What can I use to call the OS to open a URL in whatever browser the user has as default? Not worried about cross-OS compatibility; if it works in linux thats enough for me!
5 Answers
Here is how to open the user's default browser with a given url:
import webbrowser
url = "https://www.google.com/"
webbrowser.open(url, new=0, autoraise=True)
Here is the documentation about this functionality. It's part of Python's stdlibs:
http://docs.python.org/library/webbrowser.html
I have tested this successfully on Linux, Ubuntu 10.10.
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2On OS X 10.8.2 with Python 2.7.2 this does not appear to work. However, it works fine on Windows 7 with Python 2.7.3. Also works fine on Ubuntu 12.04 with XFCE 4.8 and Python 2.7.3. Apr 25, 2013 at 16:14
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Okay, on OS X 10.8.2 with Python 2.7.4 this does appear to work. So, annoyingly it probably only reliably works on newer versions of Python. May 2, 2013 at 20:35
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4I get webbrowser.open(url[, new=0[, autoraise=True]]) ^ SyntaxError: invalid syntax– fatuhokuAug 28, 2013 at 10:02
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I'm using OSX 10.8.4 with Python 2.7.2 and verified it does indeed work. However, if you use the url 'google.com' it fails without error. You need to specify 'google.com'.– JoshDec 18, 2013 at 1:27
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2FWIW, this is what
import antigravity
uses: hg.python.org/cpython/file/tip/Lib/antigravity.py– SumitFeb 17, 2016 at 7:35
Personally I really wouldn't use the webbrowser
module.
It's a complicated mess of sniffing for particular browsers, which will won't find the user's default browser if they have more than one installed, and won't find a browser if it doesn't know the name of it (eg Chrome).
Better on Windows is simply to use the os.startfile
function, which also works on a URL. On OS X, you can use the open
system command. On Linux there's xdg-open
, a freedesktop.org standard command supported by GNOME, KDE and XFCE.
if sys.platform=='win32':
os.startfile(url)
elif sys.platform=='darwin':
subprocess.Popen(['open', url])
else:
try:
subprocess.Popen(['xdg-open', url])
except OSError:
print 'Please open a browser on: '+url
This will give a better user experience on mainstream platforms. You could fall back to webbrowser
on other platforms, perhaps. Though most likely if you're on an obscure/unusual/embedded OS where none of the above work, chances are webbrowser
will fail too.
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7I've just looked at the source for webbrowser, and I'm not sure I agree with you. Only the unix sniffing looks a bit unreliable, and even it should work correctly in KDE or GNOME (it probably could use a patch to use
xdg-open
, thoughxdg-open
uses similar sniffing anyway). The win32 implementation, for instance, usesos.startfile()
already, and it also has a fallback. Nov 18, 2010 at 23:52 -
1The webbrowser module worked for me when I had Safari as my default browser, and also when I had Chrome as my default browser on Mac. Feb 4, 2013 at 15:31
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12Note that webbrowser uses
xdg-open
now, too. Thus this answer is outdated on modern python and there is no reason not to use the webbrowser module.– ChronialSep 19, 2017 at 14:25
Then how about mixing codes of @kobrien and @bobince up:
import subprocess
import webbrowser
import sys
url = 'http://test.com'
if sys.platform == 'darwin': # in case of OS X
subprocess.Popen(['open', url])
else:
webbrowser.open_new_tab(url)