Hmm. >From an interactive interpreter this works for me.
import os os.system('title Jay') but the title returns to its previous value when I Ctrl-Z out of the process. If I save this as a file and run it, it seems to work without spawning a new window but resets it the title after the program finishes like above. import os os.system('title Jay') x = raw_input() You mention that the SetConsoleTitle api resets itself after the script finishes so I'm assuming that 'title' command is just calling the same api under the covers. What is your requirement specifically? I do something similar but in a different way but it might not be what you are after. I have a 'projects' directory where I keep all of my work. I have written a small python script 'p.py' that I call like this p [s|e|*] projectname the 's' is for shell the 'e' is for explorer window the '*' is for both shell and explorer If there is only one argument, I assume it is the project name and I default the other argument to 'e'. if the projectname doesn't have any wildcard characters, I append a '*' and glob my project directory with that value. if the glob call only returns a single value, I go ahead and do what was requested (open a shell or explorer window to that directory) if there is more than one value returned, I present a numbered menu of project directories that match and wait for input on which one to open. The point to all this, is that when I open a shell from p.py I use this command. os.system(r'start "%s" /D%s\%s' % (proj,directory,proj)) This spawns a new cmd window with the title of my project name. Spawning the process with the correct name from the beginning seems to do the trick. But like I said, I don't really know your exact requirements. HTH. ... jay -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list