I am on Python 2.7 (Win 8.1 x64) and I want to open a URL in Chrome. As Chrome is only natively supported in 3.3+, I was trying a generic call:
import webbrowser
webbrowser.get("C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe %s").open("http://google.com")
The path is correct and print does give me a Handler:
"<webbrowser.GenericBrowser object at 0x0000000002D26518\>"
However, the open() - preferably open_new_tab()) - function does not work. It returns False.
If I run the command
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" "https://google.com"
in windows run dialog, it does do work, though.
If I set Chrome as standard browser and run
webbrowser.get().open("http://google.com")
it does work, but it's not what I want.
Has anyone an idea what's going wrong?
You have to use unix-style paths in the webbrowser.get call:
webbrowser.get("C:/Program Files (x86)/Google/Chrome/Application/chrome.exe %s").open("http://google.com")
This is because webbrowser internally does a shlex.split on the path, which will just erase Windows-style path separators:
>>> cmd = "C:\\Users\\oreild1\\AppData\\Local\\Google\\Chrome\\Application\\chrome.exe %s"
>>> shlex.split(cmd)
['C:Usersoreild1AppDataLocalGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe', '%s']
>>> cmd = "C:/Users/dan/AppData/Local/Google/Chrome/Application/chrome.exe %
s"
>>> shlex.split(cmd)
['C:/Users/dan/AppData/Local/Google/Chrome/Application/chrome.exe', '%s']
shlex will actually do the right thing here if given the posix=False keyword argument, but webbrowser won't supply that, even on Windows. This is arguably a bug in webbrowser.
You don't need to switch to Unix-style paths -- simply quote the executable.
import webbrowser
webbrowser.get('"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" %s').open('http://google.com')
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