Yes, right again.  Quoting around the path placeholder does allow
specifying a "long" format path including with spaces.

Thanks again.

On Aug 27, 12:26 pm, Yarko Tymciurak <yark...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 9:16 AM, ctalley<ctal...@caci.com> wrote:
>
> > Thanks guys.  Yarko, you are nothing if not prolific - all I ever
> > wanted to know and more. :-)
>
> > I just felt like there must be some mechanism to tell python where to
> > find files from the command prompt short of typing the entire path and
> > that I was missing something.  I didn't really think pythonpath or
> > sys.path were the right answer, but hey it was worth a shot.
>
> > But this does work (I tried it)...
> > python %web2pypath%\web2py.py --upgrade yes
>
> > The only catch is that web2pypath has to be in the "short name" format
> > (limit of 8 characters per path segment, no spaces, etc.).
>
> > So in my case, this...
>
> > C:\Documents and Settings\user\My Documents\w2p\web2py source\web2py
>
> the problem with this, I suspect, is not the "short path" is needed -
> it is that spaces are in the command line,
> so python is seeing four command line paramaters in this (not one)....
>
> Try, instead,
>
> python "%web2pypath%"/web2py.py -upgrade yes
>
>
>
>
>
> > looks like this...
>
> > C:\DOCUME~1\user\MYDOCU~1\w2p\WEB2PY~2\web2py
>
> > On Aug 26, 5:32 pm, Yarko Tymciurak <yark...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> ....
>
> >> >> I've added the web2py.py path to sys.path using sys.path.append and
> >> >> verified using print sys.path
>
> >> > Again - this would have an effect if you wrote a script that did
> >> > "import web2py" - but since web2py isn't a module (rather an
> >> > application) this is of little use.
>
> >> sorry - this is wrong (I was thinking ahead too fast);
>
> >> what sys.path does is the same thing as setting your windows PATH
> >> environment, but modifying only the current processes' copy of the
> >> execution environment (e.g. it is lost after that process exits).
>
> >> So if you type "set" in a windows command (or "env" in unix/linux) you
> >> will see your sys environment variables;  same for inside a running
> >> pythong script - if you import sys, then the python interface for that
> >> environment is as you show, and you can extend / modify it in your
> >> running process.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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