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Home/ Questions/Q 9139259
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T09:21:51+00:00 2026-06-17T09:21:51+00:00

I’m currently in a Python interactive interpreter session. I have a function that I

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I’m currently in a Python interactive interpreter session. I have a function that I know is doing something funky, so I want to step through it in a debugger session. I know the file name and line number of the function.

Is there any way for me to now set a breakpoint in the start of that function, then run it and step through it? Without having to open an editor, locate the file, locate the function, manually insert import pdb; pdb.set_trace(), saving the file, then go back to the interpreter, reload the module the function came from and running it? Not to mention that if I forgot to remove the pdb trace that’d spell trouble later.

Summarizing the question: If I’m in a normal Python interpreter session (or iPython), is it possible to set a breakpoint somewhere and start debugging, without having to actually edit in the code pdb.set_trace() somewhere?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T09:21:52+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 9:21 am

    I can’t believe I missed this, but I just glanced over the pdb documentation a second time and realized that all the run* functions do pretty much exactly what I want. They don’t let me set a specific line as a breakpoint, but I can pass the function and the arguments I want to use, and it will break on the first line of the function:

    import pdb
    pdb.runcall(my_wonky_function, "arg1", "arg2", *myargs)
    

    Well actually it broke at a mystical location called “EOF”:

    (Pdb) list
    [EOF]

    and I had to step twice before I got to the first line of the function, but that’s hardly a problem.

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