python - an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming
language
python [ -B ] [ -b ] [ -d ] [
-E ] [ -h ] [ -i ] [ -I ]
[ -m module-name ] [ -q ] [ -R ] [ -O ] [
-OO ] [ -P ] [ -s ] [ -S ] [ -u ]
[ -v ] [ -V ] [ -W argument ] [ -x ] [
-X option ] [ -? ]
[ --check-hash-based-pycs default | always |
never ]
[ --help ] [ --help-env ] [ --help-xoptions ] [
--help-all ]
[ -c command | script | - ] [ arguments ]
Python is an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming
language that combines remarkable power with very clear syntax. For an
introduction to programming in Python, see the Python Tutorial. The Python
Library Reference documents built-in and standard types, constants,
functions and modules. Finally, the Python Reference Manual describes the
syntax and semantics of the core language in (perhaps too) much detail.
(These documents may be located via the INTERNET RESOURCES below;
they may be installed on your system as well.)
Python's basic power can be extended with your own modules written
in C or C++. On most systems such modules may be dynamically loaded. Python
is also adaptable as an extension language for existing applications. See
the internal documentation for hints.
Documentation for installed Python modules and packages can be
viewed by running the pydoc program.
- -B
- Don't write .pyc files on import. See also
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE.
- -b
- Issue warnings about str(bytes_instance), str(bytearray_instance) and
comparing bytes/bytearray with str. (-bb: issue errors)
- -c command
- Specify the command to execute (see next section). This terminates the
option list (following options are passed as arguments to the
command).
- --check-hash-based-pycs
mode
- Configure how Python evaluates the up-to-dateness of hash-based .pyc
files.
- -d
- Turn on parser debugging output (for expert only, depending on compilation
options).
- -E
- Ignore environment variables like PYTHONPATH and PYTHONHOME that modify
the behavior of the interpreter.
- -h , -? , --help
- Prints the usage for the interpreter executable and exits.
- --help-env
- Prints help about Python-specific environment variables and exits.
- --help-xoptions
- Prints help about implementation-specific -X options and
exits.
- --help-all
- Prints complete usage information and exits.
- -i
- When a script is passed as first argument or the -c option is used,
enter interactive mode after executing the script or the command. It does
not read the $PYTHONSTARTUP file. This can be useful to inspect global
variables or a stack trace when a script raises an exception.
- -I
- Run Python in isolated mode. This also implies -E, -P and
-s. In isolated mode sys.path contains neither the script's
directory nor the user's site-packages directory. All PYTHON* environment
variables are ignored, too. Further restrictions may be imposed to prevent
the user from injecting malicious code.
- -m
module-name
- Searches sys.path for the named module and runs the corresponding
.py file as a script. This terminates the option list (following
options are passed as arguments to the module).
- -O
- Remove assert statements and any code conditional on the value of
__debug__; augment the filename for compiled (bytecode) files by adding
.opt-1 before the .pyc extension.
- -OO
- Do -O and also discard docstrings; change the filename for compiled
(bytecode) files by adding .opt-2 before the .pyc extension.
- -P
- Don't automatically prepend a potentially unsafe path to sys.path
such as the current directory, the script's directory or an empty string.
See also the PYTHONSAFEPATH environment variable.
- -q
- Do not print the version and copyright messages. These messages are also
suppressed in non-interactive mode.
- -R
- Turn on hash randomization. This option only has an effect if the
PYTHONHASHSEED environment variable is set to 0, since hash
randomization is enabled by default.
- -s
- Don't add user site directory to sys.path.
- -S
- Disable the import of the module site and the site-dependent
manipulations of sys.path that it entails. Also disable these
manipulations if site is explicitly imported later.
- -u
- Force the stdout and stderr streams to be unbuffered. This option has no
effect on the stdin stream.
- -v
- Print a message each time a module is initialized, showing the place
(filename or built-in module) from which it is loaded. When given twice,
print a message for each file that is checked for when searching for a
module. Also provides information on module cleanup at exit.
