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Full message appended at end for context.

Adam Hendry writes:

 > Although PEP 394 is geared towards Linux users, those unfamiliar
 > with Linux don't know what env is or what it does.

env(1) is not Linux-specific.  It a POSIX 1 standard utility
(presumably later versions of POSIX, as well).  If env is not
available on other OSes supported by Python, we should just say so.
There's no need to add a ton of explanation of what it does, just
refer to the man page.

 > Guido said I should post this on python-dev, but I'm still waiting
 > for access.

It's not clear whether you have actually posted.  FYI, once you have
subscribed to the list, you can post.  As a new member, for spam
control your early messages are moderated, but that only imposes a few
hours delay.  Once it's confirmed you're a real Python developer
(often at the first message), the moderation hold is removed and you
can post freely, and will be distributed in a timely fashion.

Regards,
Steve

Full post follows.

 > ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Adam Hendry writes:
 > Dear pythonistas,
 > 
 > I was wondering if we could add a clarification to PEP 394? I'm trying to
 > get some visibility on this.
 > 
 > There's a bullet in the PEP that states:
 > 
 > *For scripts that are only expected to be run in an activated virtual
 > environment, shebang lines can be written as #!/usr/bin/env python, as this
 > instructs the script to respect the active virtual environment.*
 > 
 > Could we clarify the following?
 > 
 > 
 >    - env is a system binary in /usr/bin available in most Linux distros
 >    that searches $PATH for strings containing the provided argument and
 >    returns the first instance it finds. In the above syntax, env will
 >    search for the first instance of python in $PATH and return it.
 >    -
 > 
 >    The shebang #! /usr/bin/env python works equally well in Linux when a
 >    script is to be run from within an activated virtual environment or when a
 >    default python installation is to be used and it is uncertain whether the
 >    python interpreter exists in /bin , /usr/bin , /usr/local/bin, or
 >    another custom path.
 >    -
 > 
 >    Since python may be an alias for python2 or python3 (typically, it is an
 >    alias for python2), the developer may choose to be specific and use the
 >    shebang #!/usr/bin/env python3 where desired. The Windows py
 >    launcher also accepts this shebang and searches the application directory,
 >    current directory, system directories, and PATH for “python.exe”.
 >    However, note that using python3 instead of python will not work as
 >    expected because it will instead use the preferred version of python 3.x
 >    that's installed and not look through directories.
 > 
 > Although PEP 394 is geared towards Linux users, those unfamiliar with Linux
 > don't know what env is or what it does. I've posted this issue here
 > <https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-394-clarify-bullet-for-usr-bin-env-python/7953>
 > and
 > give some more information. Guido said I should post this on python-dev,
 > but I'm still waiting for access.
 > 
 > Does anyone have any thoughts?
 > 
 > Thank you,
 > Adam Hendry
 > 
 > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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