peek - debugging and benchmarking made easy
Project description
Introduction
Do you use print()
or log()
to debug your code?
If so, peek will make printing debug information really easy.
And on top of that, you get some basic benchmarking functionality.
Table of contents
Installation
Installing peek with pip is easy.
pip install peek-python
or when you want to upgrade,
pip install peek-python --upgrade
Alternatively, peek.py can be juist copied into you current work directory from GitHub (https://github.com/salabim/peek).
No dependencies!
Importing peek
All you need is:
import peek
, or the more conventional, but more verbose
from peek import peek
Note that after this, peek
is automatically a builtin and can thus be used in any module without
importing it there.
Inspect variables and expressions
Have you ever printed variables or expressions to debug your program? If you've ever typed something like
print(add2(1000))
or the more thorough
print("add2(1000)", add2(1000)))
or:
print(f"{add2(1000)=}")
then peek()
is here to help. With arguments, peek()
inspects itself and prints
both its own arguments and the values of those arguments.
def add2(i):
return i + 2
peek(add2(1000))
prints
add2(1000)=1002
Similarly,
class X:
a = 3
world = {"EN": "world", "NL": "wereld", "FR": "monde", "DE": "Welt"}
peek(world, X.a)
prints
world={"EN": "world ", "NL": "wereld", "FR": "monde", "DE": "Welt"}, X.a: 3
Just give peek()
a variable or expression and you're done. Easy, or what?
Inspect execution
Have you ever used print()
to determine which parts of your program are
executed, and in which order they're executed? For example, if you've ever added
print statements to debug code like
def add2(i):
print("***add2 1")
result = i + 2
print("***add2 2")
return result
then peek()
helps here, too. Without arguments, peek()
inspects itself and
prints the calling line number and -if applicable- the file name and parent function.
def add2(i):
peek()
result = i + 2
peek()
return result
peek(add2(1000))
prints something like
#3 in add2()
#5 in add2()
add2(1000)=1002
Just call peek()
and you're done. Isn't that easy?
Return Value
peek()
returns its argument(s), so peek()
can easily be inserted into
pre-existing code.
def add2(i):
return i + 2
b = peek(add2(1000))
peek(b)
prints
add2(1000)=1002
b=1002
Debug entry and exit of function calls
When you apply peek()
as a decorator to a function or method, both the entry and exit can be tracked.
The (keyword) arguments passed will be shown and upon return, the return value.
@peek()
def mul(x, peek):
return x * peek
print(mul(5, 7))
prints
called mul(5, 7)
returned 35 from mul(5, 7) in 0.000006 seconds
35
It is possible to suppress the print-out of either the enter or the exit information with the show_enter and show_exit parameters, like:
@peek(show_exit=False)
def mul(x, peek):
return x * peek
print(mul(5, 7))
prints
called mul(5, 7)
35
Benchmarking with peek
If you decorate a function or method with peek(), you will be offered the duration between entry and exit (in seconds) as a bonus.
That opens the door to simple benchmarking, like:
import time
@peek(show_enter=False,show_line_number=True)
def do_sort(i):
n = 10 ** i
x = sorted(list(range(n)))
return f"{n:9d}"
for i in range(8):
do_sort(i)
the ouput will show the effects of the population size on the sort speed:
#5 ==> returned ' 1' from do_sort(0) in 0.000027 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 10' from do_sort(1) in 0.000060 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 100' from do_sort(2) in 0.000748 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 1000' from do_sort(3) in 0.001897 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 10000' from do_sort(4) in 0.002231 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 100000' from do_sort(5) in 0.024014 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 1000000' from do_sort(6) in 0.257504 seconds
#5 ==> returned ' 10000000' from do_sort(7) in 1.553495 seconds
It is also possible to time any code by using peek() as a context manager, e.g.
