On Jan 27, 2010, at 2:28 AM, Glynn Clements wrote:
> > Michael Barton wrote: > >> Some time back, I asked how users could create a python script that runs >> under GRASS for windows. At the time, the answer was more or less: 'with >> great difficulty, if even possible'. There have been quite a few changes >> in the Windows builds over the past month or so and I am wondering if >> the answer is more optimistic now. > > The problem is that g.parser re-executes the script via $GRASS_SH, > which won't work for anything other than shell scripts. That hasn't > changed. > Thanks for the update. This is unfortunate and oddly ironic, since one of the rationales for the move to Python is that shell scripts must be run on Windows under a *nix emulator like msys, while Python can run native. Given what you say, why do Python scripts run on other platforms? > One solution is to merge the support for the -s switch from 7.0. What does the -s switch do? Michael > > -- > Glynn Clements <[email protected]> ____________________ C. Michael Barton Director, Center for Social Dynamics & Complexity Professor of Anthropology, School of Human Evolution & Social Change Arizona State University voice: 480-965-6262 (SHESC), 480-727-9746 (CSDC) fax: 480-965-7671 SHESC), 480-727-0709 (CSDC) www: www.public.asu.edu/~cmbarton, http://csdc.asu.edu _______________________________________________ grass-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-dev
