Python

From Wildsong
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A few random notes on Python

Geoprocessing

ESRI

See also Model Builder

31-Dec-2007 update: ArcGIS Desktop 9.3 includes a new wrapper that makes working with ArcObjects a lot easier. I am using ActiveState 2.4.3 with it with good results. It breaks if you try to move up to 2.5.1.

Old notes:

This guy seems to have slogged through a lot of development with it and collected useful notes: http://www.ollivier.co.nz/support/python.shtm

I can add a new one to his list. I was getting error messages on setting gp.workspace = 'foo' where foo is a valid path. It's because the gp object was hanging around in pythonwin's memory. You should be able to say 'del gp' but I gave up and restarted pythonwin to fix it.

When working with ArcToolbox 9.1 and Python 2.1 I have been having lots of crashes in PythonWin. Using it on a computer with ActiveState 2.4.3 I have not been experiencing the same problems. I am going to try installing 2.4x without removing 2.1 so I can fall back on it... I followed the instructions above.

It still crashes. Oh joy. It does not even crash faster.

Open source

How about geoprocessing with OGR/GDAL? Will that do it for me?

Getting Python 2.4 and GDAL without disrupting the ESRI installation... See also Howard Butler's site.

FWtools installs a GUI called OpenEV_FW and a shell environment. It comes with python 2.3.4 which is old. I think Frank does this because it's stable and test with his tools. Going to a newer version means the DLL won't work so you'd need to compile your own.

23-Aug-2006 Python+OGR probably not worth messing with right now. From the OGR site: The Python API isn't really well documented at this time, but parallels the C/C++ APIs. The interface classes can be browsed in the pymod/ogr.py (simple features) and pymod/osr.py (coordinate systems) python modules. The pymod/samples/assemblepoly.py sample script is one demonstration of using the python API.

Links

Python on Windows CE (and Pocket PC)

Links into official python docs

TUTORIAL http://docs.python.org/tut/tut.html

GENERAL http://docs.python.org/

STRINGS http://docs.python.org/lib/string-methods.html

http://diveintopython.org/