On Freitag, 7. November 2008, Darryl Wallace wrote: > Basically, when using the startup environment script I previously > mentioned, or using ipython, you can create a window from the > command-line and the event-loop returns to the commandline and you can > still access the Qt Object. > > So when, for a PyQwt plot, I call plot.show(), the plot is displayed and > I can continue to modify the contents of that plot (like change titles, > make the window bigger, etc.) from the command line. > > Currently in eric, if I run a script where the end result is displaying > a plot I can't continue to work from the shell window's command-line > until I close the plot window. I would still like to be able to access > the active plot objects from the shell's commandline, as well as do > other things. > > So, using PyQwt (http://pyqwt.sourceforge.net/cli-examples.html)* *I can > generate a plot. Do some stuff.. add a new line to that existing plot > from the command-line after it's already been displayed. Just some more > flexibility. > > I hope this helps clear things up. Is this possible?
Not as it is now. I think, IPython is doing something with the Qt event loop. You could try to use the console debugger, which opens a console window for the program being debugged. > > > I think, I don't understand the problem. What do you want to achieve? > > > > Detlev -- Detlev Offenbach [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Eric mailing list [email protected] http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/eric
