Never mind, thought you were replying to my last message. Not sure why you expect a third party module to be in the official docs, and your original question was about the difference between os.system and subprocess. Obviously they're not the same, despite you saying they are. Have you tried debugging?
Ok, here's my current understanding: the operating system is capable of executing textual commands. For instance, calc.exe will cause the calculator executable to run. Users typically interface with software called a "shell" in order to issue these commands. The shell may understand special syntax that the OS can't natively parse. For instance, dir on the Windows Command Prompt shows a list of local files, even though there's no dir.exe anywhere in the path.
Shells usually make themselves visible to the user via a window called a "terminal", although this is not strictly mandatory. subprocess.call can either interface with the OS directly or interface with a terminal-less shell depending on the value of the shell flag. The former is preferable unless you need to use dir or piping etc etc.
I'm not 100% clear on how to distinguish between "syntax interpretable by the OS" and "syntax interpretable by the shell" other than "try running call with shell=False and see if it crashes"
hey @randomhopeful ... You know this is the first time I've pinged you and I've always thought your name was "randomhelpful" and thought that was cool (randomhopeful is not bad either :)
Ok, I'm making a comprehensive list. Things the OS can execute without a shell: - executables - files that have a registered "default program", ex. `myfile.py`
when pip install -r requirements.txt builds a dependency graph (assuming it does this at all?) is it using information from each packages respective requirements.txt , or from setup.py, or both?
$NEW_HIRE used clear yesterday while we were pair-programming, and it took him a bit to grok why it didn't clear the screen. I didn't understand at the time why he didn't use cls. Now it makes sense; he must have residual Linux muscle memory from his last job.
@Kevin Yeah, I spent a while working in cmd explicitly so I could build up both muscle memories. Sometimes it takes a minute to get back to the horror that is cmd
I am blissfully ignorant of the process for distributing programs. Anyone using my stuff has to climb uphill both ways to my github page and figure out dependencies from the ImportErrors.
Not sure you could do stuff like chase referrals across active directories with IPython and then bung the resulting info in a Word document quite as easily, but I'll take your word for it
@RobertGrant Well, if you weren't using Windows-specific things. I'm not sure what you mean by referrals, but you could easily dump info into a .txt or markdown, or whatever document
heck, with the right library you could do it into a Word doc
It's just very Microsoft-centric, which is why I try to avoid PS like the plague
my favorite thing about powershell, though, is that it has the whole "oh noes, don't execute powershell scripts that are untrusted because dangerous!"
except you can get around that by creating a .bat file that creates a ps file and executes it with the -ExecutionPolicy bypass or whatever the invocation is
ah, yes. Then again a lot of people run their personal computers as Administrators or try and use the same/extremely similar password for Admin privileges so it is easy to do a lot of junk on Win - without even needing .bat
Maybe the best way to counter LPTHW is to make LPTEW
user6568562
@JRichardSnape Spot on for figuring out that that OP is following a Python 2 tutorial using Python 3. I, also, bet it's the case as I've been through that phase
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 6, in <module>
repo = Gittle.clone(repo_url, repo_path)
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/gittle/gittle.py", line 457, in clone
local_repo = cls.init(local_path)
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/gittle/gittle.py", line 312, in init
repo = constructor(path)
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/dulwich/repo.py", line 885, in init
cls._init_maybe_bare(controldir, False)
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/dulwich/repo.py", line 869, in _init_maybe_bare
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/dulwich/refs.py", line 545, in set_symbolic_ref
f.write(SYMREF + other + '\n')
TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'
I would have been tempted to fork and update the tests to validate py3 functionality, but I don't see anything in that project for any kind of unittest
I am using Flask, and I'm trying to change an HTML element using JavaScript, but the JS code is running before the HTML is rendered (I think). So I don't have access to the HTML when running the JS. Does anyone know how to access the HTML from JS?
Wayne's link has the equivalent. "The DOMContentLoaded event is fired when the initial HTML document has been completely loaded and parsed, without waiting for stylesheets, images, and subframes to finish loading"
Mono was a FOSS alternative implementation of .Net for the sake of xamarin. MS bought them, and as part of their plans to open source .Net, they want to make them mostly equivalent now.
It was announced an hour ago, so if it's not the AUR by now something's wrong
"We will be extending the PowerShell Remoting Protocol (MS-PSRP) to use OpenSSH as a native transport. Users will have the option to use SSH or WINRM as a transport."
they just totally broke my mental model of how my product is supposed to flow through SMT/Manufacturing ... and now i get to rewrite all my test software for them ....