On 9/15/06, Will Shattuck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 9/14/06, Simon Brunning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > To open a web browser from within a python program, you want something like: > > > > import webbrowser > > webbrowser.open('www.google.com') > > > > I learned something tonight :) I only have 5 or 10 minutes here and > there to do any learning with python. So when I saw this my interest > was raised. So I started IDLE, and tried it out. It didn't work as > above so, I looked for the python module to make sure I was typing > everything correctly. The only thing I missed was that there should > be double quotes instead of single quotes. Why, I don't know yet as > I'm not that far, but it kind of makes sense from my dabbling with > programming over the last 5 years. > > import webbrowser > webbrowser.open("www.google.com")
I think you must have had some other issue. In Python, string literals can be delimited by either singe or double quotes - the resulting string is identical. (The difference is that in a single quoted strung, you can use double quote characters without quoting, and vice-versa. There's yet more to sting literals that this - raw stings, triple-quoted strings, unicode strings - see <http://docs.python.org/ref/strings.html> for details.) -- Cheers, Simon B, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.brunningonline.net/simon/blog/ _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor