Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Programming guidelines and style Post 303001740 by API on Thursday 10th of August 2017 08:45:55 AM
Old 08-10-2017
Hi drl,

thanks for your explanations... Smilie

Shell programming is only for small Problems, for further things I would also take Python... but sometimes it is more comfortable to do some things with the os-shell than to write a Python-Script - sometimes I Need it in an Environment where a lot of People only have know-how it Shell Scripting. Therfor its not possible to take another language...

And my question Targets to the Point, if there is - for UNIX-Shell-Scripting - something like the PEPs in Python?
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems

Guidelines For Posting Here

This area is not for technical questions. It is reserved for unregistered users who have a question or registered users who have trouble with their account. Other posts will be deleted by the moderators. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

2. What is on Your Mind?

Guidelines for Posting Here

This area is not for forum specific technical questions. Please post forum specific technical questions in the best forum, not in the lounge. However, if your idea or question is not covered clearly in a forum, please post it here. Discuss whatever is on your mind. Technical topics welcome... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix Shell Scripting Guidelines

Hi, I was wondering if any of you guys have developed shell scripting guidelines for writing unix shell scripts effectively. This includes naming standards, comments, indentation, error handing after unix comands, use of exported variables, sending notifications, functions, logging etc... ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: acheepi
2 Replies

4. Programming

Building Block style programming Book

Hello to all, Here is my situation. Some time in the mid-80's I stumbled across a small white programming book - can't remember the name but it was unique in that it started right out giving instructions on creating building blocks in code as a foundation for a complete system. The book was... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jozefn
2 Replies
IDLE(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   IDLE(1)

NAME
IDLE - An Integrated DeveLopment Environment for Python SYNTAX
idle [ -dins ] [ -t title ] [ file ...] idle [ -dins ] [ -t title ] ( -c cmd | -r file ) [ arg ...] idle [ -dins ] [ -t title ] - [ arg ...] DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the idle command. This manual page was written for Debian because the original program does not have a manual page. For more information, refer to IDLE's help menu. IDLE is an Integrated DeveLopment Environment for Python. IDLE is based on Tkinter, Python's bindings to the Tk widget set. Features are 100% pure Python, multi-windows with multiple undo and Python colorizing, a Python shell window subclass, a debugger. IDLE is cross-plat- form, i.e. it works on all platforms where Tk is installed. OPTIONS
-h Print this help message and exit. -n Run IDLE without a subprocess (see Help/IDLE Help for details). The following options will override the IDLE 'settings' configuration: -e Open an edit window. -i Open a shell window. The following options imply -i and will open a shell: -c cmd Run the command in a shell, or -r file Run script from file. -d Enable the debugger. -s Run $IDLESTARTUP or $PYTHONSTARTUP before anything else. -t title Set title of shell window. A default edit window will be bypassed when -c, -r, or - are used. [arg]* and [file]* are passed to the command (-c) or script (-r) in sys.argv[1:]. EXAMPLES
idle Open an edit window or shell depending on IDLE's configuration. idle foo.py foobar.py Edit the files, also open a shell if configured to start with shell. idle -est "Baz" foo.py Run $IDLESTARTUP or $PYTHONSTARTUP, edit foo.py, and open a shell window with the title "Baz". idle -c "import sys; print sys.argv" "foo" Open a shell window and run the command, passing "-c" in sys.argv[0] and "foo" in sys.argv[1]. idle -d -s -r foo.py "Hello World" Open a shell window, run a startup script, enable the debugger, and run foo.py, passing "foo.py" in sys.argv[0] and "Hello World" in sys.argv[1]. echo "import sys; print sys.argv" | idle - "foobar" Open a shell window, run the script piped in, passing '' in sys.argv[0] and "foobar" in sys.argv[1]. SEE ALSO
python(1). AUTHORS
Various. 21 September 2004 IDLE(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:23 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy