#!/usr/bin/env python
I put that at the top of a script. I've seen that should make the script runnable from the command line without the need for python programname.py
. Unless I'm misunderstanding I should be able to use programname.py
as long as I have the above line at the top of the script. Is this correct?
It isn't working for me I just get an error indicating that I would have to use python
at the beginning of the 'call'.
Universal running of Python scripts
You can pretty much universally run without the shebang (#!
) with
python myscript.py
Or nearly equivalently (it places the current directory on your path and executes the module named myscript
) (preferably do this!):
python -m myscript
from the command line, as long as you have Python installed and on your path environment variable (i.e. set to run with python
, which, if installed, would typically be the case).
Shebangs (#!
) are a Unix thing.
The shebang, as you're using it, is typically for running on a Unix platform (typically Apple or Linux). Windows would typically require cygwin to use the shebang.
You can usually default to whatever python is available on your system path with:
#!/usr/bin/env python
Assuming you're on a Unix, you might try other locations for your python setup, like:
#!/usr/bin/python
Muddling through
You can see what python you're currently using by using the unix which
command, so if you want to see where your python is coming from, use this command:
which python
or on Windows (cygwin probably can run the shebang):
where python
On Linux/Unix, you'll need execution perms to run the file as well, in that manner. Use chmod
chmod +x myscript.py
(chmod also may apply to Cygwin in Windows)
If you're not running as root, you may require sudo
, and that would be
sudo chmod +x myscript.py
And then attempt to run (within the same directory) with
./myscript.py
make the file executable
sudo chmod +x /path/to/file.py
and then from the same directory as file.py:
./file.py
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20318158/run-python-script-directly-from-command-line