From both https://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.Popen and https://docs.python.org/2/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.Popen:
You do not need shell=True
to run a batch file or console-based executable.
as already cited by @JBernardo.
So, lets try:
where lessc
actually tells
C:\Users\myname\AppData\Roaming\npm\lessc
C:\Users\myname\AppData\Roaming\npm\lessc.cmd
That means, the file to execute is lessc.cmd
, not some .bat
file. And indeed:
>>> import subprocess
>>> subprocess.Popen([r'C:\Users\myname\AppData\Roaming\npm\lessc.cmd'])
<subprocess.Popen object at 0x035BA070>
>>> lessc: no input files
usage: lessc [option option=parameter ...] <source> [destination]
So, this does work if you specify the full path. I assume there was a typo involved when you had this experience. May be you wrote .bat
instead of .cmd
?
If you don't want to patch the full path of lessc
into your script, you can bake yourself a where
:
import plaform
import os
def where(file_name):
# inspired by http://nedbatchelder.com/code/utilities/wh.py
# see also: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11210104/
path_sep = ":" if platform.system() == "Linux" else ";"
path_ext = [''] if platform.system() == "Linux" or '.' in file_name else os.environ["PATHEXT"].split(path_sep)
for d in os.environ["PATH"].split(path_sep):
for e in path_ext:
file_path = os.path.join(d, file_name + e)
if os.path.exists(file_path):
return file_path
raise Exception(file_name + " not found")
Then you can write:
import subprocess
subprocess.Popen([where('lessc')])
shell=True
?lessc
is a batch file (which might actually be the problem) and the same error occurs when I run it with the full path.cwd=r'c:\path\to\script\'
argument on Popen callsubprocess
module. So there's no way to get around this problem without editing the script itself (it's part of an asset bundler for a web framework)?shell=True
, the COMSPEC environment variable specifies the default shell. The only time you need to specifyshell=True
on Windows is when the command you wish to execute is built into the shell (e.g. dir or copy). You do not needshell=True
to run a batch file or console-based executable.