1

I have a shell script which runs a python program which has its own parameters:

#!/bin/bash
python blah.py var1 var2
./run key

I need to find a way to retrieve the contents of key from the python program. I have tried just making the python program return the value, and then doing :

key=python blah.py var1 var2

in my shell script, but that didn't work because it stated key was "outside the function".

Thanks in advance

4 Answers 4

2

Use this

key=`python blah.py var1 var2`
./run $key
4
  • this just sets key equal to python Aug 30, 2012 at 20:31
  • 2
    Really?? Hope you are not using single quote, however refer here if still a problem forums.opensuse.org/english/other-forums/development/…
    – perilbrain
    Aug 30, 2012 at 20:35
  • You're right, but I guess there's something wrong with my logic here. I can't return a variable from that python file, because returning the variable from main states makes it state that "return" is outside the function. Any suggestions? Aug 30, 2012 at 20:51
  • 2
    just print it....using print(blah blah blah)[python>3.0] or print blah blah blah [python<3.0] :)
    – perilbrain
    Aug 30, 2012 at 20:54
2

You can do:

./run $( python blah.py var1 var2 )

The $( ) syntax opens a subshell, and runs the command. The stdout output is then dumped in its place

0

One liner demo:
(ok, so it's two lines)

$ key=`python -c 'print "hi"'`
$ echo $key
0

Another alternative to modifying the python script to output the value of the key variable is to modify the python script to call the run program

import subprocess
# ... calculations, and set the "key" variable ...
subprocess.call(["./run", key])

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