with peek():
time.sleep(1)
wil print something like
enter
exit in 1.000900 seconds
You can include parameters here as well:
with peek(show_line_number=True, show_time=True):
time.sleep(1)
will print somethink like:
#8 @ 13:20:32.605903 ==> enter
#8 @ 13:20:33.609519 ==> exit in 1.003358 seconds
Finally, to help with timing code, you can request the current delta with
peek.delta
or (re)set it with
peek.delta = 0
So, e.g. to time a section of code:
peek.delta = 0
time.sleep(1)
duration = peek.delta
peek(duration)
might print something like:
duration=1.0001721999999997
Configuration
For the configuration, it is important to realize that peek
is an instance of a class, which has
a number of configuration attributes:
------------------------------------------------------
attribute alternative default
------------------------------------------------------
prefix pr ""
output o "stdout"
serialize pprint.pformat
show_line_number sln False
show_time st False
show_delta sd False
show_enter se True
show_exit sx True
show_traceback stb False
sort_dicts sdi False
underscore_numbers un False
enabled e True
line_length ll 160
compact c False
indent i 1
depth de 1000000
wrap_indent wi " "
separator sep ", "
context_separator cs " ==> "
equals_separator es "="
values_only vo False
value_only_for_fstrings voff False
return_none rn False
enforce_line_length ell False
delta dl 0
------------------------------------------------------
It is perfectly ok to set/get any of these attributes directly, like
peek.prefix = "==> "
print(peek.prefix)
But, it is also possible to apply configuration directly, only here, in the call to peek
:
So, it is possible to say
peek(12, prefix="==> ")
, which will print
==> 12
It is also possible to configure peek permanently with the configure method.
peek.configure(prefix="==> ")
peek(12)
will print
==> 12
It is arguably easier to say:
peek.prefix = "==> "
peek(12)
or even
peek.pr = "==> "
peek(12)
to print
==> 12
Yet another way to configure peek is to get a new instance of peek with peek.new() and the required configuration:
z = peek.new(prefix="==> ")
z(12)
will print
==> 12
Or, yet another possibility is to clone peek (optionally with modified attributes):
peek1 = peek.clone(show_time=True)
peek2 = peek.clone()
peek2.show_time = True
After this peek1
and peek2
will behave similarly (but they are not the same!)
prefix / pr
peek('world', prefix='hello -> ')
prints
hello -> 'world'
prefix
can be a function, too.
import time
def unix_timestamp():
return f"{int(time.time())} "
hello = "world"
peek.prefix = unix_timestamp
peek(hello)
prints
1613635601 hello='world'
output / o
This will allow the output to be handled by something else than the default (output being written to stdout).
The output
attribute can be
- a callable that accepts at least one parameter (the text to be printed)
- a string or Path object that will be used as the filename
- a text file that is open for writing/appending
In the example below,
import sys
peek(1, output=print)
peek(2, output=sys.stderr)
with open("test", "a+") as f:
peek(3, output=f)
peek(4, output="")
1
will be printed to stdout2
will be printed to stderr3
will be appended to the file test- nothing will be printed/written
As output
may be a callable, you can even use this to automatically log any peek
output:
import logging
logging.basicConfig(level="INFO")
log = logging.getLogger("demo")
peek.configure(output=log.info)
a = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
peek(a)
a.remove(4)
peek(a)
will print to stdout:
INFO:demo:a={1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
INFO:demo:a={1, 2, 3, 5}
Finally, you can specify the following strings:
"stderr" to print to stderr
"stdout" to print to stdout
"null" or "" to completely ignore (dummy) output
"logging.debug" to use logging.debug
"logging.info" to use logging.info
"logging.warning" to use logging.warning
"logging.error" to use logging.error
"logging.critical" to use logging.critical
E.g.
import sys
peek.output = "stderr"
to print to stderr.
serialize
This will allow to specify how argument values are to be serialized to displayable strings.
The default is pformat
(from pprint
), but this can be changed.
For example, to handle non-standard datatypes in a custom fashion.
The serialize function should accept at least one parameter.
The function may optionally accept the keyword arguments width
and sort_dicts
, compact
, indent
, underscore_numbers
and depth
.
def add_len(obj):
if hasattr(obj, "__len__"):
add = f" [len={len(obj)}]"
else:
add = ""
return f"{repr(obj)}{add}"
l7 = list(range(7))
hello = "world"
peek(7, hello, l7, serialize=add_len)
prints
7, hello='world' [len=5], l7=[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] [len=7]
show_line_number / sln
If True, adds the peek()
call's line number and possibly the filename and parent function to peek()
's output.
peek.configure(show_line_number=True)
def shout():
hello="world"
peek(hello)
shout()
prints something like
#5 in shout() ==> hello='world'
If "no parent" or "n", the parent function will not be shown.
peek.show_line_number = "n"
def shout():
hello="world"
peek(hello)
shout()
prints something like
#5 ==> hello='world'
Note that if you call peek
without any arguments, the line number is always shown, regardless of the status show_line_number
.
See below for an explanation of the information provided.
show_time / st
If True, adds the current time to peek()
's output.
peek.configure(show_time=True)
hello="world"
peek(hello)
prints something like
@ 13:01:47.588125 ==> hello='world'
show_delta / sd
If True, adds the number of seconds since the start of the program to peek()
's output.
import time
peek.show_delta = True
french = "bonjour le monde"
english = "hallo world"
peek(english)
time.sleep(1)
peek(french)
prints something like
delta=0.088 ==> english='hallo world'
delta=1.091 ==> french='bonjour le monde'
show_enter / se
When used as a decorator or context manager, by default, peek ouputs a line when the decorated the function is called or the context manager is entered.
With show_enter=False
this line can be suppressed.
show_exit / sx
When used as a decorator or context manager, by default, peek ouputs a line when the decorated the function returned or the context manager is exited.
With show_exit=False
this line can be suppressed.
show_traceback / stb
When show_traceback is True, the ordinary output of peek() will be followed by a printout of the traceback, similar to an error traceback.
def x():
peek(show_traceback=True)
x()
x()
prints
#4 in x()
Traceback (most recent call last)
File "c:\Users\Ruud\Dropbox (Personal)\Apps\Python Ruud\peek\x.py", line 6, in <module>
x()
File "c:\Users\Ruud\Dropbox (Personal)\Apps\Python Ruud\peek\x.py", line 4, in x
peek()
#4 in x()
Traceback (most recent call last)
File "c:\Users\Ruud\Dropbox (Personal)\Apps\Python Ruud\peek\x.py", line 7, in <module>
x()
File "c:\Users\Ruud\Dropbox (Personal)\Apps\Python Ruud\peek\x.py", line 4, in x
peek()
The show_traceback
functionality is also available when peek is used as a decorator or context manager.
line_length / ll
This attribute is used to specify the line length (for wrapping). The default is 160. Peek tries to keep all output on one line, but if it can't it will wrap:
d = dict(a1=1,a2=dict(a=1,b=1,c=3),a3=list(range(10)))
peek(d)
peek(d, line_length=80)
prints
d={'a1': 1, 'a2': {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 3}, 'a3': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]}
d=
{'a1': 1,
'a2': {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 3},
'a3': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]}
compact / c
This attribute is used to specify the compact parameter for pformat
(see the pprint documentation
for details). compact
is False by default.
a = 9 * ["0123456789"]
peek.line_length = 80
peek(a)
peek(a, compact=True)
prints
a=
['0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789',
'0123456789']
a=
['0123456789', '0123456789', '0123456789', '0123456789', '0123456789',
'0123456789', '0123456789', '0123456789', '0123456789']
indent / i
This attribute is used to specify the indent parameter for pformat
(see the pprint documentation
for details). indent
is 1 by default.
s = "01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890"
peek.line_length = 80
peek( [s, [s]])
peek( [s, [s]], indent=4)
prints
[s, [s]]=
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890']]
[s, [s]]=
[ '01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890']]
depth / de
This attribute is used to specify the depth parameter for pformat
(see the pprint documentation
for details). depth
is 1000000
by default.
s = "01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890"
peek([s,[s,[s,[s,s]]]])
peek([s,[s,[s,[s,s]]]], depth=3)
prints
[s,[s,[s,[s,s]]]]=
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
'01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890']]]]
[s,[s,[s,[s,s]]]]=
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890',
['01234567890012345678900123456789001234567890', [...]]]]
wrap_indent / wi
This specifies the indent string if the output does not fit in the line_length (has to be wrapped). Rather than a string, wrap_indent can be also be an integer, in which case the wrap_indent will be that amount of blanks. The default is 4 blanks.
