>
> +1.  This is why I tend to use Pyzo when prototyping new python code.
>>
>
> ​Pyzo has an integrated console window.  Is this what you are talking 
> about?​
>
 

> Is the Stupendous Aha 
> <http://leoeditor.com/FAQ.html#what-is-the-stupendous-aha-and-why-does-it-matter>
>  
> not convenient enough?
>

Pyzo's integrated console window is very handy. Pyzo has the ancestral idea 
of Leo's Execute Node (Ctrl-B), but more primitive as it only executes the 
currently selected lines (via Alt-Enter).

Confession: I don't do unit tests, which is horrible and likely grounds for 
kicking me off the team! ;-) Note, this is different from saying I don't do 
tests. I do test, as best I can. In my periodic attempts to do the right 
thing and get on the unit test bandwagon I get frustrated by commonly 
spending twice as much time writing and debugging the tests themselves as 
the code they are supposed to validate.

Back to Pyzo: I also really like the interactive exploration of live 
variable values in the "Workshop" panel. It lets me see at a glance how my 
in-memory data values are changing with each step. See screenshot.



matt

>

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