On May 1, 6:10 pm, Ned Deily <n...@acm.org> wrote: > In article <7618rjf1a3t8...@mid.uni-berlin.de>, > "Diez B. Roggisch" <de...@nospam.web.de> wrote: > > > > > seanm...@gmail.com schrieb: > > > I think this is maybe the most basic problem possible, but I can't get > > > even the most basic Python to run on OS X using Terminal or IDLE. I > > > used the IDLE editor to create a file with one line of code > > > > print 'text string' > > > > and I saved the file as module1.py. When using terminal I entered > > > "python" to load the interpreter or whatever and then tried > > > > python module1.py > > > > but I got an error message. I've tried using the file path instead of > > > module1.py and that didn't work either. I've tried moving the file to > > > different places, my desktop, hard drive, etc., and none of that > > > worked either. In IDLE I tried similar things and only got error > > > messages there too. > > > > Needless to say this is a frustrating start to learning this langauge. > > > I'd really appreciate any help getting this to work, so I can move on > > > the actual language. Thanks so much. > > > It would have helped if you had given us the *actual* error-message. > > From what little information you give, it appears as if you do > > something very basic wrong - instead of doing > > $ python > > >>> python mymodule.py > > (where $ is the shell/terminal and >>> the python-prompt) > > you either do > > $ python > > >>> print "hello" > > or > > $ python mymodule.py > > to execute mymodule directly. > > And from within OS X IDLE itself, if you create or open the file > mymodule.py, it will be in a separate window and, as long as that window > is selected, you can run the file directly within IDLE by selecting "Run > Module" from the "Run" menu. So, no need to use the Terminal if you > don't want to. > > -- > Ned Deily, > n...@acm.org
Thank you for both for the help. I still cannot get the program to run though. Below I've copied my commands and the error messages for you (in IDLE then Terminal): IDLE 2.6.2 >>> python module1.py SyntaxError: invalid syntax and sean-marimpietris-computer:~ seanmarimpietri$ python Python 2.6.2 (r262:71600, Apr 16 2009, 09:17:39) [GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5250)] on darwin Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> python module1.py File "<stdin>", line 1 python module1.py ^ SyntaxError: invalid syntax Again, any help would be appreciated. Thanks. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list