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How to execute a file within the Python interpreter?

I'm trying to execute a file with Python commands from within the interpreter.

EDIT: I'm trying to use variables and settings from that file, not to invoke a separate process.


N
Nico Schlömer

Several ways.

From the shell python someFile.py

From inside IDLE, hit F5.

If you're typing interactively, try this (Python3): >>> exec(open("filename.py").read())

For Python 2: >>> variables= {} >>> execfile( "someFile.py", variables ) >>> print variables # globals from the someFile module


is there any way to provide stdin from a file like using < to the executing script with in the execfile().? @s-lott
@pzkpfw python can point to any version of python. I have seen environments with only python v3 where python points to python3.
@pzkpfw That depends on what python executable the system finds when looking through the folders in the environment variable PATH.
c
codeape

For Python 2:

>>> execfile('filename.py')

For Python 3:

>>> exec(open("filename.py").read())
# or
>>> from pathlib import Path
>>> exec(Path("filename.py").read_text())

See the documentation. If you are using Python 3.0, see this question.

See answer by @S.Lott for an example of how you access globals from filename.py after executing it.


What does read method do? Unfortunately the official documentation site doesn't provide a clear example and explanation.
It reads the file and returns (by default) the entire contents in one single string, see e.g. w3schools page on file open.
Here are the docs for open(): docs.python.org/3/library/io.html
W
Waylon Flinn

Python 2 + Python 3

exec(open("./path/to/script.py").read(), globals())

This will execute a script and put all it's global variables in the interpreter's global scope (the normal behavior in most scripting environments).

Python 3 exec Documentation


You are my hero! I have been fighting with some really weird stuff for days where os.getcwd() said one thing, but glob("*") worked in another directory... Thank you! Thank you!
Is there a way to pass a parameter to the script? the following doesn't work: exec(open"setup.py install").read(), globals())
@ben that won't work because open directly reads the code from the script. To pass arguments, look at this answer, but instead of execfile, obviously use exec and open as shown above.
B
Bennett Talpers

Surprised I haven't seen this yet. You can execute a file and then leave the interpreter open after execution terminates using the -i option:

| foo.py |
----------
testvar = 10

def bar(bing):
  return bing*3

--------



$ python -i foo.py
>>> testvar 
10
>>> bar(6)
18

m
mikl

I'm trying to use variables and settings from that file, not to invoke a separate process.

Well, simply importing the file with import filename (minus .py, needs to be in the same directory or on your PYTHONPATH) will run the file, making its variables, functions, classes, etc. available in the filename.variable namespace.

So if you have cheddar.py with the variable spam and the function eggs – you can import them with import cheddar, access the variable with cheddar.spam and run the function by calling cheddar.eggs()

If you have code in cheddar.py that is outside a function, it will be run immediately, but building applications that runs stuff on import is going to make it hard to reuse your code. If a all possible, put everything inside functions or classes.


That won't use the global namespace, as the question requires. Use instead from filename import *
The question does not specifically mention using a global namespace, that may be what the OP wants, but it is not obvious from the question.
N
Neo li

From my view, the best way is:

import yourfile

and after modifying yourfile.py

reload(yourfile)   

or in python3:

import imp; 
imp.reload(yourfile)

but this will make the function and classes looks like that: yourfile.function1, yourfile.class1.....

If you cannot accept those, the finally solution is:

reload(yourfile)
from yourfile import *

yep... this seems to be the best way... THX! but... reload isn't working for me... i'm in Python 3.9.5... any ideas???
@ZEE , I'm using python 3.8.5, I can use: from importlib import reload. It looks like the imp has been merged to the importlib
S
Shital Shah

Just do,

from my_file import *

Make sure not to add .py extension. If your .py file in subdirectory use,

from my_dir.my_file import *

c
carlos e orozco

I am not an expert but this is what I noticed:

if your code is mycode.py for instance, and you type just 'import mycode', Python will execute it but it will not make all your variables available to the interpreter. I found that you should type actually 'from mycode import *' if you want to make all variables available to the interpreter.


Plus, it should be a comment, not an answer.
P
Prashant Gonga

For Python 3:

>>> exec(open("helloworld.py").read())

Make sure that you're in the correct directory before running the command.

To run a file from a different directory, you can use the below command:

with open ("C:\\Users\\UserName\\SomeFolder\\helloworld.py", "r") as file:
    exec(file.read())

j
jhoepken

For python3 use either with xxxx = name of yourfile.

exec(open('./xxxx.py').read())

K
Ken Seehart

Supposing you desire the following features:

Source file behaves properly in your debugger (filename shows in stack, etc) __name__ == '__main__' is True so scripts behave properly as scripts.

The exec(open('foo.py').read()) fails feature 1 The import foo strategy fails feature 2

To get both, you need this:

    source = open(filename).read()
    code = compile(source, filename, 'exec')
    exec(code)

b
bluevariant
python -c "exec(open('main.py').read())"