On 20 Oct 2005 01:58:44 -0700, the_crazy88 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just use > os.system("export PYTHONPATH = %s" %("your_pythonpath")) ... except it won't work: os.system will execute the command in a new process, so the environment variable change will only be visible in *this* process. Since you don't do anything else, the environment variable change will never be seen by anyone. As for the OP's question, the short answer is "you can't": the Python interpreter will always be executed in a different process than the calling shell, and environment variable changes *never* impact the calling process on Unix. The closest thing you can do is that: -myScript.py-------------------------------------- print 'export MY_VARIABLE=value' -------------------------------------------------- -myScript.sh-------------------------------------- python myScript.py > /tmp/chgvars.sh . /tmp/chgvars.sh -------------------------------------------------- This is quite ugly: you write the shell commands changing the environment variables to a file, then "source" this file in the calling shell. But this is probably the best way to do what you want. HTH -- python -c "print ''.join([chr(154 - ord(c)) for c in 'U(17zX(%,5.zmz5(17;8(%,5.Z65\'*9--56l7+-'])" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list