user code is not isolated from IDLE itself. Also, the 852environment is not restarted when Run/Run Module (F5) is selected. If 853your code has been modified, you must reload() the affected modules and 854re-import any specific items (e.g. from foo import baz) if the changes 855are to take effect. For these reasons, it is preferable to run IDLE 856with the default subprocess if at all possible. 857 858.. deprecated:: 3.4 859 860 861Help and preferences 862-------------------- 863 864.. _help-sources: 865 866Help sources 867^^^^^^^^^^^^ 868 869Help menu entry "IDLE Help" displays a formatted html version of the 870IDLE chapter of the Library Reference. The result, in a read-only 871tkinter text window, is close to what one sees in a web browser. 872Navigate through the text with a mousewheel, 873the scrollbar, or up and down arrow keys held down. 874Or click the TOC (Table of Contents) button and select a section 875header in the opened box. 876 877Help menu entry "Python Docs" opens the extensive sources of help, 878including tutorials, available at ``docs.python.org/x.y``, where 'x.y' 879is the currently running Python version. If your system 880has an off-line copy of the docs (this may be an installation option), 881that will be opened instead. 882 883Selected URLs can be added or removed from the help menu at any time using the 884General tab of the Configure IDLE dialog. 885 886.. _preferences: 887 888Setting preferences 889^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 890 891The font preferences, highlighting, keys, and general preferences can be 892changed via Configure IDLE on the Option menu. 893Non-default user settings are saved in a ``.idlerc`` directory in the user's 894home directory. Problems caused by bad user configuration files are solved 895by editing or deleting one or more of the files in ``.idlerc``. 896 897On the Font tab, see the text sample for the effect of font face and size 898on multiple characters in multiple languages. Edit the sample to add 899other characters of personal interest. Use the sample to select 900monospaced fonts. If particular characters have problems in Shell or an 901editor, add them to the top of the sample and try changing first size 902and then font. 903 904On the Highlights and Keys tab, select a built-in or custom color theme 905and key set. To use a newer built-in color theme or key set with older 906IDLEs, save it as a new custom theme or key set and it well be accessible 907to older IDLEs. 908 909IDLE on macOS 910^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 911 912Under System Preferences: Dock, one can set "Prefer tabs when opening 913documents" to "Always". This setting is not compatible with the tk/tkinter 914GUI framework used by IDLE, and it breaks a few IDLE features. 915 916Extensions 917^^^^^^^^^^ 918 919IDLE contains an extension facility. Preferences for extensions can be 920changed with the Extensions tab of the preferences dialog. See the 921beginning of config-extensions.def in the idlelib directory for further 922information. The only current default extension is zzdummy, an example 923also used for testing. 924