Shell Interaction in Python: Difference between revisions
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[[Python_Language_Modularization#Standalone_Program|Standalone Python programs]] often needs to handle command line arguments. | [[Python_Language_Modularization#Standalone_Program|Standalone Python programs]] often needs to handle command line arguments. | ||
<code>sys.argv</code> is the list containing arguments as strings. | <code>[[Python_Module_sys#sys.argv|sys.argv]]</code> is the list containing arguments as strings. | ||
The path of the script being executed is available on position 0. | The path of the script being executed is available on position 0. |
Latest revision as of 02:06, 8 July 2022
Internal
Command Line Argument Processing
Standalone Python programs often needs to handle command line arguments.
sys.argv
is the list containing arguments as strings.
The path of the script being executed is available on position 0.
import sys
print(f"Arguments count: {len(sys.argv)}")
for i, arg in enumerate(sys.argv):
print(f"Argument {i:>1}: {arg}")
Also explore argparse
.
Execute an O/S Command
Execute an O/S Command with the subprocess Module
Other Methods
TO PROCESS:
Organizatorium
from shutil import which
commands={
"aws": "awscli",
"aws-login": "aws-login",
"aws-eks-configure": "aws-eks-configure"
}
for c in commands:
print("{:20}{:7}".format(commands[c], "OK" if which(c) else "missing"))