so yesterday I asked a question and I thought I had gotten my answer as everything seemed to work fine. I come back today to try and run my program and find nothing happens, and this time I am not getting any errors at all.
To give you an idea of things, I've been looking to incorporate a Python Script a friend made for me into a Java application that I am trying to develop. After some trial and error I finally found out about 'Jython' and used the PythonInterpreter to try and run the script.
However, upon trying to run it, I was getting an error within the Python Script. This was resolved by a suggestion a member of SO provided to change the "thisDir = getcwd()", or so I thought. Now I have no clue what could be wrong, the script works fine and does exactly what I need it to (extract all the images from the .docx files stored in its same directory) when I run it directly from the command line, so I don't know. Any ideas?
Can someone help me out here?
Java:
import org.python.core.PyException;
import org.python.util.PythonInterpreter;
public class SPImageExtractor
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws PyException
{
try
{
PythonInterpreter.initialize(System.getProperties(), System.getProperties(), new String[0]);
PythonInterpreter interp = new PythonInterpreter();
interp.execfile("C:/Documents and Settings/user/workspace/Intern Project/Proposals/Converted Proposals/Image-Extractor2.py");
}
catch(Exception e)
{
System.out.println(e.toString());
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Python:
from os import path, chdir, listdir, mkdir, gcwd
from sys import argv
from zipfile import ZipFile
from time import sleep
#A few notes -
#(1) when I do something like " _,variable = something ", that is because
#the function returns two variables, and I only need one. I don't know if it is a
#common convention to use the '_' symbol as the name for the unused variable, but
#I saw it in some guy's code in the past, and I started using it.
#(2) I use "path.join" because on unix operating systems and windows operating systems
#they use different conventions for paths like '\' vs '/'. path.join works on all operating
#systems for making paths.
#Defines what extensions to look for within the file (you can add more to this)
IMAGE_FILE_EXTENSIONS = ('.bmp', '.gif', '.jpg', '.jpeg', '.png', '.tif', '.tiff')
#Changes to the directory in which this script is contained
thisDir = gcwd()
chdir(thisDir)
#Lists all the files/folders in the directory
fileList = listdir('.')
for file in fileList:
#Checks if the item is a file (opposed to being a folder)
if path.isfile(file):
#Fetches the files extension and checks if it is .docx
_,fileExt = path.splitext(file)
if fileExt == '.docx':
#Creates directory for the images
newDirectory = path.join(thisDir, file + "-Images")
if not path.exists(newDirectory):
mkdir(newDirectory)
currentFile = open(file,"r")
for line in currentFile:
print line
sleep(5)
#Opens the file as if it is a zipfile
#Then lists the contents
try:
zipFileHandle = ZipFile(file)
nameList = zipFileHandle.namelist()
for archivedFile in nameList:
#Checks if the file extension is in the list defined above
#And if it is, it extracts the file
_,archiveExt = path.splitext(archivedFile)
if archiveExt in IMAGE_FILE_EXTENSIONS:
zipFileHandle.extract(archivedFile, newDirectory)
except:
pass
EDIT
Just made some progress, so within Eclipse, when I run the Script by itself (not being called through java) as a "Python Run" everything works fine. However, when I do a "Jython Run" the script spazzes and it will create new directories for the images, however it will not extract the images themselves.
FINAL EDIT
Man, just screw crappy Jython. I just installed python in开发者_StackOverflow中文版to my path...
Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
Process pr = rt.exec("C:\\Python27\\python.exe \"C:\\Documents and Settings\\user\\workspace\\Intern Project\\Proposals\\Converted Proposals\\ImageExtractor2.py\"");
Bam, worked perfectly.
Hope that helps someone out there.
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