- -V , --version
- Prints the Python version number of the executable and exits. When given
twice, print more information about the build.
- -W argument
- Warning control. Python's warning machinery by default prints warning
messages to sys.stderr.
The simplest settings apply a particular action
unconditionally to all warnings emitted by a process (even those that
are otherwise ignored by default):
-Wdefault # Warn once per call location
-Werror # Convert to exceptions
-Walways # Warn every time
-Wall # Same as -Walways
-Wmodule # Warn once per calling module
-Wonce # Warn once per Python process
-Wignore # Never warn
The action names can be abbreviated as desired and the
interpreter will resolve them to the appropriate action name. For
example, -Wi is the same as -Wignore .
The full form of argument is:
action:message:category:module:lineno
Empty fields match all values; trailing empty fields may be
omitted. For example -W ignore::DeprecationWarning ignores all
DeprecationWarning warnings.
The action field is as explained above but only applies
to warnings that match the remaining fields.
The message field must match the whole printed warning
message; this match is case-insensitive.
The category field matches the warning category (ex:
"DeprecationWarning"). This must be a class name; the match
test whether the actual warning category of the message is a subclass of
the specified warning category.
The module field matches the (fully-qualified) module
name; this match is case-sensitive.
The lineno field matches the line number, where zero
matches all line numbers and is thus equivalent to an omitted line
number.
Multiple -W options can be given; when a warning
matches more than one option, the action for the last matching option is
performed. Invalid -W options are ignored (though, a warning
message is printed about invalid options when the first warning is
issued).
Warnings can also be controlled using the
PYTHONWARNINGS environment variable and from within a Python
program using the warnings module. For example, the
warnings.filterwarnings() function can be used to use a regular
expression on the warning message.
- -X option
- Set implementation-specific option. The following options are available:
-X cpu_count=N: override the return value of
os.cpu_count();
-X cpu_count=default cancels overriding; also
PYTHON_CPU_COUNT
-X dev: enable CPython's "development mode", introducing
additional
runtime checks which are too expensive to be enabled by default. It
will not be more verbose than the default if the code is correct: new
warnings are only emitted when an issue is detected. Effect of the
developer mode:
* Add default warning filter, as -W default
* Install debug hooks on memory allocators: see the
PyMem_SetupDebugHooks() C function
* Enable the faulthandler module to dump the Python traceback on a
crash
* Enable asyncio debug mode
* Set the dev_mode attribute of sys.flags to True
* io.IOBase destructor logs close() exceptions
-X importtime: show how long each import takes. It shows module
name,
cumulative time (including nested imports) and self time (excluding
nested imports). Note that its output may be broken in multi-threaded
application. Typical usage is
python3 -X importtime -c 'import asyncio'
-X faulthandler: enable faulthandler
-X frozen_modules=[on|off]: whether or not frozen
modules
should be used.
The default is "on" (or "off" if you are running a
local build).
-X gil=[0|1]: enable (1) or disable (0) the GIL;
also
PYTHON_GIL
Only available in builds configured with --disable-gil.
-X int_max_str_digits=number: limit the size of
int<->str conversions.
This helps avoid denial of service attacks when parsing untrusted data.
The default is sys.int_info.default_max_str_digits. 0 disables.
-X no_debug_ranges: disable the inclusion of the tables mapping
extra
location information (end line, start column offset and end column
offset) to every instruction in code objects. This is useful when
smaller code objects and pyc files are desired as well as suppressing
the extra visual location indicators when the interpreter displays
tracebacks.
-X perf: support the Linux "perf" profiler; also
PYTHONPERFSUPPORT=1
-X perf_jit: support the Linux "perf" profiler with
DWARF support;
also PYTHON_PERF_JIT_SUPPORT=1
-X presite=MOD: import this module before site; also
PYTHON_PRESITE
This only works on debug builds.
-X pycache_prefix=PATH: enable writing .pyc files to a
parallel
tree rooted at the given directory instead of to the code tree.
