Difference in Setup Between Windows 10 Running Python 3.9 and Windows 11 Running Python 3.10
Eryk Sun
eryksun at gmail.com
Tue May 3 17:03:43 EDT 2022
On 5/1/22, Brent Hunter <brent at brenthunter.tv> wrote:
>
> I was recently running a Windows 10 machine Python 3.9. I simply created a
> batch file titled "Start-AIG.bat" which simply contained the following:
> "pythonw AIG.py". It started a python program titled "AIG.py" and the
> Python dialog box was displayed on my screen, running all day and night. I
> set up Windows to run this batch file upon startup and it worked fine. I
> remember having to do a bunch of research before I learned that I needed to
> put "pythonw AIG.py" in the batch file as opposed to "python AIG.py".
When running a command at startup, it's best to use the full path of
the application and the full path of any files passed on the command
line. For example, run something like the following:
"path\to\pythonw.exe" "path\to\AIG.py"
This removes any dependency on the search PATH or the current working
directory. Also, the script shouldn't depend on the initial working
directory. Any files that it needs should be in a well-known location,
such as the script directory,
os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)).
Also, there's no need to use a batch script just to run a single
command. When you use a batch script, a visible console gets created
for CMD. It doesn't close until CMD exits, which in this case won't be
until pythonw.exe exits, unless you use `START` to run the command
without waiting. It's simpler to just run the command directly using a
shortcut (i.e. LNK file) or the task scheduler.
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