Jim Byrnes wrote:
Dave Angel wrote:
Jim Byrnes wrote:
<div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed">I am just
learning Python and am new to Linux so I am probably doing something
to trip myself up. I am trying to run an example GUI program that
fetches a record from a database. All the files are in the same folder.
The program runs but its results vary depending on how I started it.
If I run it from the terminal or Idle, I enter a key and the program
fetches the proper record. If I run it from Nautilis or a panel
launcher, I enter the proper key and I get an error message saying the
key does not exist.
I am assuming that I am having path issues but don't know how to
correct it.
Thamks, Jim
Presumably you're also new to mailing lists.
Not really.
At an absolute minimum when you describe an error, PASTE the error
message, complete with traceback, into your message. As it stands, I'm
left wondering which key on your keyboard can possibly "not exist."
Perhaps it's a non-ASCII code, and you're getting some encoding error.
That's a common discrepancy between running from a terminal and running
from some GUI.
The error was generated by the program, not Python. The 'key' I was
referring to was a dictionary type key, not a physical one on the
keyboard.
Even better is to specify the version of Python this program is
presumably written in, and what Linux distro. Then you say it's a GUI
program, so you should specify which GUI library you're using.
Python 2.6, Ubuntu 9.10, tkinter
Now if I do a bunch of guessing, I might come up with the likelihood
that your "Nautilus" is supplying a different current directory than the
one the script is located in. You can find that out by looking at:
os.path.abspath(os.curdir)
OK, thanks. If that is the case how do I correct it?
But of course how you print that depends on what GUI package you're
running.
DaveA
Regards, Jim
You forgot to include the list in your reply. Try using reply-all instead.
If you determine that the current directory is your problem, and that
Nautilus isn't setting it the way you'd like, then you may have to
resort to other ways to identify the other files you mention. Easiest
way might be to use the __file__ attribute of each module, which gives
its complete path. So your code in the main script could do something
like (untested):
target = os.path.dirname(__file__)
os.chdir(target)
Better is usually to ignore current directory, and passed the desired
directory name into whatever function is going to use it.
HTH,
DaveA
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