Chris Rebert wrote:
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:56 AM, vsoler <vicente.so...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 16, 8:45 pm, Chris Rebert <c...@rebertia.com> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:36 AM, vsoler <vicente.so...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 16, 2:35 am, "Gabriel Genellina" <gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar>
wrote:
En Sun, 15 Nov 2009 09:04:06 -0300, vsoler <vicente.so...@gmail.com>
escribió:
Ever since I installed my Python 2.6 interpreter (I use IDLE), I've
been saving my
*.py files in the C:\Program Files\Python26 directory, which is the
default directory for such files in my system.
However, I have realised that the above is not the best practice.
Therefore I created the C:\Program Files\Python26\test directory and I
want it to be my default directory for saving *.py files, importing
modules, etc.
This is *not* a good place either. Non-privileged users should not have
write permission in the C:\Program Files directory.
I'd like to do something like the DOS equivalent of   "CD test" but I
do not know kow to do it.
I am currently doing something really awful: I open a *.py file in the
test subdirectory, I run it with the F5 key and it works! but I am
doing really something stupid.
"it works!" What's the problem then?
How should I proceed, if I want to proceed properly?
Sorry but I don't even see your problem. You can save your .py files
anywhere you like...
When I enter IDLE, I'd like to say at the prompt: "my current
directory is...  ...test" and then be able to run a module in that
directory. This is what my problem is!!!
1. File -> Open
2. Navigate to file and choose it
3. Press F5
Say that you wanted to import a file in the test directory after just
entering IDLE. How would you do it?

import sys
sys.path.insert(0, "C:/path/to/test/dir/here")
import something_in_test_dir

Cheers,
Chris
--
http://blog.rebertia.com

Change directory to the test-directory
Then run idle


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