On 12/22/23 07:02, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote: > On my Windows 10 machine, Python scripts run without a shebang line. > Perhaps Windows 11 has added the ability to use one, but then you would > need to use the actual location of your Python executable.
Yes if you associate .py or .pyw with python.exe (or pythonw.exe), then things work as you describe. However it's no longer recommended to do that. Instead---and I think this is the default now when you install python---you should associate both .py and .pyw files with the py launcher (py.exe) and it will examine the shebang line of the script and determine which version of python to run. As I said this should work regardless of the path listed in the shebang. Note that the shebang is meaningless to Windows itself, and Windows Explorer. It is only meaningful to the py launcher. So it's customary to just use a unix-style shebang in your python scripts. So either #!/usr/bin/python3 or #!/usr/bin/env python3 as you would in unix. Using the py launcher as your Windows association with .py and.pyw files you can have multiple versions of python installed and everything works as it should, according to your shebang, just like on Unix. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list