-X showrefcount: output the total reference count and number of
used
memory blocks when the program finishes or after each statement in the
interactive interpreter. This only works on debug builds
-X tracemalloc: start tracing Python memory allocations using the
tracemalloc module. By default, only the most recent frame is stored in a
traceback of a trace. Use -X tracemalloc=NFRAME to start tracing with a
traceback limit of NFRAME frames
-X utf8: enable UTF-8 mode for operating system interfaces,
overriding the default locale-aware mode. -X utf8=0 explicitly
disables UTF-8 mode (even when it would otherwise activate
automatically). See PYTHONUTF8 for more details
-X warn_default_encoding: enable opt-in EncodingWarning for
'encoding=None'
- -x
- Skip the first line of the source. This is intended for a DOS specific
hack only. Warning: the line numbers in error messages will be off by
one!
The interpreter interface resembles that of the UNIX shell: when
called with standard input connected to a tty device, it prompts for
commands and executes them until an EOF is read; when called with a file
name argument or with a file as standard input, it reads and executes a
script from that file; when called with -c command, it
executes the Python statement(s) given as command. Here
command may contain multiple statements separated by newlines.
Leading whitespace is significant in Python statements! In non-interactive
mode, the entire input is parsed before it is executed.
If available, the script name and additional arguments thereafter
are passed to the script in the Python variable sys.argv, which is a
list of strings (you must first import sys to be able to access it).
If no script name is given, sys.argv[0] is an empty string; if
-c is used, sys.argv[0] contains the string '-c'. Note
that options interpreted by the Python interpreter itself are not placed in
sys.argv.
In interactive mode, the primary prompt is `>>>'; the
second prompt (which appears when a command is not complete) is `...'. The
prompts can be changed by assignment to sys.ps1 or sys.ps2.
The interpreter quits when it reads an EOF at a prompt. When an unhandled
exception occurs, a stack trace is printed and control returns to the
primary prompt; in non-interactive mode, the interpreter exits after
printing the stack trace. The interrupt signal raises the
KeyboardInterrupt exception; other UNIX signals are not caught
(except that SIGPIPE is sometimes ignored, in favor of the IOError
exception). Error messages are written to stderr.
These are subject to difference depending on local installation
conventions; ${prefix} and ${exec_prefix} are installation-dependent and
should be interpreted as for GNU software; they may be the same. On Debian
GNU/{Hurd,Linux} the default for both is /usr.
- ${exec_prefix}/bin/python
- Recommended location of the interpreter.
${prefix}/lib/python<version>
${exec_prefix}/lib/python<version>
Recommended locations of the directories containing the
standard modules.
${prefix}/include/python<version>
${exec_prefix}/include/python<version>
Recommended locations of the directories containing the
include files needed for developing Python extensions and embedding the
interpreter.
- PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string, enable the
debug mode of the asyncio module.
- PYTHON_BASIC_REPL
- If this variable is set to any value, the interpreter will not attempt to
load the Python-based REPL that requires curses and readline, and will
instead use the traditional parser-based REPL.
- PYTHONBREAKPOINT
- If this environment variable is set to 0, it disables the default
debugger. It can be set to the callable of your debugger of choice.
- PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE
- If set to the value 0, causes the main Python command line application to
skip coercing the legacy ASCII-based C and POSIX locales to a more capable
UTF-8 based alternative.
- PYTHON_COLORS
- If this variable is set to 1, the interpreter will colorize various kinds
of output. Setting it to 0 deactivates this behavior.
- PYTHON_CPU_COUNT
- If this variable is set to a positive integer, it overrides the return
values of os.cpu_count and os.process_cpu_count.
- See also the -X cpu_count option.
- PYTHONDEBUG
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-d option. If set to an integer, it is equivalent to specifying
-d multiple times.
- PYTHONEXECUTABLE
- If this environment variable is set, sys.argv[0] will be set to its
value instead of the value got through the C runtime. Only works on Mac OS
X.
