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In order to use IPython during Python development in Emacs, I have been opening up a terminal, and typing ipython. This doesn't seem like the right way to do it.

For one thing, my buffer lists this buffer as *ansi-term*, which is confusing, as I often end up with multiple terminals, one of which is dedicated to Python. I also see that I can open a python interpreter directly with M-x python-shell. It seems like there ought to be a similar option for IPython.

Is there a better way to use the IPython interpreter in Emacs?

I'm using Emacs 24 with Prelude.

Eric Wilson
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  • I am thinking that the reference to Prelude (which I think is a bunch of pre-defined emacs settings in github) doesn't really help here. Also, I'm reluctant to put this as an Answer, but have you seen EIN (Emacs IPython Notebook: https://github.com/tkf/emacs-ipython-notebook ) ? This is probably what you're after. – mike Jul 03 '14 at 06:11
  • I recommend emacs-ipython - https://github.com/burakbayramli/emacs-ipython – BBSysDyn Sep 04 '18 at 19:25

6 Answers6

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I don't know what Prelude is, but if you can install the latest Emacs (i.e, Emacs with Fabian's python-mode included), then you can use the following to let Python mode know your preferred choice of interpreter. Then you just need to call M-x run-python:

--

(when (executable-find "ipython")
  (setq python-shell-interpreter "ipython"))

--

WickedJargon
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kindahero
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    I love this answer, because it illustrates how get Emacs to actually understand the session (where the prompts are, use emacs python mode instead of simple cominf) and use ipython's own completion. – mike Jul 02 '14 at 11:54
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    I added this code to my .emacs and it works as expected. However if I try to use ipython notebook through ein (M-x ein:notebooklist-open) it throws me an error that says Wrong type argument: stringp, nil. Anyways to integrate this with ein? – rambalachandran Feb 18 '15 at 04:42
  • @WanderingMind with out a backtrace I can't tell you what's wrong. May be ask a new question on emacs.SE with backtrace details. – kindahero Feb 18 '15 at 11:58
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    if you know that the conditional is not necessary, i.e., 1st thing you do on any new computer is to install IPython, you can just use `customize`, more specifically `M-x customize-apropos python-shell `. Of course you will start customizing `python-shell-interpreter` (to `ipython`) but next you have over 25 other possibilities for customizing in detail your Emacs-IPython experience. – gboffi Aug 04 '21 at 09:44
9

UPD Detailed instructions for beginners:

  1. Copy this:

    (defun ipython ()
        (interactive)
        (term "/usr/bin/ipython"))
    
  2. Try first launching Emacs as emacs -q from the terminal. -q means don't load any customized code. It means that in this mode your emacs will behave exactly like mine.

  3. You should now be at the welcome screen. Press q.
  4. You should now be in the *scratch* buffer. Press C-y to paste the code you copied from the browser.
  5. Position your cursor at the very end of the code, right after the last parenthesis.
  6. Press C-j to evaluate the code. The name ipython pops up.
  7. Now you can execute this command as any other e.g. M-x ipython.
  8. If you want this change to become permanent, append the code to your ~/.emacs.
Yuval Langer
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abo-abo
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    I'm not particularly experienced with Emacs. Would you mind being more explicit about what it means to "Try this"? – Eric Wilson Jul 23 '13 at 17:35
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    This answer is okay, far as it goes, but it isn't really much better than the asker's own solution, just a bit faster to start. Actual integration between Emacs inferior python mode and IPython would be the Right Way. See kindahero's answer – mike Jul 02 '14 at 12:01
3

Seems a bit late, however was also having similar problem, wanted to have ipython as default python interpreter for my emacs 24.x. The following worked like a magic -

(require 'python)
(setq python-shell-interpreter "ipython")
(setq python-shell-interpreter-args "--pylab")

thanks to http://www.flannaghan.com/2013/08/29/ipython-emacs for saving my day and hopefully yours.

PS: seems having anaconda preinstalled in your system helps...

Arun Kumar Khattri
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2

I've tried abo-abo's approach to running ipython inside of emacs. Its a pretty slick way of shortcutting shell functions within emacs. However, you do lose emacs functionality when you are in the shell (e.g. can't M-x o out of the shell)

Instead, I personally think that using the Emacs builtin shell command (M-x shell) is much better. You can run ipython within the Emacs builtin shell and still have all Emacs functionality that we all know and love.

mortonjt
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0

Edit: Whoops, the project below is a fork, not the official Prelude project. The second paragraph here still stands. Or you could try the fork.

It looks like Prelude already sets up ipython integration. Maybe your copy is out of date?

If M-x run-python doesn't launch ipython, try adding (setq python-shell-interpreter "ipython") to your init file (or just evaluating it) and running M-x run-python again. After a quick test without Prelude that seems to be all that is necessary.

Randy Morris
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0

You can use my Emacs extension called emacs-ipython for this.

https://github.com/burakbayramli/emacs-ipython

In a LaTeX buffer (you can change this to be any buffer) between code blocks with one keystroke it sends the python code to ipython kernel and displays the results in a verbatim block underneath.

BBSysDyn
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