I was wondering how to make a python script portable to both linux and windows?
One problem I see is shebang. How to write the shebang so that the script can be run on both windows and linux?
Are there other problems besides shebang that I should know?
Is the solution same for perl script?
Thanks and regards!
Windows will just ignore the shebang (which is, after all, a comment); in Windows you need to associate the
.pyextension to the Python executable in the registry, but you can perfectly well leave the shebang on, it will be perfectly innocuous there.There are many bits and pieces which are platform-specific (many only exist on Unix,
msvcrtonly on Windows) so if you want to be portable you should abstain from those; some are subtly different (such as the detailed precise behavior ofsubprocess.Popenormmap) — it’s all pretty advanced stuff and the docs will guide you there. If you’re executing (viasubprocessor otherwise) external commands you’d better make sure they exist on both platforms, of course, or check what platform you’re in and use different external commands in each case.Remember to always use
/, not\, as path separator (forward slash works in both platforms, backwards slash is windows-only), and be meticulous as to whether each file you’re opening is binary or text.I think that’s about it…