On Sunday, February 24, 2013 1:35:31 AM UTC-8, Chris Rebert wrote: > On Feb 24, 2013 1:21 AM, "llanitedave" <llani...@veawb.coop> wrote: > > > > > > I created an html help page for my Python 2.7.3 application and put it in a > > documentation folder. I used webbrowser.open() to fetch the page. > > > > > > On linux -- KDE specifically, the command opens the local file on my > > default browser with no issues. However, on Windows 7, it opens Internet > > Explorer, which doesn't even search the local folder, but goes straight to > > the web and does a Google search, returning nothing but useless noise. > > > > > > > My default browser on Windows is Chrome, so my intention is getting > > undermined right from the start. > > > > > > How do I get a local html file to open properly from Python in Windows? > > Sounds like this might be your problem: > > http://bugs.python.org/issue8936 > > The fix would seem to be ensuring that the URL you pass includes the scheme > (in your case, "file:"). > > Cheers, > > Chris
Holy Toledo! That's a two-year-old bug spanning two versions of the language! BTW, Chris, the snippet I showed in the title essentially WAS the exact code. It's a method with that single line called from a wxPython Help menu. I can't really put an absolute pathname into the argument, because the application is going to be distributed to a variety of computers at my workplace, and there's no assurance that it will go into (or remain in)a particular folder. I was trying to avoid using the wx.html.HtmlWindow feature of wxPython, because it doesn't handle CSS and styles. My help page is the portal to a multi-page users guide with a style sheet to render all the content consistently. Plus, I couldn't get the wx.html.HtmlWindow to open relative paths either -- it gave me "URL Malformed" messages even in KDE, when webbrowser.open("filepath") was working for the exact same path. But that's something to take up on the wxPython list, I guess. This to me illustrates the downside of the Python philosophy of "There should be only one obvious way to do things". If that one obvious way has a fatal bug, you're pretty much SOL. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list