How do I install the pythonstartup
file so that it runs on command like python myfile.py
?
I tried to install it into my /home/myuser<
I'm assuming you mean the PYTHONSTARTUP environment variable? Try putting a file my-python-startup.py
with some interesting contents in your home dir, then issue the following on the command line:
export PYTHONSTARTUP=$HOME/my-python-startup.py
python
and observe what happens. Then put the first of the above lines in the (hidden!) file .bashrc
in your homedir to have it persist across terminal sessions.
In your ~/.bashrc
:
export PYTHONSTARTUP=$HOME/.pythonstartup
and put your python code in $HOME/.pythonstartup
, like:
import rlcompleter
import readline
readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete")
Then run the interactive shell:
python
See the imports from PYTHONSTARTUP are processed. This only works in python interactive mode.
For more information about PYTHONSTARTUP
variable, read the python man page:
$ man python
python foobar.py
Run this command to find out where your OS has defined USER_SITE
:
$ python -c "import site; site._script()"
Mine says:
USER_SITE: '/home/el/.local/lib64/python2.7/site-packages'
Create a new file there called /home/el/.local/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/usercustomize.py
, put this code in there:
try:
import your_things
import readline
print("ROCKETMAN!")
except ImportError:
print("Can't load your things")
print("Either exit here, or perform remedial actions")
exit()
Close the terminal and reopen it to clear out any shenanigans.
Make a new file python foobar.py
anywhere on the filesystem, put this code in there:
#Note there is no your_things module imported here.
#Print your_things version:
print(your_things.__version__)
Run it:
python foobar.py
ROCKETMAN!
'1.12.0'
What just happened.
You used the python sitewide specific python configuration hook and imported libraries in the usercustomize.py
file which ran before foobar.py.
Documentation: https://docs.python.org/2/library/site.html
Where I found this trick: https://nedbatchelder.com/blog/201001/running_code_at_python_startup.html
On Windows you can put your startup script just about anywhere as long as you put its path into your PYTHONSTARTUP environment variable. On Windows the lettercase of environment variable names doesn't matter.
You can define the values of user and system environment variables as described in a somewhat related answer of mine here.