The Python Oracle

Run a Python script from another Python script, passing in arguments

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Chapters
00:00 Run A Python Script From Another Python Script, Passing In Arguments
01:13 Accepted Answer Score 425
01:31 Answer 2 Score 53
01:45 Answer 3 Score 137
02:29 Answer 4 Score 140
03:13 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3781...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#python

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 425


Try using os.system:

os.system("script2.py 1")

execfile is different because it is designed to run a sequence of Python statements in the current execution context. That's why sys.argv didn't change for you.




ANSWER 2

Score 140


Ideally, the Python script you want to run will be set up with code like this near the end:

def main(arg1, arg2, etc):
    # do whatever the script does


if __name__ == "__main__":
    main(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3])

In other words, if the module is called from the command line, it parses the command line options and then calls another function, main(), to do the actual work. (The actual arguments will vary, and the parsing may be more involved.)

If you want to call such a script from another Python script, however, you can simply import it and call modulename.main() directly, rather than going through the operating system.

os.system will work, but it is the roundabout (read "slow") way to do it, as you are starting a whole new Python interpreter process each time for no raisin.




ANSWER 3

Score 137


This is inherently the wrong thing to do. If you are running a Python script from another Python script, you should communicate through Python instead of through the OS:

import script1

In an ideal world, you will be able to call a function inside script1 directly:

for i in range(whatever):
    script1.some_function(i)

If necessary, you can hack sys.argv. There's a neat way of doing this using a context manager to ensure that you don't make any permanent changes.

import contextlib
@contextlib.contextmanager
def redirect_argv(num):
    sys._argv = sys.argv[:]
    sys.argv=[str(num)]
    yield
    sys.argv = sys._argv

with redirect_argv(1):
    print(sys.argv)

I think this is preferable to passing all your data to the OS and back; that's just silly.




ANSWER 4

Score 53


SubProcess module:
http://docs.python.org/dev/library/subprocess.html#using-the-subprocess-module

import subprocess
subprocess.Popen("script2.py 1", shell=True)

With this, you can also redirect stdin, stdout, and stderr.