Tim Golden wrote: > joep wrote: >> On Mar 15, 5:42 pm, joep <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>> http://timgolden.me.uk/python/win32_how_do_i/run-a-command-with-a-spa... >>> Note: this works for subprocess.call but for subprocess.Popen this >>> does not work if there are two arguments in the command line with >>> spaces. Especially, even after trying out many different versions, I >>> never managed to get subprocess.Popen to work, when both the >>> executable and one argument have spaces in the file path. >>> >> Sorry, incomplete sentence >> >> Especially, even after trying out many different versions, I never >> managed to get subprocess.Popen to work '''when command line is given >> as a *list* argument to subprocess.Popen''' >> in the case when both the executable and one argument have spaces in >> the file path.
Following up, I'm a little bemused. Below is a command which works on a Win2K Python 2.4 installation (and on WinXP with Python 2.5). I've deliberately chosen something in Program Files and I've copied both the executable and the document so that even the base filenames have embedded spaces, as well as the directory path to get there. (The lines are quite long: you'll probably have to piece them together a bit; that's why I've put an extra line space between each.) subprocess.call ([ r"C:\Program Files\Adobe\Acrobat 5.0\Reader\acro reader.exe", r"C:\Program Files\Adobe\Acr obat 5.0\Reader\plug_ins.donotuse\Annotations\Stamps\abc def.pdf" ]) Can you confirm that something equivalent *doesn't* work on your setup? Or have I misunderstood your point earlier? I'd really like to get to the point where we can definitively state: this works (and possibly: that doesn't). Thanks TJG -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list