The answer submitted by @Kyllopardium may be exactly what you need. There's no reason to create a console application if you never intend to use the console interface.
That said, given that the networking program also needs to run as a standalone application, you may need to build a separate executable for a console interface. If you prefer to have a single console program, you can instead use the subprocess module to hide the console window when launched from the main application.
Configure an instance of STARTUPINFO
to hide the application window and pass this to the Popen
constructor. You can also pass this parameter to the subprocess convenience functions, call
, check_call
, and check_output
. For example:
import subprocess
exe = r'\path\to\networking_program.exe'
args = [exe, 'param1', '...', 'paramN']
if hasattr(subprocess, 'STARTUPINFO'):
# Windows
si = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
si.dwFlags |= subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
# The following is the initialized default, but
# setting it explicitly is self-documenting.
si.wShowWindow = subprocess.SW_HIDE
else:
# POSIX
si = None
try:
subprocess.check_call(args, startupinfo=si)
# check_call waits for the process to exit.
# If the return code is non-zero it raises the
# following exception:
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
handle_error(e)
Note that the program is run directly instead of via the cmd.exe shell. So the window that gets hidden is the program's own console window, not a "cmd shell" window. This window is hosted in a separate process (e.g. conhost.exe in Windows 7+). Multiple applications can share the same console, such as when a parent process (e.g. python.exe) starts a child process and waits for it to exit. If the parent process doesn't have a console (e.g. pythonw.exe), then Windows creates a new console for the child.
subprocess
(for some reason, I was thinking it was part ofos
, which is what was giving me trouble, but all I get isTypeError: 'float' object is not iterable
.