With Linux, problems with files not executing are either ownership or 
privilege related.  Before you created the new text file did you do 
an "ls -alF" on the file?  Typically, you will see a 755 or 
-rwxr-xr-x for the privileges and if the executable file is your own, 
you'll see your owner account and group - similar to this:

[we...@c4iweb ~]$ ls -alF executable_file
-rwxr-xr-x  1 wendt wendt 202 Feb 22 10:09 executable_file*

mark

At 09:52 AM 2/22/2010, you wrote:
>Hello again,
>
>Well at last the script (same) worked, i don't know why, i only created a
>new plain text file, and put the script in it, and worked.
>
>Could be an error with the tabulations or something, but i don't know much
>about python.
>
>Anyway, thanks for your help and concern.
>
>Best regards.
>
>Leonardo.
>
>
>
>2010/2/22 acemi list <acemi.l...@gmail.com>
>
> > Maybe it's related with your default python's version
> >
> > On 2/22/10, Jeff Epler <jep...@unpythonic.net> wrote:
> > > What happens (what error message do you get) when you type the same
> > > command at the terminal window shell, instead of running it from a hal
> > > script or the halcmd prompt?
> > >
> > > Jeff


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