On Sep 27, 12:24 pm, Dave Angel <da...@ieee.org> wrote: > Hacken wrote: > > On Sep 25, 6:27 pm, Dave Angel <da...@ieee.org> wrote: > > >> Hacken wrote: > > >>> I have write some python script > > >>> i want to use browser(IE or FF) to call it, an show the returns! > > >>> how to? > > >> You don't say much about your environment, nor the nature of your > >> script. So my response will be very generic. > > >> If your script writes a valid html/xml/xhtml format to stdout, then you > >> could put the script onto a web server with cgi enabled, and mark it > >> executable. Then you could enter the URL for that cgi file into your > >> browser, and see that generated web page. > > >> Interesting additional gotchas: You need rights to upload (ftp) to such > >> a server. The server needs to have an appropriate Python available, and > >> configured to permit cgi access for files with the .py extension. > >> Further, if the server is Unix, your file must be in Unix text format, > >> with a shebang line that matches the location of the appropriate version > >> of python on that particular server. > > >> DaveA > > > Thanks. > > > but,i do not want to setup a webserver, i think that is so big for > > other user. > > > i just want write my programes in python, and i use Browser to show my > > GUI, > > > can i do that?and how to? > > > thanks,waitting...... > > What I described is all I've done firsthand. But more is possible. And > I've worked on fancier setups, but somebody else did the plumbing. > > As Stephen points out, you can use webbrowser module to launch a > browser. So you could write python code to create a web page(s), write > it to a file, then launch the browser using the "file://......" > protocol. That'd be fine for displaying pages that are generated > entirely before launching the browser. But if you want the python > program to get feedback from the browser (which is usually what's meant > by using the browser for a GUI), you're going to have to simulate a > webserver. > > That can be done on a single machine using the "localhost" shortcut. I > don't know how to do it, but there is a sample in the 2.6 release of > Python, at least in the Windows version. You run it from the Start > menu->Python2.6->module docs. > > The source for the main server is in > c:\Python26\Tools\Scripts\pydocgui.pyw. (though all it does is import > pydoc.py and call it.) Now that particular program's purpose is to > generate and display docs for the python files on the system, but > presumably it's a starting place. > > Now, this is the first I've looked at this file, but at line 1967 is a > function serve(), which is commented as the web browser interface. The > function serve() probably has much of what you're interested. In > particular, it contains a few class definitions, including DocServer and > DocHandler, which send data back and forth to the browser, over the > localhost connection. > > It looks like it gets its core code from BaseHTTPServer module. > > At line 2058 is a function gui(), which is a small tkinter program that > just displays a few buttons and such. That's not what you're asking about. > > Hopefully somebody else has actually used some of this stuff, and can > elaborate. > > DaveA- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
Thaks both u guys I find a way to do my work ,but i found a basic webserver is really necessary. First,i use webbrowser,Steven recommend,to call the browser open a html file,my gui,in this html file i make a form and submit a GET request with the paraments i need second, i use BaseHTTPServer, to handle the GET request,parse the request get the paraments i need, and use these parament to finish my logic thrid, use BaseHTTPServer make a response to the browser with a formated html file with my result. It's not complex like i think,because the BaseHTTPServer is not complex Thanks DaveA,a webserver,like you said,is a necessary,&Steven, your webbrowser. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list