Automagically import missing modules in IPython: instead of
In [1]: plt.plot([1, 2], [3, 4]) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- NameError Traceback (most recent call last) <ipython-input-1-994ba2bf13c0> in <module>() ----> 1 plt.plot([1, 2], [3, 4]) NameError: name 'plt' is not defined In [2]: from matplotlib import pyplot as plt In [3]: plt.plot([1, 2], [3, 4]) Out[3]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x7f73f0179198>]
do what I mean:
In [1]: plt.plot([1, 2], [3, 4]) Autoimport: from matplotlib import pyplot as plt Out[1]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x7f7e253552b0>]
Inspired from @OrangeFlash81's version, with many improvements:
- Does not rely on re-execution, but instead hooks the user namespace; thus, safe even in the presence of side effects, and works for tab completion and magics too.
- Learns your preferred aliases from the history --
plt
is not hardcoded to aliasmatplotlib.pyplot
, just found because you previously importedpyplot
under this alias. - Suppresses irrelevant chained tracebacks.
- Auto-imports submodules.
pip
-installable.
To see auto imports from the current session: %autoimport -l
To clear the cache for a symbol with multiple possible imports: %autoimport -c SYMBOL
As usual, install using pip:
$ pip install ipython-autoimport # from PyPI
$ pip install git+https://github.com/anntzer/ipython-autoimport # from Github
Then, append the output of python -m ipython_autoimport
to the
ipython_config.py
file in the directory printed by ipython profile
locate
(typically ~/.ipython/profile_default/
). If you don't have such a
file at all, first create it with ipython profile create
.
When using Spyder, the above registration method will not work; instead, add
%load_ext ipython_autoimport
to the
Preferences → IPython console → Startup → Run code
option.
Note that upon loading, ipython_autoimport
will register its submodule
auto-importer to IPython's "limited evalutation" completer policy (on IPython
versions that support it).
Run tests with pytest
.
Constructs such as
class C: auto_imported_value
will not work, because they are run using the class locals (rather than the
patched locals); patching globals would not work because LOAD_NAME
queries
globals using PyDict_GetItem
exactly (note that it queries locals using
PyObject_GetItem
; also, LOAD_GLOBALS
queries both globals and
builtins using PyObject_GetItem
so we could possibly get away with patching
the builtins dict instead, but that seems a bit too invasive...).
When using Jedi autocompletion (the default if Jedi is installed as of IPython
7.2), trying to tab-complete not-yet-imported global names to trigger an import
failure, because Jedi purposefully converts the global dict to a namespace
object and looks up attributes using getattr_static
. Jedi can be disabled
by adding c.Completer.use_jedi = False
to the ipython_config.py
file.
- Avoid erroring when exiting IPython≥8.15.