Calling External Commands

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The simplest use case is using the subprocess.call function. It accepts a list as the first argument. The first item in the list should be the external application you want to call. The other items in the list are arguments that will be passed to that application.

subprocess.call([r'C:\path\to\app.exe', 'arg1', '--flag', 'arg'])

For shell commands, set shell=True and provide the command as a string instead of a list.

subprocess.call('echo "Hello, world"', shell=True)

Note that the two command above return only the exit status of the subprocess. Moreover, pay attention when using shell=True since it provides security issues (see here).

If you want to be able to get the standard output of the subprocess, then substitute the subprocess.call with subprocess.check_output. For more advanced use, refer to this.

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Subprocess Library:
* Calling External Commands

Table Of Contents
2 Filter
3 List
7 Loops
22 Reduce
27 Classes
31 Set
42 Tuple
45 Enum
59 Subprocess Library
62 Sockets
89 urllib
92 Idioms
104 Stack
105 Profiling
109 Logging
111 os module
118 Mixins
120 ArcPy
126 Arrays
132 2to3 tool
135 Unicode
138 Neo4j
140 Curses
141 Templates
145 heapq
146 tkinter
154 Audio
155 pyglet
157 ijson
160 Flask
161 Groupby
163 pygame
165 hashlib
166 Gzip
167 ctypes
185 pyaudio
186 shelve