1.9 KiB
<py-terminal>
This is one of the core plugins in PyScript, which is active by default. With it, you can print to stdout and stderr from your python code, and the output will be displayed on the page in <py-terminal>.
Configuration
You can control how <py-terminal> behaves by setting the value of the terminal configuration in your <py-config>, together with the docked one.
For the terminal field, these are the values:
| value | description |
|---|---|
false |
Don't add <py-terminal> to the page |
true |
Automatically add a <py-terminal> to the page |
"auto" |
This is the default. Automatically add a <py-terminal auto>, to the page. The terminal is initially hidden and automatically shown as soon as something writes to stdout and/or stderr |
For the docked field, these are the values:
| value | description |
|---|---|
false |
Don't dock <py-terminal> to the page |
true |
Automatically dock a <py-terminal> to the page |
"docked" |
This is the default. Automatically add a <py-terminal docked>, to the page. The terminal, once visible, is automatically shown at the bottom of the page, covering the width of such page |
Please note that docked mode is currently used as default only when terminal="auto", or terminal default, is used.
In all other cases it's up to the user decide if a terminal should be docked or not.
Examples
<py-config>
terminal = true
docked = false
</py-config>
<py-script>
print("Hello, world!")
</py-script>
This example will create a new <py-terminal>, the value "Hello, world!" that was printed will show in it.
You can also add one (or more) <py-terminal> to the page manually.
<py-script>
print("Hello, world!")
</py-script>
<py-terminal></py-terminal>
If you include a `<py-terminal>` in the page, you can skip `terminal` from your `<py-config>`.