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Home/ Questions/Q 3308128
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T21:29:10+00:00 2026-05-17T21:29:10+00:00

I’m trying to save myself just a few keystrokes for a command I type

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I’m trying to save myself just a few keystrokes for a command I type fairly regularly in Python.

In my python startup script, I define a function called load which is similar to import, but adds some functionality. It takes a single string:

def load(s):
  # Do some stuff
  return something

In order to call this function I have to type

>>> load('something')

I would rather be able to simply type:

>>> load something

I am running Python with readline support, so I know there exists some programmability there, but I don’t know if this sort of thing is possible using it.

I attempted to get around this by using the InteractivConsole and creating an instance of it in my startup file, like so:

import code, re, traceback

class LoadingInteractiveConsole(code.InteractiveConsole):
  def raw_input(self, prompt = ""):
    s = raw_input(prompt)
    match = re.match('^load\s+(.+)', s)
    if match:
      module = match.group(1)
      try:
        load(module)
        print "Loaded " + module
      except ImportError:
        traceback.print_exc()
      return ''
    else:
      return s

console = LoadingInteractiveConsole()
console.interact("")

This works with the caveat that I have to hit Ctrl-D twice to exit the python interpreter: once to get out of my custom console, once to get out of the real one.

Is there a way to do this without writing a custom C program and embedding the interpreter into it?

Edit

Out of channel, I had the suggestion of appending this to the end of my startup file:

import sys
sys.exit()

It works well enough, but I’m still interested in alternative solutions.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T21:29:10+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 9:29 pm

    Hate to answer my own question, but there hasn’t been an answer that works for all the versions of Python I use. Aside from the solution I posted in my question edit (which is what I’m now using), here’s another:

    Edit .bashrc to contain the following lines:

    alias python3='python3 ~/py/shellreplace.py'
    alias python='python ~/py/shellreplace.py'
    alias python27='python27 ~/py/shellreplace.py'
    

    Then simply move all of the LoadingInteractiveConsole code into the file ~/py/shellreplace.py Once the script finishes executing, python will cease executing, and the improved interactive session will be seamless.

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