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An autocompletion tool for Python that can be used for text editors.

Project description

PyPI version Supported Python versions Linux Tests Windows Tests Coverage status

If you have specific questions, please add an issue or ask on Stack Overflow with the label python-jedi.

Jedi is a static analysis tool for Python that can be used in IDEs/editors. Its historic focus is autocompletion, but does static analysis for now as well. Jedi is fast and is very well tested. It understands Python on a deeper level than all other static analysis frameworks for Python.

Jedi has support for two different goto functions. It’s possible to search for related names and to list all names in a Python file and infer them. Jedi understands docstrings and you can use Jedi autocompletion in your REPL as well.

Jedi uses a very simple API to connect with IDEs. There’s a reference implementation as a VIM-Plugin, which uses Jedi’s autocompletion. We encourage you to use Jedi in your IDEs. It’s really easy.

Jedi can currently be used with the following editors/projects:

and many more!

Here are some pictures taken from jedi-vim:

https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi/raw/master/docs/_screenshots/screenshot_complete.png

Completion for almost anything (Ctrl+Space).

https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi/raw/master/docs/_screenshots/screenshot_function.png

Display of function/class bodies, docstrings.

https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi/raw/master/docs/_screenshots/screenshot_pydoc.png

Pydoc support (Shift+k).

There is also support for goto and renaming.

Get the latest version from github (master branch should always be kind of stable/working).

Docs are available at https://jedi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/. Pull requests with documentation enhancements and/or fixes are awesome and most welcome. Jedi uses semantic versioning.

If you want to stay up-to-date (News / RFCs), please subscribe to this github thread.:

Installation

pip install jedi

Note: This just installs the Jedi library, not the editor plugins. For information about how to make it work with your editor, refer to the corresponding documentation.

You don’t want to use pip? Please refer to the manual.

Feature Support and Caveats

Jedi really understands your Python code. For a comprehensive list what Jedi understands, see: Features. A list of caveats can be found on the same page.

You can run Jedi on CPython 2.7 or 3.4+ but it should also understand/parse code older than those versions. Additionally you should be able to use Virtualenvs very well.

Tips on how to use Jedi efficiently can be found here.

API

You can find the documentation for the API here.

Autocompletion / Goto / Pydoc

Please check the API for a good explanation. There are the following commands:

  • jedi.Script.goto_assignments

  • jedi.Script.completions

  • jedi.Script.usages

The returned objects are very powerful and really all you might need.

Autocompletion in your REPL (IPython, etc.)

Starting with IPython 6.0.0 Jedi is a dependency of IPython. Autocompletion in IPython is therefore possible without additional configuration.

It’s possible to have Jedi autocompletion in REPL modes - example video. This means that in Python you can enable tab completion in a REPL.

Static Analysis / Linter

To do all forms of static analysis, please try to use jedi.names. It will return a list of names that you can use to infer types and so on.

Linting is another thing that is going to be part of Jedi. For now you can try an alpha version python -m jedi linter. The API might change though and it’s still buggy. It’s Jedi’s goal to be smarter than classic linter and understand AttributeError and other code issues.

Refactoring

Jedi’s parser would support refactoring, but there’s no API to use it right now. If you’re interested in helping out here, let me know. With the latest parser changes, it should be very easy to actually make it work.

Development

There’s a pretty good and extensive development documentation.

Testing

The test suite depends on tox and pytest:

pip install tox pytest

To run the tests for all supported Python versions:

tox

If you want to test only a specific Python version (e.g. Python 2.7), it’s as easy as

tox -e py27

Tests are also run automatically on Travis CI.

For more detailed information visit the testing documentation.

Acknowledgements

  • Takafumi Arakaki (@tkf) for creating a solid test environment and a lot of other things.

  • Danilo Bargen (@dbrgn) for general housekeeping and being a good friend :).

  • Guido van Rossum (@gvanrossum) for creating the parser generator pgen2 (originally used in lib2to3).

Changelog

0.13.2 (2018-12-15)

  • Fixed a bug that led to Jedi spawning a lot of subprocesses.

0.13.1 (2018-10-02)

  • Bugfixes, because tensorflow completions were still slow.

0.13.0 (2018-10-02)

  • A small release. Some bug fixes.

  • Remove Python 3.3 support. Python 3.3 support has been dropped by the Python foundation.

  • Default environments are now using the same Python version as the Python process. In 0.12.x, we used to load the latest Python version on the system.

  • Added include_builtins as a parameter to usages.

  • goto_assignments has a new follow_builtin_imports parameter that changes the previous behavior slightly.

0.12.1 (2018-06-30)

  • This release forces you to upgrade parso. If you don’t, nothing will work anymore. Otherwise changes should be limited to bug fixes. Unfortunately Jedi still uses a few internals of parso that make it hard to keep compatibility over multiple releases. Parso >=0.3.0 is going to be needed.

0.12.0 (2018-04-15)

  • Virtualenv/Environment support

  • F-String Completion/Goto Support

  • Cannot crash with segfaults anymore

  • Cleaned up import logic

  • Understand async/await and autocomplete it (including async generators)

  • Better namespace completions

  • Passing tests for Windows (including CI for Windows)

  • Remove Python 2.6 support

0.11.1 (2017-12-14)

  • Parso update - the caching layer was broken

  • Better usages - a lot of internal code was ripped out and improved.

0.11.0 (2017-09-20)

  • Split Jedi’s parser into a separate project called parso.

  • Avoiding side effects in REPL completion.

  • Numpy docstring support should be much better.

  • Moved the settings.*recursion* away, they are no longer usable.

0.10.2 (2017-04-05)

  • Python Packaging sucks. Some files were not included in 0.10.1.

0.10.1 (2017-04-05)

  • Fixed a few very annoying bugs.

  • Prepared the parser to be factored out of Jedi.

0.10.0 (2017-02-03)

  • Actual semantic completions for the complete Python syntax.

  • Basic type inference for yield from PEP 380.

  • PEP 484 support (most of the important features of it). Thanks Claude! (@reinhrst)

  • Added get_line_code to Definition and Completion objects.

  • Completely rewritten the type inference engine.

  • A new and better parser for (fast) parsing diffs of Python code.

0.9.0 (2015-04-10)

  • The import logic has been rewritten to look more like Python’s. There is now an Evaluator.modules import cache, which resembles sys.modules.

  • Integrated the parser of 2to3. This will make refactoring possible. It will also be possible to check for error messages (like compiling an AST would give) in the future.

  • With the new parser, the evaluation also completely changed. It’s now simpler and more readable.

  • Completely rewritten REPL completion.

  • Added jedi.names, a command to do static analysis. Thanks to that sourcegraph guys for sponsoring this!

  • Alpha version of the linter.

0.8.1 (2014-07-23)

  • Bugfix release, the last release forgot to include files that improve autocompletion for builtin libraries. Fixed.

0.8.0 (2014-05-05)

  • Memory Consumption for compiled modules (e.g. builtins, sys) has been reduced drastically. Loading times are down as well (it takes basically as long as an import).

  • REPL completion is starting to become usable.

  • Various small API changes. Generally this release focuses on stability and refactoring of internal APIs.

  • Introducing operator precedence, which makes calculating correct Array indices and __getattr__ strings possible.

0.7.0 (2013-08-09)

  • Switched from LGPL to MIT license.

  • Added an Interpreter class to the API to make autocompletion in REPL possible.

  • Added autocompletion support for namespace packages.

  • Add sith.py, a new random testing method.

0.6.0 (2013-05-14)

  • Much faster parser with builtin part caching.

  • A test suite, thanks @tkf.

0.5 versions (2012)

  • Initial development.

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