Use watch_explode
to expand values to see all their attributes or items of lists/dictionaries:
@pysnooper.snoop(watch_explode=('foo', 'self'))
watch_explode
will automatically guess how to expand the expression passed to it based on its class. You can be more specific by using one of the following classes:
import pysnooper
@pysnooper.snoop(watch=(
pysnooper.Attrs('x'), # attributes
pysnooper.Keys('y'), # mapping (e.g. dict) items
pysnooper.Indices('z'), # sequence (e.g. list/tuple) items
))
Exclude specific keys/attributes/indices with the exclude
parameter, e.g. Attrs('x', exclude=('_foo', '_bar'))
.
Add a slice after Indices
to only see the values within that slice, e.g. Indices('z')[-3:]
.
$ export PYSNOOPER_DISABLED=1 # This makes PySnooper not do any snooping
This will output lines like:
Modified var:.. foo[2] = 'whatever'
New var:....... self.baz = 8
Start all snoop lines with a prefix, to grep for them easily:
@pysnooper.snoop(prefix='ZZZ ')
Remove all machine-related data (paths, timestamps, memory addresses) to compare with other traces easily:
@pysnooper.snoop(normalize=True)
On multi-threaded apps identify which thread are snooped in output:
@pysnooper.snoop(thread_info=True)
PySnooper supports decorating generators.
If you decorate a class with snoop
, it'll automatically apply the decorator to all the methods. (Not including properties and other special cases.)
You can also customize the repr of an object:
def large(l):
return isinstance(l, list) and len(l) > 5
def print_list_size(l):
return 'list(size={})'.format(len(l))
def print_ndarray(a):
return 'ndarray(shape={}, dtype={})'.format(a.shape, a.dtype)
@pysnooper.snoop(custom_repr=((large, print_list_size), (numpy.ndarray, print_ndarray)))
def sum_to_x(x):
l = list(range(x))
a = numpy.zeros((10,10))
return sum(l)
sum_to_x(10000)
You will get l = list(size=10000)
for the list, and a = ndarray(shape=(10, 10), dtype=float64)
for the ndarray.
The custom_repr
are matched in order, if one condition matches, no further conditions will be checked.
Variables and exceptions get truncated to 100 characters by default. You can customize that:
@pysnooper.snoop(max_variable_length=200)
You can also use max_variable_length=None
to never truncate them.
Use relative_time=True
to show timestamps relative to start time rather than
wall time.
The output is colored for easy viewing by default, except on Windows. Disable colors like so:
@pysnooper.snoop(color=False)