Alternative To Execfile In Python 3?
Answer :
The 2to3
script replaces
execfile(filename, globals, locals)
by
exec(compile(open(filename, "rb").read(), filename, 'exec'), globals, locals)
This seems to be the official recommendation. You may want to use a with
block to ensure that the file is promptly closed again:
with open(filename, "rb") as source_file: code = compile(source_file.read(), filename, "exec") exec(code, globals, locals)
You can omit the globals
and locals
arguments to execute the file in the current scope, or use exec(code, {})
to use a new temporary dictionary as both the globals and locals dictionary, effectively executing the file in a new temporary scope.
execfile(filename)
can be replaced with
exec(open(filename).read())
which works in all versions of Python
Newer versions of Python will warn you that you didn't close that file, so then you can do this is you want to get rid of that warning:
with open(filename) as infile: exec(infile.read())
But really, if you care about closing files, you should care enough to not use exec
in the first place.
In Python3.x this is the closest thing I could come up with to executing a file directly, that matches running python /path/to/somefile.py
.
Notes:
- Uses binary reading to avoid encoding issues
- Garenteed to close the file (Python3.x warns about this)
- defines
__main__
, some scripts depend on this to check if they are loading as a module or not for eg.if __name__ == "__main__"
- setting
__file__
is nicer for exception messages and some scripts use__file__
to get the paths of other files relative to them.
def exec_full(filepath): global_namespace = { "__file__": filepath, "__name__": "__main__", } with open(filepath, 'rb') as file: exec(compile(file.read(), filepath, 'exec'), global_namespace) # Execute the file. exec_full("/path/to/somefile.py")
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