Scientific mode
Scientific mode in Python plugin provides support for interactive scientific computing and data visualization. To enable the mode use one of the following ways
From the main menu, select
.In your code, add an import statement for
numpy
. IntelliJ IDEA shows the banner that suggests you to enable the Scientific mode:Click the Use scientific mode link on the banner.
User interface in the scientific mode
With this mode enabled, the following changes are introduced to the UI:
The SciView tool window appears. It has two tabs to preview data frames in the Data tab and matplotlib charts in the Plots tab.
Python console is shown.
The Documentation tool window appears (a pinned version of the Quick Documentation popup), showing the inline documentation for the symbol at caret:
In the Scientific mode you can format your code as a set of executable cells to run each separately. To split your code into cells just add # %%
lines where appropriate.
Analyzing data
When you preview variable in the Python Console, you can click DataFrame or Array links to view these types in the Data tab of the SciView tool window.
You can sort data in a table column by clicking a soring icon () on its header. You can also filter out data in the table by selecting a column name and typing a substring or an expression.
Set a value (for example, 8) or use a wildcard (for example, 8*):
Type an expression using x
as a column value variable (for example, x > 20):
A column with an applied filter is marked with the filter icon ( ). Hover it with a mouse cursor to see the filter value.
Any table can be saved () or opened in a separate tab of the editor ( ). You can also select any cells in the table and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+C ). The copied cells can be pasted into any file, for example, .csv.
Building matplotlib charts
In the Scientific mode, a graph opens in its own tab in the SciView window, allowing you to resize it, zoom in and out, and so on. You can alter this behavior by toggling the Show plots in tool window checkbox ( ).
When stopping on a breakpoint, a tab appears in the SciView with the graph being debugged. See the Debug section of the Scientific Mode tutorial.
Matplotlib is available also in console. See the Running in console section of the Scientific Mode tutorial. When starting a Python console ( ), one can import Matplotlib
, and build graphs as required:
The Java console is accessible for further inputs.