I think you want something like the following:
$(python -c "import urllib, sys; print urllib.unquote(sys.argv[1])" "h%23g")
This will result in h#g
, if this is all you have on a line then it will also attempt to run a command called h#g
, so I'm assuming you are actually using this as a part of a larger command.
The issue with your version is that sys.argv[0]
is the -c
from the command, and urllib.unquote('-c')
will just return '-c'
.
From the documentation on sys.argv
:
If the command was executed using the -c
command line option to the interpreter, argv[0]
is set to the string '-c'
.
Combining that with info from the man page (emphasis mine):
-c command
Specify the command to execute (see next section). This terminates the option list (following options are passed as arguments to the command).
So, when you use -c
, sys.argv[0]
will be '-c'
, the argument provided to -c
is the script so it will not be included in sys.argv
, and any additional arguments are added to sys.argv
starting at index 1.
python
aliased to? It looks like it might be an empty string...or perhapsecho
. What happens if you write$(\python ...)
? Do you really want to execute the output of the Python script?-c command Specify the command to execute (see next section). This terminates the option list (following options are passed as arguments to the command).