I'm attempting to launch a local html file from python in the default browser (right now my default is Google Chrome if I double-click on a .html file, Chrome launches.)
When I use python's webbrowser.open()
, IE launches instead, with a blank address bar.
Python 2.7.1 (r271:86832, Nov 27 2010, 17:19:03) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import webbrowser
>&开发者_JS百科gt;> filename = 'test.html'
>>> webbrowser.open('file://'+filename)
True
>>> print(webbrowser.get().__class__.__name__)
WindowsDefault
I've checked my default programs and they look correct. I'm on Win 7 SP1. Why is Chrome not launching?
Update: The code will be running on unknown OS's and machines, so hardcoding or registering browsers or path updates are not options. I'm thinking that parsing the url for file://
and then doing an os.path.exists
check and os.path.realpath
might be the answer.
My main issue was a bad URL by attempting prepend file://
to a relative path. It can be fixed with this:
webbrowser.open('file://' + os.path.realpath(filename))
Using webbrowser.open
will try multiple methods until one "succeeds", which is a loose definition.
The WindowsDefault
class calls os.startfile()
which fails and returns False
. I can verify that by entering the URL in the windows run command and seeing an error message rather than a browser.
Both GenericBrowser
and BackgroundBrowser
will call subprocess.Popen()
with an exe which will succeed, even with a bad URL, and return True
. IE gives no indication of the issue, all other browsers have a nice messages saying they can't find the file.
GenericBrowser
is set by the environment variableBROWSER
and is first.WindowsDefault
is second.BackgroundBrowser
is last and includes the fall back IE if nothing else works.
Here is my original setup:
>>> import webbrowser
>>> webbrowser._tryorder
['windows-default',
'C:\\Program Files\\Internet Explorer\\IEXPLORE.EXE']
>>> webbrowser._browsers.items()
[('windows-default', [<class 'webbrowser.WindowsDefault'>, None]),
('c:\\program files\\internet explorer\\iexplore.exe', [None, <webbrowser.BackgroundBrowser object at 0x00000000022E3898>])]
>>>
Here is my setup after modifiying the environment variables:
C:>path=C:\Program Files (x86)\Mozilla Firefox;%path%
C:>set BROWSER=C:\Users\Scott\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe
C:>python
Python 2.7.1 (r271:86832, Nov 27 2010, 17:19:03) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import webbrowser
>>> webbrowser._tryorder
['C:\\Users\\Scott\\AppData\\Local\\Google\\Chrome\\Application\\chrome.exe',
'windows-default',
'firefox',
'C:\\Program Files\\Internet Explorer\\IEXPLORE.EXE']
>>> webbrowser._browsers.items()
[('windows-default', [<class 'webbrowser.WindowsDefault'>, None]),
('c:\\program files\\internet explorer\\iexplore.exe',[None, <webbrowser.BackgroundBrowser object at 0x000000000235E828>]),
('firefox', [None, <webbrowser.BackgroundBrowser object at 0x000000000235E780>]),
('c:\\users\\scott\\appdata\\local\\google\\chrome\\application\\chrome.exe', [None, <webbrowser.GenericBrowser object at 0x000000000235E8D0>])]
>>>
The webbrowser._tryorder
gives the list of browsers tried. Registering chrome or adding a BROWSER env var or modifiying my path all would have gotten me the correct browser with a better error message.
Thanks for the help guys, I couldn't have solved this without your ideas.
You can use get(name)
to use a specific browser.
You'll need to register the Chrome webbrowser, as it doesn't seem to be one of the predefined browser types, and then you should be able to do this:
webbrowser.get('chrome').open('http://www.google.com')
Update:
Actually, you might be able to just one of the following:
webbrowser.get('windows-default').open('http://www.google.com')
webbrowser.get('macosx').open('http://www.google.com')
The docs show no predefined defaults for Linux.
This opened a new Chrome tab for me, and it's still OS-independent:
webbrowser.get().open('http://www.google.com')
What's odd is that without the get()
call, it still uses IE. This looks like a bug with a simple workaround.
