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python tab completion Mac OSX 10.7 (Lion)

Before upgrading to lion, I had tab complete working in a python shell via terminal. Following these instructions, it was possible to have tab complete working.

Since upgrading to Lion, I am now unable to get tab complete working in a terminal session of Python. I've followed the above instructions to the letter, and it still does not work.

Is there a difference with the readline module in Lion? Hooking in to the 'tab:complete' option no longer seems to work. I'm wondering if it is terminal that is ignoring readline, or if it is python itself.

Python version: 2.7.1

Edit:

By tab complete, I mean I could do something like the following:

# django import MyModel MyModel.objects.a[TAB] # will complete to all() 
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Josh Smeaton Avatar asked Aug 19 '11 01:08

Josh Smeaton


2 Answers

Apple does not ship GNU readline with OS X. It does ship BSD libedit which includes a readline compatibility interface. The system Pythons shipped by Apple and the 64-bit/32-bit Pythons from python.org installers are built with libedit. The problem is that the commands supported by libedit are completely different from those of readline (see for example the discussion here). The traditional 32-bit-only python.org installers do use GNU readline as do some other 3rd-party distributors of Python for OS X, like MacPorts. Chances are that you were previously using such a Python and not a recent Apple one. You do have a few options, besides modifying Django: you can install the third-party replacement readline module; or you can use another Python that comes with GNU readline. However, you should not use the python.org 32-bit-only Pythons on 10.7 because, unfortunately, Xcode 4 on 10.7 no longer includes gcc-4.0 and the OS X 10.4u SDK which those Pythons need to build and install packages with C extension modules.

Putting the following in the python startup file will enable tab completion for both the libedit interface and the typical readline module. For more information on the python startup file, see here

import readline import rlcompleter if 'libedit' in readline.__doc__:     readline.parse_and_bind("bind ^I rl_complete") else:     readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete") 
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Ned Deily Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 14:10

Ned Deily


As it uses libedit/editline, the syntax to enable autocompletion is a little bit different. You can first force emacs bindings (as it is with readline if I'm not wrong) by typing :

readline.parse_and_bind("bind -e")

Then you can add autocompletion linked to your TAB button (man editrc) :

readline.parse_and_bind("bind '\t' rl_complete")

And if you want to support indenting and has a history (found on internet), it should look like that (unless I made a mistake) :

import readline,rlcompleter  ### Indenting class TabCompleter(rlcompleter.Completer):     """Completer that supports indenting"""     def complete(self, text, state):         if not text:             return ('    ', None)[state]         else:             return rlcompleter.Completer.complete(self, text, state)  readline.set_completer(TabCompleter().complete)  ### Add autocompletion if 'libedit' in readline.__doc__:     readline.parse_and_bind("bind -e")     readline.parse_and_bind("bind '\t' rl_complete") else:     readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete")  ### Add history import os histfile = os.path.join(os.environ["HOME"], ".pyhist") try:     readline.read_history_file(histfile) except IOError:     pass import atexit atexit.register(readline.write_history_file, histfile) del histfile 
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Camille Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 15:10

Camille