IPython: Productive Interactive Computing
Overview
Welcome to IPython. Our full documentation is available on our website; if you downloaded a built source
distribution the docs/source
directory contains the plaintext version of
these manuals. If you have Sphinx installed, you can build them by typing
cd docs; make html
for local browsing.
Dependencies and supported Python versions
For full details, see the installation section of the manual. The basic parts of IPython only need the Python standard library, but much of its more advanced functionality requires extra packages.
Officially, IPython requires Python version 2.7, or 3.3 and above. IPython 1.x is the last IPython version to support Python 2.6 and 3.2.
Instant running
You can run IPython from this directory without even installing it system-wide by typing at the terminal:
$ python -m IPython
Development installation
If you want to hack on certain parts, e.g. the IPython notebook, in a clean
environment (such as a virtualenv) you can use pip
to grab the necessary
dependencies quickly:
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/ipython/ipython.git $ cd ipython $ pip install -e ".[notebook]"
This installs the necessary packages and symlinks IPython into your current environment so that you can work on your local repo copy and run it from anywhere:
$ ipython notebook
The same process applies for other parts, such as the qtconsole (the
extras_require
attribute in the setup.py file lists all the possibilities).
Git Hooks and Submodules
IPython now uses git submodules to ship its javascript dependencies. If you run IPython from git master, you may need to update submodules once in a while with:
$ git submodule update
or:
$ python setup.py submodule
We have some git hooks for helping keep your submodules always in sync,
see our git-hooks
directory for more info.