| #!/usr/bin/env pwsh |
| |
| # See ./x for why these scripts exist. |
| |
| $xpy = Join-Path $PSScriptRoot x.py |
| # Start-Process for some reason splits arguments on spaces. (Isn't powershell supposed to be simpler than bash?) |
| # Double-quote all the arguments so it doesn't do that. |
| $xpy_args = @("""$xpy""") |
| foreach ($arg in $args) { |
| $xpy_args += """$arg""" |
| } |
| |
| function Get-Application($app) { |
| return Get-Command $app -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue -CommandType Application |
| } |
| |
| function Invoke-Application($application, $arguments) { |
| $process = Start-Process -NoNewWindow -PassThru $application $arguments |
| $process.WaitForExit() |
| Exit $process.ExitCode |
| } |
| |
| foreach ($python in "py", "python3", "python", "python2") { |
| # NOTE: this only tests that the command exists in PATH, not that it's actually |
| # executable. The latter is not possible in a portable way, see |
| # https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/12625. |
| if (Get-Application $python) { |
| if ($python -eq "py") { |
| # Use python3, not python2 |
| $xpy_args = @("-3") + $xpy_args |
| } |
| Invoke-Application $python $xpy_args |
| } |
| } |
| |
| $found = (Get-Application "python*" | Where-Object {$_.name -match '^python[2-3]\.[0-9]+(\.exe)?$'}) |
| if (($null -ne $found) -and ($found.Length -ge 1)) { |
| $python = $found[0] |
| Invoke-Application $python $xpy_args |
| } |
| |
| Write-Error "${PSCommandPath}: error: did not find python installed" |
| Exit 1 |