Hi all,
I've just made the 0.6.14 release of IPython, mostly to fix the
inevitable bugs reported after the .13 one (though one big improvement
sneaked by).
IPython's homepage is at:
http://ipython.scipy.org
and downloads are at:
http://ipython.scipy.org/dist
I've provided RPMs (for Python 2.3 and 2.4, built under Fedora Core 3),
plus source downloads (.tar.gz). Fedora users should note that IPython
is now officially part of the Extras repository, so they can get the
update from there as well (though it may lag by a few days).
There is also a native win32 installer which should work correctly for
both Python 2.3 and 2.4.
Debian, Fink and BSD packages for this version should be coming soon, as
the respective maintainers (many thanks to Jack Moffit, Andrea Riciputi
and Dryice Liu) have the time to follow their packaging procedures.
Many thanks to Enthought for their continued hosting support for
IPython, and to all the users who contributed ideas, fixes and reports.
I'd like to add a special thanks to Denis Rivière, Yann Cointepas and
Benjamin Thyreau for their hard work on the Qt improvements, and for
their overall hospitality. Python really seems to have a remarkably
friendly community, worldwide!
WHAT is IPython?
----------------
1. An interactive shell superior to Python's default. IPython has many
features for object introspection, system shell access, and its own
special command system for adding functionality when working interactively.
2. An embeddable, ready to use interpreter for your own programs.
IPython can be started with a single call from inside another program,
providing access to the current namespace.
3. A flexible framework which can be used as the base environment for
other systems with Python as the underlying language.
Release notes
-------------
As always, the NEWS file can be found at http://ipython.scipy.org/NEWS,
and the full ChangeLog at http://ipython.scipy.org/ChangeLog. The
highlights of this release follow.
This is mainly a bugfix release, to clean up the problems reported in
0.6.13. As I said at the time, I intend to start new development now
(more details on that in a separate email). As always, however, a few
new goodies managed to sneak by.
* A new -qthread option to support controlling Qt apps from within
ipython, similar to what -gthread and -wthread do for GTK/WX. This was
contributed by Denis Rivière
participants (1)
-
Fernando Perez