- PYTHONFAULTHANDLER
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string,
faulthandler.enable() is called at startup: install a handler for
SIGSEGV, SIGFPE, SIGABRT, SIGBUS and SIGILL signals to dump the Python
traceback.
- This is equivalent to the -X faulthandler option.
- PYTHON_FROZEN_MODULES
- If this variable is set to on or off, it determines whether
or not frozen modules are ignored by the import machinery. A value of
on means they get imported and off means they are ignored.
The default is on for non-debug builds (the normal case) and
off for debug builds.
- See also the -X frozen_modules option.
- PYTHON_GIL
- If this variable is set to 1, the global interpreter lock (GIL) will be
forced on. Setting it to 0 forces the GIL off. Only available in builds
configured with --disable-gil.
- This is equivalent to the -X gil option.
- PYTHON_HISTORY
- This environment variable can be used to set the location of a history
file (on Unix, it is ~/.python_history by default).
- PYTHONNODEBUGRANGES
- If this variable is set, it disables the inclusion of the tables mapping
extra location information (end line, start column offset and end column
offset) to every instruction in code objects. This is useful when smaller
code objects and pyc files are desired as well as suppressing the extra
visual location indicators when the interpreter displays tracebacks.
- PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-B option (don't try to write .pyc files).
- PYTHONDEVMODE
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string, enable Python's
"development mode", introducing additional runtime checks that
are too expensive to be enabled by default.
- This is equivalent to the -X dev option.
- PYTHONHASHSEED
- If this variable is set to "random", a random value is used to
seed the hashes of str and bytes objects.
If PYTHONHASHSEED is set to an integer value, it is used as a
fixed seed for generating the hash() of the types covered by the hash
randomization. Its purpose is to allow repeatable hashing, such as for
selftests for the interpreter itself, or to allow a cluster of python
processes to share hash values.
The integer must be a decimal number in the range
[0,4294967295]. Specifying the value 0 will disable hash
randomization.
- PYTHONHOME
- Change the location of the standard Python libraries. By default, the
libraries are searched in ${prefix}/lib/python<version> and
${exec_prefix}/lib/python<version>, where ${prefix} and
${exec_prefix} are installation-dependent directories, both defaulting to
/usr/local. When $PYTHONHOME is set to a single directory, its
value replaces both ${prefix} and ${exec_prefix}. To specify different
values for these, set $PYTHONHOME to ${prefix}:${exec_prefix}.
- PYTHONINSPECT
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-i option.
- PYTHONINTMAXSTRDIGITS
- Limit the maximum digit characters in an int value when converting from a
string and when converting an int back to a str. A value of 0 disables the
limit. Conversions to or from bases 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 are never
limited.
- This is equivalent to the -X int_max_str_digits=NUMBER
option.
- PYTHONIOENCODING
- If this is set before running the interpreter, it overrides the encoding
used for stdin/stdout/stderr, in the syntax
encodingname:errorhandler The errorhandler
part is optional and has the same meaning as in str.encode. For stderr,
the errorhandler part is ignored; the handler will always be
´backslashreplace´.
- PYTHONMALLOC
- Set the Python memory allocators and/or install debug hooks. The available
memory allocators are malloc and pymalloc. The available
debug hooks are debug, malloc_debug, and
pymalloc_debug.
- When Python is compiled in debug mode, the default is
pymalloc_debug and the debug hooks are automatically used.
Otherwise, the default is pymalloc.
- PYTHONMALLOCSTATS
- If set to a non-empty string, Python will print statistics of the pymalloc
memory allocator every time a new pymalloc object arena is created, and on
shutdown.
- This variable is ignored if the $PYTHONMALLOC environment variable
is used to force the malloc(3) allocator of the C library, or if
Python is configured without pymalloc support.
- PYTHONNOUSERSITE
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-s option (Don't add the user site directory to sys.path).
- PYTHONOPTIMIZE
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-O option. If set to an integer, it is equivalent to specifying
-O multiple times.
