breakword
breakword
is a small debugging utility that combines print debugging with breakpoint debugging. It aims to facilitate debugging the kind of problem where you might use print statements to quickly spot where something seems to be off, and then switch to a step by step debugger.
breakword
normally requires running your program twice and will only work properly if it is deterministic.
How to use
-
Set the PYTHONBREAKPOINT
environment variable to breakword.breakpoint
.
-
Use breakpoint
like a print
statement:
for i in range(10):
breakpoint(i)
This will print out something like this:
$ python example.py
⏎ standard 0
⏎ sound 1
⏎ character 2
⏎ thank 3
⏎ play 4
⏎ however 5
⏎ fish 6
⏎ cultural 7
⏎ either 8
⏎ and 9
- Use the
BREAKWORD
environment variable to set a breakpoint to what you want to investigate further. For instance, if you want to stop when i == 6
in the above program, you can run the following command:
$ env BREAKWORD=fish python example.py
⏎ standard 0
⏎ sound 1
⏎ character 2
⏎ thank 3
⏎ play 4
⏎ however 5
⏎ fish 6
> example.py(2)<module>()
-> for i in range(10):
(Pdb) i
6
You can also give a comma-separated list of words, e.g. BREAKWORD=sound,fish
.
Note: breakpoint()
with no arguments retains the normal behavior.
More functions
-
breakword.log(*things, **config)
: Print a word and optionally other things after it.
-
breakword.brk(watch=None, **config)
: Sets a breakpoint to trigger after log
printed out the given word. If watch
is None
or not given, the BREAKWORD
environment variable is consulted. If the variable is not set, nothing will happen.
- This is equivalent to
breakword.after(word).breakpoint()
.
-
breakword.after(watch=None, **config)
: Returns an object that evaluates to True
right after log
printed out the given watch word. As with brk
, if watch
is None
or not given, the BREAKWORD
environment variable is consulted.
-
breakword.word(**config)
: Returns the next word as a string. You can print it yourself, in which case it's basically like log
, or you can store it in an object.
-
breakword.logbrk(**config)
: Calls log
and then brk
.
-
breakword.wordbrk(**config)
: Calls word
and then brk
. The word is returned.
-
breakword.set_default_logger(logger)
: Set the logging function to use (defaults to print
)
Tracking objects
-
breakword.track(obj, all=False)
will set the breakword
attribute in the object to the next word in the list. By setting the BREAKWORD
environment variable, you will set a breakpoint to the corresponding call to track
. Set the all
argument to True
and the attribute will contain a list. Note: this will not work if obj
is an integer or string, in those cases track will print a warning.
-
breakword.track_creation(*classes)
will set the breakword
attribute on all instances of the given classes, when they are created. That way, you can set a breakpoint back to the creation of some object of interest.
Groups
Use breakword.groups.<name>
to get a "word group" with the given name. Each group generates words independently and will therefore not interfere with each other. They have log
, brk
, after
, word
, etc. as methods. The default group is groups[""]
.
from breakword import groups
assert groups.aardvark == groups["aardvark"]
groups.aardvark.log("a")
groups.pelican.log("b")
word = groups.pelican.word()
if groups.pelican.after("cherry"):
print("blah")