2

I am writing a basic Python script that ultimately generates a string which is used to call other scripts on the Linux command line.

For example:

inputFile = "loadsOfData.csv"
outputFile = "results.txt"
doThis = "-p"
doThat = '-a"


scriptCommand = "./myscript" + " " + inputFile + " " + outputFile + " " + doThis + " " + doThat

os.system(scriptCommand)

The order of the command line arguments may change in the future, and I want a check on what is generated.

Is there some way in Python of specifying a template that would make it easy to change the format of the arguments and ensure accuracy?

The real example has a lot more parms than this, so it would be nice for me to be able to specify the order with some template I could edit at the top of the script rather than copy paste everything around in scriptCommand = .... if it does change.

P.S. The actual args come from elsewhere including argv, so are not hard-coded as in my example.

1
  • You should use the subprocess module which is meant to replace os.system. It accepts a list with the command and its arguments: you can just build that list dynamically and then pass it to the appropriate subprocess function. Oct 6, 2012 at 9:50

1 Answer 1

2

You should use python string formatting. Define the format you want to use at the top of your file like this:

commandFormat = "./myscript {0} {1} {2} {3}"
inputFile = "loadsOfData.csv"
outputFile = "results.txt"
doThis = "-p"
doThat = "-a"
scriptCommand = commandFormat.format(inputFile, outputFile, doThis, doThat)
print scriptCommand

>>> './myscript loadsOfData.csv results.txt -p -a'

if you need, say, to have -a appear before -p in all your scriptCommand, change the number order in the commandFormat variable like this commandFormat = "./myscript {0} {1} {3} {2}" and the output will become:

>>> './myscript loadsOfData.csv results.txt -a -p'

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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