On 04Feb2017 12:16, Steve D'Aprano <steve+pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote:
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 03:06 am, Neal Becker wrote:
I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide
any
others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the
beginning.
What's the best way to ensure this is always true whenever I run python3?
For some definition of "always"...
I don't know about "best", but you can do this:
1. In your .bashrc file, or equivalent, set the environment
variable PYTHONPATH:
export PYTHONPATH='./;$PYTHONPATH'
You want double quotes (allowing parameter substitution) instead of single
quotes here. Or, of course, no quotes at all. And the separator is ":", not
";".
Personally, I'm against hacking the $PYTHONPATH this way at all.
Far better to invoke the Python script via a shell script that includes the
absolute path of the current directory (or the module directory) in the
$PYTHONPATH.
Cheers,
Cameron Simpson <c...@zip.com.au>
That article and its poster have been canceled.
- David B. O'Donnell, Sysadmin, America OnLine
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