E.g.
d = dict(a1=1,a2=dict(a=1,b=1,c=3),a3=list(range(10)))
peek.line_length = 80
peek(d, wrap_indent=" ")
peek(d, wrap_indent="....")
peek(d, wrap_indent=2)
prints
d=
{'a1': 1,
'a2': {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 3},
'a3': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]}
d=
....{'a1': 1,
.... 'a2': {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 3},
.... 'a3': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]}
d=
{'a1': 1,
'a2': {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 3},
'a3': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]}
enabled / e
Can be used to disable the output:
peek.enabled = False
s = 'the world is '
peek(s + 'perfect.')
peek.enabled = True
peek(s + 'on fire.')
prints
s + 'on fire.'='the world is on fire.'
and nothing about a perfect world.
sort_dicts / sdi
By default, peek does not sort dicts (printed by pprint). However, it is possible to get the default pprint behaviour (i.e. sorting dicts) with the sorted_dicts attribute:
world = {"EN": "world", "NL": "wereld", "FR": "monde", "DE": "Welt"}
peek(world))
peek(world, sort_dicts=False)
peek(world, sort_dicts=True)
prints
world={'EN': 'world', 'NL': 'wereld', 'FR': 'monde', 'DE': 'Welt'}
world={'EN': 'world', 'NL': 'wereld', 'FR': 'monde', 'DE': 'Welt'}
world={'DE': 'Welt', 'EN': 'world', 'FR': 'monde', 'NL': 'wereld'}
Note that under Python <=3.7, dicts are always printed sorted.
underscore_numbers / un
By default, peek does not add underscores in big numbers (printed by pprint). However, it is possible to get the default pprint behaviour with the underscore_numbers attribute:
numbers = dict(one= 1, thousand= 1000, million=1000000, x1234567890= 1234567890)
peek(numbers)
peek(numbers, underscore_numbers=True)
peek(numbers, un=False)
prints
numbers={'one': 1, 'thousand': 1000, 'million': 1000000, 'x1234567890': 1234567890}
numbers={'one': 1, 'thousand': 1_000, 'million': 1_000_000, 'x1234567890': 1_234_567_890}
numbers={'one': 1, 'thousand': 1000, 'million': 1000000, 'x1234567890': 1234567890}
seperator / sep
By default, pairs (on one line) are separated by ,
.
It is possible to change this with the attribute separator
:
a = "abcd"
b = 1
c = 1000
d = list("peek")
peek(a, (b, c), d)
peek(a, (b, c), d, separator=" | ")
prints
a='abcd', (b,c)=(1, 1000), d=['peek', 'c', 'e', 'c', 'r', 'e', 'a', 'm']
a='abcd' | (b,c)=(1, 1000) | d=['peek', 'c', 'e', 'c', 'r', 'e', 'a', 'm']
Note that under Python <=3.7, numbers are never printed with underscores.
context_separator / cs
By default the line_number, time and/or delta are followed by ==>
.
It is possible to change this with the attribute context_separator
:
a = "abcd"
peek(a,show_time=True)
peek(a, show_time=True, context_separator = ' \u279c ')
prints:
@ 09:05:38.693840 ==> a='abcd'
@ 09:05:38.707914 ➜ a='abcd'
equals_separator / es
By default name of a variable and its value are separated by =
.
It is possible to change this with the attribute equals_separator
:
a = "abcd"
peek(a)
peek(a, equals_separator = ' == ")
prints:
a='abcd'
a == 'abcd'
values_only / vo
If False (the default), both the left-hand side (if possible) and the value will be printed. If True, the left hand side will be suppressed:
hello = "world"
peek(hello, 2 * hello)
peek(hello, 2 * hello, values_only=True)
prints
hello='world', 2 * hello='worldworld'
'world', 'worldworld'
The values=True version of peek can be seen as a supercharged print/pprint.
values_only_for_fstrings / voff
If False (the default), both the original f-string and the value will be printed for f-strings. If True, the left_hand side will be suppressed in case of an f-string:
x = 12.3
peek(f"{x:0.3e}")
peek.values_only_for_fstrings = True
peek(f"{x:0.3e}")
prints
f"{x:0.3e}"='1.230e+01'
'1.230e+01'
Note that if values_only
is True, f-string will be suppressed, regardless of values_only_for_fstrings
.
