import argparse import os import sys from voussoirkit import betterhelp from voussoirkit import pathclass from voussoirkit import winwhich def namedpython_argparse(args): this_python = pathclass.Path(sys.executable) base = this_python.replace_extension('').basename.split('-', 1)[0] name = args.name.strip() extension = this_python.extension.with_dot named_python = this_python.parent.with_child(f'{base}-{name}{extension}') if named_python.exists: return 0 os.link(this_python.absolute_path, named_python.absolute_path) print(named_python.absolute_path) return 0 def main(argv): parser = argparse.ArgumentParser( description=''' Because Python is interpreted, when you look at the task manager / process list you'll see that every running python instance has the same name, python.exe. This script helps you name the executables so they stand out. For the time being this script doesn't automatically call your new exe, you have to write a second command to actually run it. I tried using subprocess.Popen to spawn the new python with the rest of argv but the behavior was different on Linux and Windows and neither was really clean. ''', ) parser.add_argument( 'name', type=str, help=''' If you invoke this script with python.exe, a hardlink python-{name}.exe will be created. Also works with pythonw. ''', ) parser.set_defaults(func=namedpython_argparse) return betterhelp.go(parser, argv) if __name__ == '__main__': raise SystemExit(main(sys.argv[1:]))