vote up 4 vote down star
1

Hey everyone,

I'm writing a pretty basic application in python (it's only one file at the moment). My question is how do I get it so the python script is able to be run in /usr/bin without the .py extension?

For example, instead of running

python htswap.py args

from the directory where it currently is, I want to be able to cd to any directory and do

htswap args

Thanks in advance!

flag

5 Answers

vote up 13 vote down check

Simply strip off the .py extension by renaming the file. Then, you have to put the following line at the top of your file:

#!/usr/bin/env python

env is a little program that sets up the environment so that the right python interpreter is executed.

You also have to make your file executable, with the command

chmod a+x htswap

And dump it into /usr/local/bin. This is cleaner than /usr/bin, because the contents of that directory are usually managed by the operating system.

link|flag
after much pain and near-death experiences, I suggest to use the specific python version you develop for #!/usr/bin/env python<version-major>.<version-minor> (e.g. python2.4) instead. Better to have control of the python version is running the executable (at least for the cases I experienced, YMMV) – Stefano Borini Sep 21 at 17:31
vote up 8 vote down

The first line of the file should be

#!/usr/bin/env python

You should remove the .py extension, and make the file executable, using

chmod ugo+x htswap

EDIT: Thomas points out correctly that such scripts should be placed in /usr/local/bin rather than in /usr/bin. Please upvote his answer (at the expense of mine, perhaps. Seven upvotes (as we speak) for this kind of stuff is ridiculous)

link|flag
Yep that was it, I did this earlier and for some reason it didn't work, turns out I forgot the ! in the shebang – Nakedsteve Jul 22 at 20:32
vote up 2 vote down

Shebang?

#!/usr/bin/env python

Put that at the beginning of your file and you're set

link|flag
1  
Oh baby when she moves... – windfinder Jul 22 at 20:32
vote up 1 vote down

add #!/usr/bin/env python to the very top of htswap.py and rename htswap.py to htswap then do a command: chmod +x htswap to make htswap executable.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I see in the official Python tutorials, http://docs.python.org/tutorial/index.html, that

#! /usr/bin/env python

is used just as the answers above suggest. Note that you can also use the following

#!/usr/bin/python

This is the style you'll see for in shell scripts, like bash scripts. For example

#!/bin/bash

Seeing that the official tuts go with the first option that is probably your best bet. Consistency in code is something to strive for!

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.