- PYTHONPATH
- Augments the default search path for module files. The format is the same
as the shell's $PATH: one or more directory pathnames separated by colons.
Non-existent directories are silently ignored. The default search path is
installation dependent, but generally begins with
${prefix}/lib/python<version> (see PYTHONHOME above). The default
search path is always appended to $PYTHONPATH. If a script argument is
given, the directory containing the script is inserted in the path in
front of $PYTHONPATH. The search path can be manipulated from within a
Python program as the variable sys.path.
- PYTHON_PERF_JIT_SUPPORT
- If this variable is set to a nonzero value, it enables support for the
Linux perf profiler so Python calls can be detected by it using DWARF
information. Setting to 0 disables.
- See also the -X perf_jit option.
- PYTHONPERFSUPPORT
- If this variable is set to a nonzero value, it enables support for the
Linux perf profiler so Python calls can be detected by it. Setting to 0
disables.
- See also the -X perf option.
- PYTHONPLATLIBDIR
- Override sys.platlibdir.
- PYTHONPROFILEIMPORTTIME
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string, Python will
show how long each import takes. This is exactly equivalent to setting
-X importtime on the command line.
- PYTHONPYCACHEPREFIX
- If this is set, Python will write .pyc files in a mirror directory
tree at this path, instead of in __pycache__ directories within the
source tree.
- This is equivalent to specifying the -X pycache_prefix=PATH
option.
- PYTHONSAFEPATH
- If this is set to a non-empty string, don't automatically prepend a
potentially unsafe path to sys.path such as the current directory,
the script's directory or an empty string. See also the -P
option.
- PYTHONSTARTUP
- If this is the name of a readable file, the Python commands in that file
are executed before the first prompt is displayed in interactive mode. The
file is executed in the same name space where interactive commands are
executed so that objects defined or imported in it can be used without
qualification in the interactive session. You can also change the prompts
sys.ps1 and sys.ps2 in this file.
- PYTHONTRACEMALLOC
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string, start tracing
Python memory allocations using the tracemalloc module.
- The value of the variable is the maximum number of frames stored in a
traceback of a trace. For example, PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=1 stores only
the most recent frame.
- PYTHONUNBUFFERED
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-u option.
- PYTHONUSERBASE
- Defines the user base directory, which is used to compute the path of the
user site-packages directory and installation paths for python
-m pip install --user.
- PYTHONUTF8
- If set to 1, enable the Python "UTF-8 Mode". Setting to 0
disables.
- PYTHONVERBOSE
- If this is set to a non-empty string it is equivalent to specifying the
-v option. If set to an integer, it is equivalent to specifying
-v multiple times.
- PYTHONWARNDEFAULTENCODING
- If this environment variable is set to a non-empty string, issue a
EncodingWarning when the locale-specific default encoding is
used.
- PYTHONWARNINGS
- If this is set to a comma-separated string it is equivalent to specifying
the -W option for each separate value.
Setting these variables only has an effect in a debug build of
Python, that is, if Python was configured with the --with-pydebug
build option.
- PYTHONDUMPREFS
- If this environment variable is set, Python will dump objects and
reference counts still alive after shutting down the interpreter.
- PYTHONDUMPREFSFILE
- If set, Python will dump objects and reference counts still alive after
shutting down the interpreter into a file under the path given as the
value to this environment variable.
- PYTHON_PRESITE
- If this variable is set to a module, that module will be imported early in
the interpreter lifecycle, before the site module is executed, and
before the __main__ module is created. This only works on debug
builds.
- This is equivalent to the -X presite=module option.
The Python Software Foundation: https://www.python.org/psf/
Main website: https://www.python.org/
Documentation: https://docs.python.org/
Developer resources: https://devguide.python.org/
Downloads: https://www.python.org/downloads/
Module repository: https://pypi.org/
Newsgroups: comp.lang.python, comp.lang.python.announce
Python is distributed under an Open Source license. See the file
"LICENSE" in the Python source distribution for information on
terms & conditions for accessing and otherwise using Python and for a
DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.