Using Windows 10, in short, everything that does not include a full URL in the https://example.com
format is opened in IE for me. For example, if I say
webbrowser.open("https://www.example.com")
it will open a new tab in Chrome, while
webbrowser.open("example.com")
will open IE. Any .get()
will cause it to not open a browser at all.
Kind of weird behaviour, but I can see that this is a complex thing do implement and likely the OS is to blame for this behavior.
The webbrowser
module is supposed to use the default browser, so this might be a bug. On the other hand, use this explanation from the docs to troubleshoot your problem:
If the environment variable BROWSER exists, it is interpreted to override the platform default list of browsers, as a os.pathsep-separated list of browsers to try in order. When the value of a list part contains the string %s, then it is interpreted as a literal browser command line to be used with the argument URL substituted for %s; if the part does not contain %s, it is simply interpreted as the name of the browser to launch.
Looking at the module source code, it first tries to use the Windows default browser but if it doesn't work, it searches for common browser names that are commands, ie. that are in the PATH variable. Try adding the location of your web browser to your PATH.
I have the same problem with firefox. http://www.google.com is opened in ff while file:///test.html is opened in IE.
webbrowser doc says:
Note that on some platforms, trying to open a filename using this function, may work and start the operating system’s associated program. However, this is neither supported nor portable.
What worked for me with Python 3.6, Windows 10, was using the register()
function with BackgroundBrowser
, to sign in my desired browser:
import webbrowser
# Register your preferable browser
browser_path = 'C:/path/to/opera.exe'
webbrowser.register('opera', None, webbrowser.BackgroundBrowser(browser_path))
# Get an instance and launch your file
browser = webbrowser.get('opera')
browser.open('html_file')
Bonus observation -
webbrowser also has a GenericBrowser
class.
Looking at the source, seems BackgroundBrowser
uses start_new_session
when calling subprocess.Popen()
, whereas GenericBrowser
does not.
I'm not aware of that flag's exact functionality.
Practically however, using BackgroundBrowser
switches to the browser window, while GenericBrowser
just opens the tab, but doesn't switch.
This problem appears for me only with file:///
protocol URLs, which are probably not registered to chrome, so os.startfile() (which is the first thing webbrowser.open tries on Windows) opens them in Internet Explorer. I don't think putting your other browser in the PATH will help, since os.startfile() still gets invoked before even trying the browsers in the path.
What you can do, is to check the default browser for http://
in the registry (for instance, by checking the registry key HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\http\shell\open\command
) and use that one for file:///
URLs. Not pretty, but it should work.
import _winreg
import webbrowser
import shlex
import subprocess
def win_browser_open(url):
if url.startswith('file:///'):
browser = _winreg.QueryValue(_winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, r'http\shell\open\command')
browser = browser.replace('%1', url)
subprocess.Popen(shlex.split(browser))
else:
webbrowser.open(url)
Use this:
import webbrowser
webbrowser.get('windows-default').open('http://www.google.com')
since all answers did not solve this/my issue, this way worked for me... (windows)
commands needs to be in a list, not in a single string! (in this case, "start", "filepath"), also shell needs to be True (windows)
import subprocess
subprocess.Popen(['start', 'C:/Users/User/Desktop/convert_report.html'], shell=True)
It seems that webbrowser module couldn't find filename in cwd because you opened the program by shortcut or terminal, so cwd is different from the program's directory.
In that case, you have to convert the path into the absolute path of the program's directory when giving a path to webbrowser.open
function.
The program's path is stored as __file__
global constant.
You can fix like that:
webbrowser.open(os.path.join(__file__, '..', filename))
I fixed the same problem by this solution.
Add a BROWSER variable to your system variables and put path of your default browser.
I just had the same issue of web pages suddenly opening with Internet Explorer, which only started after installing Visual Studio 2017. My guess is that VS2017 installed its own version of IE.
My program was opening websites using webbrowser.open(url)
, but I had stripped the 'https://' protocol from the beginning of each URL. Now, by making sure that all URLs have the 'https://' protocol at the beginning, the issue goes away and the pages are once again opened in Chrome (my Windows default browser).
精彩评论