return_none / rn
Normally, peek()
returns the values passed directly, which is usually fine. However, when used in a notebook
or REPL, that value will be shown, and that can be annoying. Therefore, if return_none
is True, peek()
will
return None and thus not show anything.
a = 3
b = 4
print(peek(a, b))
peek.return_none = True
print(peek(a, b))
prints
a=3, b=4
(3, 4)
a=3, b=4
None
enforce_line_length / ell
If enforce_line_length is True, all output lines are explicitly truncated to the given line_length, even those that are not truncated by pformat.
delta / dl
The delta attribute can be used to (re)set the current delta, e.g.
peek.dl = 0
print(peek.delta)
prints a value that id slightly more than 0.
provided / pr
If provided is False, all output for this call will be suppressed. If provided is True, output will be generated as usual (obeying the enabled attribute).
x = 1
peek("should print", provided=x > 0)
peek("should not print", provided=x < 0)
This will print
should print
Return a string instead of sending to output
peek(*args, as_str=True)
is like peek(*args)
but the output is returned as a string instead
of written to output.
hello = "world"
s = peek(hello, as_str=True)
print(s, end="")
prints
hello='world'
Note that if enabled=False, the call will return the null string (""
).
Disabling peek's output
peek1 = peek.fork(show_delta=True)
peek(1)
peek1(2)
peek.enabled = False
peek(3)
peek1(4)
peek1.enabled = True
peek(5)
peek1(6)
print(peek1.enabled)
prints
1
delta=0.011826 ==> 2
5
delta=0.044893 ==> 6
True
Of course peek()
continues to return its arguments when disabled, of course.
It is also possible to suppress output with the provided attribute (see above).
Using peek as a substitute for assert
Peek has a method assert_
that works like assert
, but can be enabled or disabled with the enabled flag.
temperature = -1
peek.assert_(temperature > 0)
This will raise an AttributeError.
But
peek.enabled = False
temperature = -1
peek.assert_(temperature > 0)
will not.
Note that with the attribute propagation method, you can in effect have a layered assert system.
Interpreting the line number information
When show_line_number
is True or peek() is used without any parameters, the output will contain the line number like:
#3 ==> a='abcd'
If the line resides in another file than the main file, the filename (without the path) will be shown as well:
#30[foo.py] ==> foo='Foo'
And finally when used in a function or method, that function/method will be shown as well:
#456[foo.py] in square_root ==> x=123
The parent function can be suppressed by setting show_line_number
or sln
to "n"
or "no parent"
.
Configuring at import time
It can be useful to configure peek at import time. This can be done by providing a peek.json
file which
can contain any attribute configuration overriding the standard settings.
E.g. if there is an peek.json
file with the following contents
{
"o": "stderr",
"show_time": true,
"line_length": 80`
'compact' : true
}
in the same folder as the application, this program:
hello = "world"
peek(hello)
will print to stderr (rather than stdout):
@ 14:53:41.392190 ==> hello='world'
At import time the sys.path will be searched for, in that order, to find a peek.json
file and use that. This means that
you can place a peek.json
file in the site-packages folder where peek
is installed to always use
these modified settings.
Please observe that json values are slightly different from their Python equivalents:
-------------------------------
Python json
-------------------------------
True true
False false
None none
strings always double quoted
-------------------------------
Note that not-specified attributes will remain the default settings.
For obvious reasons, it is not possible to specify serialize
in an peek.json file.
Working with multiple instances of peek
Normally, only the peek()
object is used.
It can be useful to have multiple instances, e.g. when some of the debugging has to be done with context information and others requires an alternative prefix.
THere are several ways to obtain a new instance of peek:
-
by using
peek.new()
With this a new peek object is created with the default attributes and possibly peek.json overrides.
-
by using
peek.new(ignore_json=True)
With this a new peekobject is created with the default attibutes. Any peek.json files asre ignored.
-
by using
peek.fork()
With this a new peek object is created with the same attributes as the object it is created ('the parent') from. Note that any non set attributes are copied (propagated) from the parent.
-
by using
peek.clone()
, which copies all attributes from peek()With this a new peek object is created with the same attributes as the object it is created ('the parent') from. Note that the attributes are not propagated from the parent, in this case.
