23

After import sys, I use sys.argv to get input arguments.

But after I compile my program with PyInstaller, the exe program will not accept my input. Instead, it uses the default value I set for the program.

If I run it with python this_script.py it waits for my input to specify the wait_time. However, after I compile it with PyInstaller, if I double click the exe file there is no place for me to input the wait_time.

How can I compile it and let the exe file accept my input?

import sched, time
import sys
    
s = sched.scheduler(time.time, time.sleep)
    
# wait_time is an integer representing how many seconds to wait.
def do_something(sc, wait_time): 
    # Here will be the code for doing something every after "wait_time " seconds
    sc.enter(wait_time, 1, do_something, (sc, wait_time))  
    
    try:
        wait_time = int(sys.argv[1])
    except IndexError:
        wait_time = 5    
    
    
# s.enter(wait_time, 1, do_something, (s,))
s.enter(wait_time, 5, do_something, (s, wait_time))
s.run()
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  • 1
    can you give us a small short concise and working example of your code that demonstrates this problem? Have you attempted to run it as a script and not a compiled executable? Sep 22, 2014 at 23:07
  • How are you running the resulting .exe file? Are you running it from a command prompt or are you clicking on it? Sep 22, 2014 at 23:08
  • Are you supplying any command line arguments? Sep 22, 2014 at 23:23
  • Above is the code. I want the program repeatly doing something every 5 mins. Then I can input wait_time = 300. I want to run the .exe directly instead of using python command line. Sep 25, 2014 at 16:31

2 Answers 2

26

If you click on the exe to open it:

Usually, when you double click the exe, there is only one argument which is <EXEfilename>. Create a shortcut for that exe. In the properties for that shortcut, you will see a property called Target which will contain <EXEfilename> change that to <EXEfilename> <arg1> <arg2>. When you use this shortcut to open the exe, it calls the target, which is this call <EXEfilename> <arg1> <arg2>. You can then access arg1 and arg2 using sys.argv

If you use command line:

Just call it as C:\> <EXEfilename> <arg1> <arg2>

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  • 1
    Thank you! After I change add <arg1> in the target, it works. But is there any way to allow me input the arg1 interactively? Sep 25, 2014 at 16:39
  • I see this problem is due the the windows system. For linux, we can just run <EXEfilename> <arg1> in the shell. For windows, we used to double click the exe, we cannot input <arg1> unless we use cmd or add a gui to the program. Sep 25, 2014 at 16:46
  • 2
    Or you can use the console with that opens up. If you are using python 2 its arg1 = raw_input('Enter arg1') if you are using python 3 its arg1 = input('Enter arg1'). This lets users enter the args in interactively.
    – ashwinjv
    Sep 25, 2014 at 16:51
1

sys.arg[0] is helpful if you run the program through command line. Instead of using sys.arg[0], use

input()

You can also use input("<Statement to show to user>: "), to show a statement to the user. Then create your executable (.exe) by compiling the Python script using

pyinstaller --onefile pythonscript.py

Simply double click on the generated .exe file, a console will appear showing the following statement, Statement to show to user: .

You can also take multiple user inputs from user by using multiple input() statements in pythonscript.py. For example:

input_customer_segment = input("Enter a customer segment (For example: Daily user): ")
input_number_of_months = input("Enter number of months of consumption: ")

This will take multiple user inputs on pressing Enter after every input in the console that appears.

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