The next release of pydb will have the ability to go into ipython from inside the debugger. Sort of like how in ruby-debug you can go into irb :-)
For ipython, this can be done pretty simply; there is an IPShellEmbed method which returns something you can call. But how could one do the same for the stock python interactive shell? To take this out of the realm of debugging. What you want to do is to write a python program that goes into the python interactive shell - without having to write your own a read/eval loop and deal with readline, continuation lines, etc. The solution should also allow - variables/methods in the calling PYthon program to be visible in the shell - variables set in the interactive (sub) shell should persist after the shell terminates, although this is a weaker requirement. POSIX subshells for example *don't* work this way. There has been much written about how to embed Python from C, so I suppose this may offer one way. And at worst, I could write a C extension which follows how C Python does this for itself. But is there a simpler way? Thanks. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list