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author | R David Murray <rdmurray@bitdance.com> | 2013-12-13 17:29:29 (GMT) |
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committer | R David Murray <rdmurray@bitdance.com> | 2013-12-13 17:29:29 (GMT) |
commit | d913d9d54e6156a6998ef1f7009cc9ba8142d8a4 (patch) | |
tree | 17c1ef9d2b7ed181f7c678446be3cf9578a9a81a /Doc/faq | |
parent | c9362cf86ae302e89207dff7206b1c6bba413e33 (diff) | |
download | cpython-d913d9d54e6156a6998ef1f7009cc9ba8142d8a4.zip cpython-d913d9d54e6156a6998ef1f7009cc9ba8142d8a4.tar.gz cpython-d913d9d54e6156a6998ef1f7009cc9ba8142d8a4.tar.bz2 |
#18036: update .pyc FAQ entry in light of PEP 3147.
Initial patch by Phil Connell.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/faq')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/faq/programming.rst | 45 |
1 files changed, 27 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/faq/programming.rst b/Doc/faq/programming.rst index 887f0b4..42e55d6 100644 --- a/Doc/faq/programming.rst +++ b/Doc/faq/programming.rst @@ -1607,26 +1607,34 @@ Modules How do I create a .pyc file? ---------------------------- -When a module is imported for the first time (or when the source is more recent -than the current compiled file) a ``.pyc`` file containing the compiled code -should be created in the same directory as the ``.py`` file. - -One reason that a ``.pyc`` file may not be created is permissions problems with -the directory. This can happen, for example, if you develop as one user but run -as another, such as if you are testing with a web server. Creation of a .pyc -file is automatic if you're importing a module and Python has the ability -(permissions, free space, etc...) to write the compiled module back to the -directory. +When a module is imported for the first time (or when the source file has +changed since the current compiled file was created) a ``.pyc`` file containing +the compiled code should be created in a ``__pycache__`` subdirectory of the +directory containing the ``.py`` file. The ``.pyc`` file will have a +filename that starts with the same name as the ``.py`` file, and ends with +``.pyc``, with a middle component that depends on the particular ``python`` +binary that created it. (See :pep:`3147` for details.) + +One reason that a ``.pyc`` file may not be created is a permissions problem +with the directory containing the source file, meaning that the ``__pycache__`` +subdirectory cannot be created. This can happen, for example, if you develop as +one user but run as another, such as if you are testing with a web server. + +Unless the :envvar:`PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE` environment variable is set, +creation of a .pyc file is automatic if you're importing a module and Python +has the ability (permissions, free space, etc...) to create a ``__pycache__`` +subdirectory and write the compiled module to that subdirectory. Running Python on a top level script is not considered an import and no ``.pyc`` will be created. For example, if you have a top-level module -``foo.py`` that imports another module ``xyz.py``, when you run ``foo``, -``xyz.pyc`` will be created since ``xyz`` is imported, but no ``foo.pyc`` file -will be created since ``foo.py`` isn't being imported. +``foo.py`` that imports another module ``xyz.py``, when you run ``foo`` (by +typing ``python foo.py`` as a shell command), a ``.pyc`` will be created for +``xyz`` because ``xyz`` is imported, but no ``.pyc`` file will be created for +``foo`` since ``foo.py`` isn't being imported. -If you need to create ``foo.pyc`` -- that is, to create a ``.pyc`` file for a module -that is not imported -- you can, using the :mod:`py_compile` and -:mod:`compileall` modules. +If you need to create a ``.pyc`` file for ``foo`` -- that is, to create a +``.pyc`` file for a module that is not imported -- you can, using the +:mod:`py_compile` and :mod:`compileall` modules. The :mod:`py_compile` module can manually compile any module. One way is to use the ``compile()`` function in that module interactively:: @@ -1634,8 +1642,9 @@ the ``compile()`` function in that module interactively:: >>> import py_compile >>> py_compile.compile('foo.py') # doctest: +SKIP -This will write the ``.pyc`` to the same location as ``foo.py`` (or you can -override that with the optional parameter ``cfile``). +This will write the ``.pyc`` to a ``__pycache__`` subdirectory in the same +location as ``foo.py`` (or you can override that with the optional parameter +``cfile``). You can also automatically compile all files in a directory or directories using the :mod:`compileall` module. You can do it from the shell prompt by running |