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pydiary 1.1.0
pydiary
MatLab style commands logger for the Python interpreter, with added features.
Usage
Import the Diary class from the package and create a new instance. The commands you type in from now on will be logged into a file. Call diary.off() to disable logging.
from pydiary import Diary
Diary() # Turns diary on, saving commands to the default file diary.py
...
# The current active diary is automatically assigned to a variable called "diary"
diary.off() # Turns diary off
You can pass a custom path for the diary file and save the instance to re-enable it afterwards:
# Turns diary on, saving commands to a file called mydiary.py in the current directory
my_diary = Diary('mydiary.py') # You can save a reference to the Diary instance to use it later
...
my_diary.off()
...
my_diary.on() # Turns on the previously created diary
Advanced usage
Buffered mode
By default pydiary uses an internal string buffer to keep the diary file free for manual changes, and only writes to it when you turn off the diary.
You can force pydiary to flush commands to the file by calling diary.flush().
Call diary.discard() if you want to discard all commands not yet written to the diary file.
Direct mode
You can force pydiary to operate in direct mode by setting the buffered parameter to False when creating an instance.
Diary(buffered=False)
In this mode pydiary will write commands directly to the diary file. Note that due to the way Python handles writing to files, the commands may not be written immediately and you may still need to call diary.off() to see them in the file.
Improvement, Issues report
Suggest improvements or features, report bugs at https://github.com/nathanlepori/pydiary/issues
Authors
Nathan Lepori
For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.
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