How do I manipulate a variable whose name conflicts with PDB commands?

Nick T picture Nick T · Jan 14, 2014 · Viewed 10.8k times · Source

My code is, for better or worse, rife with single letter variables (it's physics stuff, so those letters are meaningful), as well as NumPy's, which I'm often interacting with.

When using the Python debugger, occasionally I'll want to look at the value of, say, n. However, when I hit n<enter>, that's the PDB command for (n)ext, which has a higher priority. print n works around looking at it, but how can I set it?

Answer

Abraham picture Abraham · Nov 9, 2014

Use an exclamation mark ! before a statement to have it run :

python -m pdb test.py
> /home/user/test.py(1)<module>()
-> print('foo')
(Pdb) !n = 77
(Pdb) !n
77
(Pdb) n
foo
> /home/user/test.py(2)<module>()
-> print('bar')
(Pdb)

The docs say:

! statement

Execute the (one-line) statement in the context of the current stack frame. The exclamation point can be omitted unless the first word of the statement resembles a debugger command. [...]