Domanda

I'm trying to understand one of the answers to this question:

Cannot pass an argument to python with "#!/usr/bin/env python"

#!/bin/sh
''''exec python -u -- "$0" ${1+"$@"} # '''

This works well, but I do not understand why it works with four ticks at the beginning of that line rather than three.

In addition, why the hash near the end of that string?

È stato utile?

Soluzione

Python supports triple-quoted strings:

'''something'''

Shell supports only single-quoted strings:

'something'

By using four quotes, sh sees that as 2 empty strings, but Python sees the first three as the start of a triple-quoted string, and includes the fourth as part of the string value.

The rest of the line is then interpreted as a command by sh, but as part of a string by Python.

The # then forms a comment as far as sh is concerned, but it is still a string to Python, closing it off with a closing triple-quote.

So, to summarize:

  • sh sees: empty string ('') - empty string ('') - command (exec python -u -- "$0" ${1+"$@"}) - comment (# ''')
  • Python sees: triple-quoted string literal (containing the characters 'exec python -u -- "$0" ${1+"$@"} #)

So sh executes that command, replacing itself with the python -u -- with the script name and the rest of the command line arguments, and Python reads this file and just sees an initial string literal that isn't going anywhere.

Because it is the first string literal in the file, it'll be set as the docstring for the __main__ module but that is hardly going to matter if this is the main script.

Altri suggerimenti

I just use:

#!/bin/sh
''':'
exec python -tt "$0" "$@"
'''
# The above shell shabang trick is more portable than /usr/bin/env and supports adding arguments to the interpreter (python -tt)
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