-
with
peek()
used as a context manager
In either case, attributes can be added to override the default ones.
Example
peek_with_line_number = peek.fork(show_line_number=True)
peek_with_new_prefix = peek.new(prefix="==> ")
peek_with_new_prefix_and_time = peek_with_new_prefix.clone(show_time=True)
hello="world"
peek_with_line_number(hello)
peek_with_new_prefix(hello)
peek_with_new_prefix_and_time(hello)
peek.equals_separator = " == " # this affects only the forked objects
peek_with_line_number(hello)
peek_with_new_prefix(hello)
peek_with_new_prefix_and_time(hello)
with peek(prefix="peek_cm ") as peek_cm:
peek_cm(hello)
peek(hello)
prints something like
#28 ==> hello='world'
==> hello='world'
==> @ 09:55:52.122818 ==> hello='world'
#32 ==> hello == 'world'
==> hello='world'
==> @ 09:55:52.125928 ==> hello='world'
peek_cm enter
peek_cm hello == 'world'
hello == 'world'
peek_cm exit in 0.001843 seconds
ignore_json
With peek.new(ignore_json=True)
an instance of peek without having applied any json configuration file will be returned. That can be useful when guaranteeing the same output in several setups.
Example
Suppose we have a peek.json
file in the current directory with the contents
{prefix="==>"}
Then
peek_post_json = peek.new()
peek_ignore_json = peek.new(ignore_json=True)
hello = "world"
peek(hello)
peek_post_json(hello)
peek_ignore_json(hello)
prints
==>hello='world'
==>hello='world'
hello='world'
Test script
On GitHub is a file test_peek.py
that tests (and thus also demonstrates) most of the functionality
of peek.
It is very useful to have a look at the tests to see the features (some may be not covered (yet) in this readme).
Using peek in a REPL
Peek may be used in a REPL, but with limited functionality:
- all arguments are just presented as such, i.e. no left-hand side, e.g.
>> hello = "world" >>> peek(hello, hello * 2) 'hello', 'hellohello' ('hello', 'hellohello')
- line numbers are never shown
- use as a decorator is not supported
- use as a context manager is not supported
Alternative to peek
Sometimes, even peek is too long during a debug session or it is not suitable to use the name peek.
In that case, it is possible to use p instead
from peek import p
The p
object is a fork of peek. That means that attributes of peek
are propagated to p
, unless overridden.
Limitations
It is not possible to use peek:
- from a frozen application (e.g. packaged with PyInstaller)
- when the underlying source code has changed during execution
Implementation details
Although not important for using the package, here are some implementation details:
- peek.py contains the complete source of the asttokens, executing and six packages, in order to offer the required source lookups, without any dependencies
- in order to support using peek() as a decorator and a context manager, peek caches the complete source of any source file that uses peek()
Changelog
The changelog can be found here:
Acknowledgement
The peek package is inspired by the IceCream package, but is a nearly complete rewrite. See https://github.com/gruns/icecream
Many thanks to the author Ansgar Grunseid / grunseid.com / grunseid@gmail.com .
The peek package is a rebrand of the ycecream package, with enhancements.
Differences with IceCream
The peek module was originally a fork of IceCream, but has many differences:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
characteristic peek IceCream
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
default name peek ic
import method import peek from icecream import ic
dependencies none many
number of files 1 several
usable without installation yes no
can be used as a decorator yes no
can be used as a context manager yes no
can show traceback yes no
PEP8 (Pythonic) API yes no
sorts dicts no by default, optional *) yes
supports compact, indent,
and underscore_numbers
parameters of pprint yes **) no
use from a REPL limited functionality no
external configuration via json file no
observes line_length correctly yes no
default line length 160 80
benchmarking functionality yes no
suppress f-strings at left hand optional no
indentation 4 blanks (overridable) dependent on length of prefix
forking and cloning yes no
test script pytest unittest
colourize no yes (can be disabled)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*) under Python <= 3.7, dicts are always sorted (regardless of the sort_dicts attribute
**) under Python <= 3.7, numbers are never underscored (regardless of the underscore_numnbers attribute
Project details
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