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Importing Python module from Bash

I am launching a Python script from the command line (Bash) under Linux. I need to open Python, import a module, and then have lines of code interpreted. The console must then remain in Python (not quit it). How do I do that?

I have tried an alias like this one:

alias program="cd /home/myname/programs/; python; import module; line_of_code"

But this only starts python and the commands are not executed (no module import, no line of code treated).

What is the proper way of doing this, provided I need to keep Python open (not quit it) after the script is executed? Many thanks!

like image 202
Morlock Avatar asked Mar 08 '10 12:03

Morlock


2 Answers

An easy way to do this is with the "code" module:

python -c "import code; code.interact(local=locals())"

This will drop you into an interactive shell when code.interact() is called. The local keyword argument to interact is used to prepopulate the default namespace for the interpreter that gets created; we'll use locals(), which is a builtin function that returns the local namespace as a dictionary.

Your command would look something like this:

python -c "import mymodule, code; code.interact(local=locals())"

which drops you into an interpreter that has the correct environment.

like image 130
Alex Jordan Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 21:09

Alex Jordan


use a subroutine instead of alias

callmyprogram(){
  python -i -c "import time;print time.localtime()"
}
callmyprogram
like image 20
ghostdog74 Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 21:09

ghostdog74