external file closed
Jordan
jordan.taylor2 at gmail.com
Tue Oct 17 14:41:22 EDT 2006
I think the win32all extension includes the findwindow() fuction, so
you could make a loop that looks for the window name (or class if it
takes that) of the pdf. You can also loop through a list of running
processes looking for whatever the process name is. Note that both of
these have serious loopholes, such as if there is more than one pdf
open.
Cheers,
Jordan
utabintarbo wrote:
> Jerry wrote:
> > On Oct 17, 12:43 pm, "kilnhead" <bumt... at gmail.com> wrote:
> > > I am opening a file using os.start('myfile.pdf') from python. How can I
> > > know when the user has closed the file so I can delete it? Thanks.
> >
> > I assume you mean os.startfile. There is no way to do this directly.
> > os.startfile simply hands off the call to the OS and doesn't provide
> > anything to track anything after that. Since you won't know what
> > program handled the file association, you couldn't watch for an
> > instance of that to start up and detect when it exits. Even if you
> > could, it wouldn't be reliable as in the case of PDF's and Adobe
> > Acrobat Reader, the user could close the document, but not the
> > application, so your script would never delete the file in question.
> >
> > If anyone can think of a way to do this, it would be interesting to see
> > how it's done.
> >
> > --
> > Jerry
>
> os.system('myfile.pdf') will give return code upon closing. This can
> also be done using the subprocess module with poll().
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