I went and looked at the pydoc.py code, and it looks like it isn't really meant to be used from inside another python program. After some tinkering arond with my code, I ended up with this: (Google is messing up my indentation)
(in my __init__ function) ... menuBar.addmenuitem('Help', 'command', '', command=self.run_pydoc, label='Run pydoc (module help GUI)') ... def run_pydoc(self): """Run pydoc -g for gui based help""" if 'linux' in sys.platform: os.system('pydoc -g') if 'win32' in sys.platform: os.system(os.path.join(sys.prefix, 'Tools', 'Scripts', 'pydocgui.pyw')) return A bit of a kludge, but it works for me. timw.google wrote: > Hi all, > > I'm discovering pydoc, and it seems to me that this is a great way to > have online documentation for my application. Are there any examples of > using this in some kind of help menu in an application? I've tried to > just bind pydoc.gui() to a menu item, but this just brings up the GUI > for pydoc, and the user still needs to search for the module before the > browser comes up, and when I quit serving pydoc.gui(), my application > dies along with it. Also, I need to get out of python to use pydoc.gui > again, or I get > > error: (98, 'Address already in use') > > I'm sure there's a better way to take advantage of this module and my > docstrings to get some online help. I'm using Tkinter and Pmw, but > maybe it's time to convert all this to wxWidgets? > > Thanks for any help. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list