Michael Foord wrote: > Fred Mailhot wrote: >> Hi, >> >> It is stated in PEP 257 that: >> >> "The docstring of a script (a stand-alone program) should be usable as >> its "usage" message, printed when the script is invoked with incorrect >> or missing arguments (or perhaps with a "-h" option, for "help").[...]" > > I wasn't aware of that advice. Hmmm... > > Anway - how about this: > > import sys > module = sys.modules['__main__'] # or [__name__] > docstring = module.__doc__
No need for the fancy footwork - remember that a module's globals and its attributes are the same dict: ~/devel$ cat > demo.py "My docstring" print __doc__ ~/devel$ python demo.py My docstring For modules and classes, the interpreter sets "__doc__" in the current namespace automatically when it builds the docstring (not functions though - their docstring isn't added to the local scope). Cheers, Nick. -- Nick Coghlan | ncogh...@gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia --------------------------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ Doc-SIG maillist - Doc-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/doc-sig