replwrap - Control read-eval-print-loops

Generic wrapper for read-eval-print-loops, a.k.a. interactive shells

New in version 3.3.

class pexpect.replwrap.REPLWrapper(cmd_or_spawn, orig_prompt, prompt_change, new_prompt=u'[PEXPECT_PROMPT>', continuation_prompt=u'[PEXPECT_PROMPT+')[source]

Wrapper for a REPL.

Parameters:
  • cmd_or_spawn – This can either be an instance of pexpect.spawn in which a REPL has already been started, or a str command to start a new REPL process.
  • orig_prompt (str) – The prompt to expect at first.
  • prompt_change (str) – A command to change the prompt to something more unique. If this is None, the prompt will not be changed. This will be formatted with the new and continuation prompts as positional parameters, so you can use {} style formatting to insert them into the command.
  • new_prompt (str) – The more unique prompt to expect after the change.
run_command(command, timeout=-1)[source]

Send a command to the REPL, wait for and return output.

Parameters:
  • command (str) – The command to send. Trailing newlines are not needed. This should be a complete block of input that will trigger execution; if a continuation prompt is found after sending input, ValueError will be raised.
  • timeout (int) – How long to wait for the next prompt. -1 means the default from the pexpect.spawn object (default 30 seconds). None means to wait indefinitely.
pexpect.replwrap.PEXPECT_PROMPT

A string that can be used as a prompt, and is unlikely to be found in output.

Using the objects above, it is easy to wrap a REPL. For instance, to use a Python shell:

py = REPLWrapper("python", ">>> ", "import sys; sys.ps1={!r}; sys.ps2={!r}")
py.run_command("4+7")

Convenience functions are provided for Python and bash shells:

pexpect.replwrap.python(command='python')[source]

Start a Python shell and return a REPLWrapper object.

pexpect.replwrap.bash(command='bash', orig_prompt=<_sre.SRE_Pattern object at 0x7ffe5730e918>)[source]

Start a bash shell and return a REPLWrapper object.