On 04:02 am, pje at telecommunity.com wrote: >At 08:52 AM 4/10/2011 +1000, Ben Finney wrote: >>This is an often-overlooked case, I think. The unspoken assumption is >>often that ``setup.py`` is a suitable place for the overall version >>string, but this is not the case when that string must be read by >>non-Python programs. > >If you haven't used the distutils a lot, you might not realize that you >can do this: > >$ python setup.py --version >0.6c12 > >(The --name option also works, and they can be used together -- the >answers will be on two separate lines.) This only works as long as setup.py is around - which it typically no longer is after installation is complete. And though it's common and acceptable enough to launch a child process in a shell script in order to get some piece of information, it isn't as pleasant in a Python program. Can you get this version information out of setup.py without running a child process and without monkey-patching sys.argv and sys.stdout? Jean-Paul
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