I'm just learning Python, so bear with. I was messing around with the webbrowser module and decided it was pretty cool to have the browser open a URL from within a python script, so I wrote a short script to open a local file the same way, using the script file as an example target:
# browser-test.py import webbrowser import sys pathname = sys.argv[0] protocol = 'file://' url = protocol + pathname webbrowser.open(url) And what I got, instead of a browser window with the text of my script, was a sequence of DOS windows popping up and disappearing. Apparently that's because either Windows (XP SP2) or the browser (Firefox) was interpreting the .py file extension and running Python to execute it. So is this a known (mis)feature, and will it happen if I chance to use webbrowser.open() on a remote .py file? Because if so, it's a king-hell security hole. --Blair -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list