Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote: > Duncan Booth wrote: > >> Chris Angelico <ros...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> On Sat, May 31, 2014 at 7:42 AM, Devin Jeanpierre >>><jeanpierr...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> In unix shells you can literally use a new line. Or is that only >> bash? >>> >>> You can in bash, I know, but it's fiddly to type it; and more >>> importantly, it's not a good point in the "this is cleaner than a >>> series of pipes" argument. My primary recommendation, of course, was >>> a three-line script saved as an actual file, but for a more direct >>> parallel to the pipe-it-three-ways model, I wanted to use -c. >> >> and you also wrote originally that it's fiddly to edit. I think that >> Windows Powershell has (at least in the current ISE command line) got >> the editing a bit better. It's a minor difference though and it has >> taken Microsoft about 30 years to get to that point. >> >> What may be a larger difference, or may just be my lack of Linux-foo, >> is this: >> >> PS C:\python33> $script = @" >> import os >> for root, dirs, files in os.walk("."): >> if len(dirs + files) == 1: print(root) >> "@ >> >> PS C:\python33> python -c $script >> .\Doc >> .\Lib\concurrent\__pycache__ >> .\Lib\curses\__pycache__ >> ... >> >> which is a style I've found useful for example when running a group >> of related timeit.py commands as I can put things like multi-line >> setup statements in a variable and then have a simpler command to >> repeat. >> >> But bash as far as I can won't let me do that: >> >> $ script='import os >> for root, dirs, files in os.walk("."): >> if len(dirs + files) == 1: print(root) >> ' >> $ python -c $script >> File "<string>", line 1 >> import >> ^ >> SyntaxError: invalid syntax > > $ script='import os >> for root, dirs, files in os.walk("."): >> if len(dirs + files) == 1: >> print(root) >> ' > $ python3 -c "$script" > . > ./heureka > > $ python3 -c 'import sys; print(sys.argv)' $script > ['-c', 'import', 'os', 'for', 'root,', 'dirs,', 'files', 'in', > 'os.walk("."):', 'if', 'len(dirs', '+', 'files)', '==', '1:', > 'print(root)'] $ python3 -c 'import sys; print(sys.argv)' "$script" > ['-c', 'import os\nfor root, dirs, files in os.walk("."):\n if > len(dirs + files) == 1:\n print(root)\n'] > Thanks, I thought there must be a way to do that (and I should have remembered it). It nicely shows up the difference between the *nix shells that are all about processing the command line as a string and the Powershell way where it is all about objects (so a single value stays as a single argument).
-- Duncan Booth -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list