I started seapie as a reaction to pdb's command-driven interface in 2019. I wanted a breakpoint to simply mean 'open a Python REPL here', with debugging functionality layered on top instead of replacing the REPL.
`seapie.breakpoint()` opens a working `>>>` REPL at the current execution state. Any changes to variables or function definitions persist. Debugger state is exposed via built-ins (e.g. `_magic_`), and stepping/frame control/etc is handled via small `!commands`.
I've been using this regularly in my own work for a few years now. Happy to answer questions or hear criticism, especially from people who've used debuggers heavily.
markushirsimaki•1d ago
I started seapie as a reaction to pdb's command-driven interface in 2019. I wanted a breakpoint to simply mean 'open a Python REPL here', with debugging functionality layered on top instead of replacing the REPL.
`seapie.breakpoint()` opens a working `>>>` REPL at the current execution state. Any changes to variables or function definitions persist. Debugger state is exposed via built-ins (e.g. `_magic_`), and stepping/frame control/etc is handled via small `!commands`.
I've been using this regularly in my own work for a few years now. Happy to answer questions or hear criticism, especially from people who've used debuggers heavily.