Brant Sears wrote: > Hi. I'm new to Python and I am trying to use the latest release (2.5) > on Windows XP. > > What I want to do is execute a program and have the results of the > execution assigned to a variable. According to the documentation the > way to do this is as follows: > > import commands > x = commands.getstatusoutput('dir') > > This should assign "x" to be the output of the command "dir". > However, when I run this (or any other command), x ends up being: > > (1, "'{' is not recognized as an internal or external command, > \noperable program or batch file.") > > From looking through the documentation, I'm believing that the > implementation of commands.getstatusoutput is actually some multi- > step thing that starts with issuing the bracket character that is > being choked on. This leads me to believe that Python or perhaps just > the commands module is not setup correctly on my computer. > > I installed Python using the Python2-5.msi link that I found at: > http://www.python.org/download/releases/2.5/ > > I left everything the default during installation, so Python was > installed to C:\Python25. The only other thing I did was add this > PATH variable on my computer. > > Any ideas on what I might do to troubleshoot this? > > Thanks! > > Brant Sears
commands is a Unix module, hence it will not work in Windows XP. If you don't need the return code try this: import os pipe = os.popen('dir') x = pipe.read() # do something with x -Matt -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list