ref: 5513dae7d9eee46f7e1843c8eeeaf9066d0ec632
dir: /sys/src/cmd/python/Doc/lib/librlcompleter.tex/
\section{\module{rlcompleter} --- Completion function for GNU readline} \declaremodule{standard}{rlcompleter} \sectionauthor{Moshe Zadka}{moshez@zadka.site.co.il} \modulesynopsis{Python identifier completion, suitable for the GNU readline library.} The \module{rlcompleter} module defines a completion function suitable for the \refmodule{readline} module by completing valid Python identifiers and keywords. When this module is imported on a \UNIX\ platform with the \module{readline} module available, an instance of the \class{Completer} class is automatically created and its \method{complete} method is set as the \module{readline} completer. Example: \begin{verbatim} >>> import rlcompleter >>> import readline >>> readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete") >>> readline. <TAB PRESSED> readline.__doc__ readline.get_line_buffer readline.read_init_file readline.__file__ readline.insert_text readline.set_completer readline.__name__ readline.parse_and_bind >>> readline. \end{verbatim} The \module{rlcompleter} module is designed for use with Python's interactive mode. A user can add the following lines to his or her initialization file (identified by the \envvar{PYTHONSTARTUP} environment variable) to get automatic \kbd{Tab} completion: \begin{verbatim} try: import readline except ImportError: print "Module readline not available." else: import rlcompleter readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete") \end{verbatim} On platforms without \module{readline}, the \class{Completer} class defined by this module can still be used for custom purposes. \subsection{Completer Objects \label{completer-objects}} Completer objects have the following method: \begin{methoddesc}[Completer]{complete}{text, state} Return the \var{state}th completion for \var{text}. If called for \var{text} that doesn't include a period character (\character{.}), it will complete from names currently defined in \refmodule[main]{__main__}, \refmodule[builtin]{__builtin__} and keywords (as defined by the \refmodule{keyword} module). If called for a dotted name, it will try to evaluate anything without obvious side-effects (functions will not be evaluated, but it can generate calls to \method{__getattr__()}) up to the last part, and find matches for the rest via the \function{dir()} function. \end{methoddesc}