Something like Perl's -c flag?
Oleg Broytmann
phd at phd.pp.ru
Mon Sep 3 04:41:17 EDT 2001
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Mon Sep 3 04:41:17 EDT 2001
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Hi! On Sun, 2 Sep 2001, Magnus Lie Hetland wrote: MLH> "Oleg Broytmann" <phd at phd.pp.ru> wrote in message MLH> news:mailman.999326826.29300.python-list at python.org... MLH> > On 31 Aug 2001, Mark Atwood wrote: MLH> > MA> Does the Python interpreter have anything like Perl's -c flag, which MLH> > MA> does a static syntax and sanity check without actually running the MLH> > MA> script? MLH> > MLH> > Just compile the script. Like this: MLH> > MLH> > import sys MLH> > from py_compile import compile MLH> > MLH> > if len(sys.argv) <= 1: MLH> > sys.exit(1) MLH> > MLH> > for file in sys.argv[1:]: MLH> > compile(file) MLH> MLH> You could also use pythonc, of course. What is "pythonc"? The only pythonc I know is PythonC - current CPython implementation. Oleg. ---- Oleg Broytmann http://phd.pp.ru/ phd at phd.pp.ru Programmers don't die, they just GOSUB without RETURN.
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