Issue
Is there a way for a python script to automatically detect whether it is being run interactively or not? Alternatively, can one detect whether ipython is being used versus the regular c python executable?
Background: My python scripts generally have a call to exit() in them. From time to time, I run the scripts interactively for debugging and profiling, usually in ipython. When I'm running interactively, I want to suppress the calls to exit.
Clarification:
Suppose I have a script, myscript.py, that looks like:
#!/usr/bin/python
...do useful stuff...
exit(exit_status)
Sometimes, I want to run the script within an IPython session that I have already started, saying something like:
In [nnn]: %run -p -D myscript.pstats myscript.py
At the end of the script, the exit() call will cause ipython to hang while it asks me if I really want to exit. This is a minor annoyance while debugging (too minor for me to care), but it can mess up profiling results: the exit prompt gets included in the profile results (making the analysis harder if I start a profiling session before going off to lunch).
What I'd like is something that allows me modify my script so it looks like:
#!/usr/bin/python
...do useful stuff...
if is_python_running_interactively():
print "The exit_status was %d" % (exit_status,)
else:
exit(exit_status)
Solution
I stumbled on the following and it seems to do the trick for me:
def in_ipython():
try:
return __IPYTHON__
except NameError:
return False
Answered By - Mr Fooz
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