I am trying to run a command with subprocess.check_output
without using shell=True
keyword argument. My command is this:
command --parameter="something with spaces"
With this:
subprocess.check_output(['command', '--parameter="something with spaces"'])
command becomes to this:
command "--parameter=\"something with spaces\""
And with this:
subprocess.check_output(['command', '--parameter=', 'something with spaces'])
command becomes to this(white space after =
):
command --parameter= "something with spaces"
Is there a proper way to do that without using shell=True
Here's what you need to know:
Spaces are used for separating arguments on the shell command line. However, if you are not using shell, you don't need to escape spaces. Spaces can be escaped at least two ways ( that I know of ): With quotes ( either single or double ) and the backslash .
When you pass an array to subprocess.check_output() you are already dividing the command into parameters for the subprocess. Thus, you don't need the quotes around "something with spaces". That is, you don't need to escape the spaces. Rather, the quotes are being taken quite literally as quotes as you have shown with your result snippet:
command "--parameter=\"something with spaces\""
By now I hope you have guessed what the right answer is. Spoiler ahead:
subprocess.check_output(['command', '--parameter=something with spaces'])
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